April 16, 2025

ABC Champion Wolhunter returns at Philippine Masters

Having clinched the 2024 Asian Buggy Championships title at the season finale in Indonesia last October after a consistent campaign, Sworkz’s Christian Wolhuter will get his title defence underway at the upcoming Philippine Masters.  Having opted to miss the season opener in New Zealand last month, the Australian returns to Manila for Asia’s biggest annual 1:8 Offroad race having finished fifth last year behind team-mate Joern Nuemann at the Circulo Verde Race Track.  Both the Champion of Nitro and eBuggy in the Cayote backed championship, the 18-year-old will be looking to build on his breakthrough international season and looking to his first away race of 2025 said, “Feeling ready for the Philippine Masters 2025 event, with a lot of travel last year and a good start to this year, I have high hopes. With high competition, it is going to be a long, tough fight throughout qualifying and finals.  Edward Sio has always put on a killer event through accommodation and, most importantly, the track. Good luck to everyone participating.”

Source: Asian Buggy Championships [Facebook]


April 14, 2025

Hara back for 2025 Philippine Masters

After making his first major international offroad final in many years & claiming a hugely popular podium at last year’s Philippine Masters, Atsushi Hara is returning to Asia’s biggest annual 1:8 Offroad race.  Hara would lead for almost half of the 1-hour main at the famed Circulo Verde Race Track in Manila before the former World Champion was passed by current World Champion Davide Ongaro.  Eventually taking 3rd place in the nitro buggy final, the legend of the sport was truly rejuvenated by the whole experience of the weekend.  With the 13th edition of the Philippine Masters once again the second round of Scotty Ernst’s Asian Buggy Championships, which this year is boosted by title sponsor from Cayote who are also one of Hara’s main sponsors, on his return to the race Hara said, “I am very happy to be going to Masters again this year.  The Philippine Masters is my favorite 1/8 buggy race because of the great organization by the race director Scotty Ernst with his team, the great facilities, and the great people.  I am also excited to be able to compete at a high level with the world’s best drivers like Ongaro and other top drivers from around the world.”  The Philippine Masters takes place from April 30 -May 4th with Ongaro going for his 5th win of the race.

Source: Asian Buggy Championships [Facebook]


April 11, 2025

Matsukura confirmed for Philippine Masters debut

Infinity’s Naoto Matsukura has been confirmed to make his Philippine Masters debut later this month at the 13th running Asia’s biggest annual 1:8 Offroad race meeting.  The second round of the Cayote sponsored Asian Buggy Championships, Matsukura got his first taste of the championship last year when he complete at the season finale in Indonesia where Infinity team-mate Kouki Kato took the win.  Now the multiple World Champion will tackle the famed Circulo Verde Race Track in Manila which is the work of track designer and accomplished offroad racer Edward Sio.  Commenting in his Philippine Masters debut Matsukura said, ‘I’m excited for the first time to join the Philippine Masters!  It’s also my first time going to the Philippines.  I’m looking forward to racing at such a great event, and having some good battles with the top drivers.’

Source: Asian Buggy Championships [Facebook]


April 10, 2025

Ongaro heads 2025 Philippine Masters entry

World Champion Davide Ongaro will once again head the entry at the Philippine Masters, which takes place later this month in Manila.  The Team Associated star driver has become a regular of the event which has grown into Asia’s biggest annual 1:8 Offroad race meeting.  With 2025 marking the biggest edition yet of the Philippine Masters, it is the second stop of the four round Asian Buggy Championships which kicked off in New Zealand last month.  With a new title sponsor in Cayote, Round 1 of the Scotty Ernst promoted championship saw Mayako Youth Mentoring Program driver Jayden Edmunds take the win and the Australian will be aiming to build on that performance at the Circulo Verde Race Track from April 30 -May 4th.  A huge fan of the Philippine Masters, this the 13th running of the event, asked about the race reigning Champion Ongaro said, ‘I like to come to the PM Masters because the atmosphere is incredible, the joy of the people is something that I’ve never seen, the track is amazing and the effort that the guys put on for this race is something special.’   The Philippine Masters is one of Red RC’s favourite annual events to attend and report on as it combines both top level racing and a social atmosphere around the racing that lives up to the host country’s tagline ‘It’s More Fun in the Philippines’.

Source: Asian Buggy Championships [Facebook]


March 27, 2025

2025 Asian Buggy Championships Rd 1, New Zealand – Chassis Focus Index

Last weekend New Zealand played host to the opening round of the Cayote backed Asian Buggy Championships.  Now in its third season, the 2025 four round championship kicked off at the Counties RC Car Club track in Pukekohe where almost 200 entries took part in the four day event.  The weekend would prove a major break through for Mayako’s Jayden Edmunds as the talented 19-year-old who saw off the challenge of 2024 Asian Buggy Championship race winner Caleb Noble to secure the biggest win of his career to-date.  In terms of manufacturer representation, the team photo session ahead of Day 1 of qualifying clearly showed HB Racing to be the most popular chassis of choice among the Kiwi’s thanks to efforts of Shane O’Connor, the same guy who was also instrumental in bringing Scotty Ernst’s Asian Buggy Championships to the country the last two years.  Another standout was the variety of buggy brands with qualifying seeing buggies from 6 different manufacturers filling the top half of the 12 car grid.  We got the chance to photograph 8 buggies from 6 different manufacturers including the podium finishers in both Nitro Buggy and eBuggy.  In case you missed any of the Chassis Focus’ during our coverage of the race, we have compiled them all in our latest Chassis Focus index.

Nitro Buggy

Jayden Edmunds (Q3/Winner) – Mayako

Caleb Noble (Q4/P2) – Tekno

Jayden Jamieson (Q2/P3) – Sworkz

Kyle McBride (Top Qualifier/P12) – Team Associated

Kasey Dawson (Q5/P4) – WIRC


eBuggy

Kyle McBride (Q2/Winner)- Team Associated

Logan Toia (Top Qualifier/P2) – HB Racing

Kasey Dawson (Q3/P3) – WIRC

 


March 23, 2025

Edmunds earns biggest career win at Asian Buggy Championships opener

Mayako Youth Mentoring Program driver Jayden Edmunds earned the biggest win of his career today with victory in New Zealand following an exciting season opener to the Cayote backed Asian Buggy Championships.  With the Counties RC Car Club track hosting the first of the four encounters that make up the third season of the 1:8 Offroad Championship, Edmunds sent the first hint of his potential when he topped the second round of qualifying before the highly experienced Kyle McBride hit his stride to take the final two qualifiers and the overall TQ.  Lining up P3 for the 45-minute final behind Sworkz’s Jayden Jamieson, after plenty of shuffling for position at the start, four different leaders in the opening four minutes, Edmunds would settle into serious contention when he took the lead from HB Racing’s Logan Toia on lap 33.  With McBride and Toia, who had three stints at leading, both suffering multiple flameouts ending their challenges, Edmunds would find himself under attack from fellow countryman Caleb Noble.  With a very fast car, his Tekno posting the fastest lap of the race, Noble went to the front with a nice pass coming onto the main straight however as both drivers made their final pit stops, Noble pitting a lap earlier, Edmunds’ stop helped him to retake the lead.  Again Caleb appeared quicker but Edmunds played it cool.  As they came around to start their final lap, a mistake by Noble gave Edmunds the breathing room he needed to secure a very popular first international race win.  Finishing 6-seconds back, Top Seed Noble was clearly unhappy with his second place.  Opening the event strongly with a TQ in the opening qualifier, before starting to feel under the weather on Saturday, Jamieson was happy to survive to finish P3 and claim the Kiwi’s first Asian Buggy Championships podium finish in Nitro Buggy.  Just 3.6-seconds back, the WIRC of eBuggy podium finisher and local racer Kasey Dawson capped off an impressive weekend with fourth while Dylan Toia completed the Top 5.

Reacting to his win, a clearly delighted Edmunds joked, ‘That worked out pretty good I think.’  The 19-year-old continued, ‘I got out to a clean start.  I got into the lead and then made a mistake and lost it but fought back.  Caleb was so fast, he was coming and I had a good battle with him.  It was a great race.’  A driver who strangely enough doesn’t use the now almost universally standard issue radio head sets to communicate with pit crew, highlighting to him how impressively calm his father performs his fuel stops, Edmunds replied, ‘yeah it’s probably something we need to work on, we can always improve but that last one I came into the pits behind Caleb and then got out in front so that was the one that counted.’  Asked how his car evolved over the final, he said, ‘It was definitely hard to hang on to at the end but I think that was the same for everyone due to tyre wear and a very small line on the track.  The track was so bumpy for the final.  I went out in the warm-up and crashed 5 -times in one lap, compared to eBuggy it just got so much bumpier in spots that it hadn’t all weekend.  I just tried to limit the mistakes.’  On his biggest career win he said, ‘the only win I have had before this is sort of local races’ with him then confirming, ‘we’ll be in the Philippines, Queensland and maybe Jakarta’, Indonesia bringing the championship to a conclusion.

Asked for a run down on his race, Noble replied, ‘Not much I can say to not make my brands sound terrible I guess.  I drove shockingly for the first 15-minutes.  Somehow I probably drove the worst car on the grid to within contention.’  Asked what the issue with the car was the 18-year-old replied, ‘I don’t really even want to guess.  eBuggy was super good, shocks were super good and I put them on this car and they were super terrible.’  Asked if he took a risk changing the shocks he said, ‘the eBuggy was really good so I just pulled them off that car and bolted them on this car and it was a like a whole different car.  I drove through the field in eBuggy in A3 twice after getting taken out mid race and then drove back to fourth or whatever it was.’  Putting it to him that he had some very good speed in the nitro buggy final, he said, ‘the car was fast but an absolute handful and just not great to drive, I was just making it happen I guess.’

First asking him about how he was feeling after coming down with something on the second day of qualifying, his voice almost inaudible, Jamieson said, ‘we’re on the way out of it, it’s just a sore coughy throat now.’  Asked if it was a tougher than usual 45-minute final given he was under the weather, the 24-year-old said, ‘I think I went through a whole lot of different phases in that race.  At the start I felt like I was going really good, I got into the lead and if thought if I just hold Kyle up for a bit longer I’ll get his tyres balding off before mine because I knew he was on supersofts and I knew they wouldn’t last but he was quick at the start.  I thought if I can hang on I think I have a chance but then just after I lost the lead my throttle finger went completely numb, pins & needle numb, so for 20-minutes I was hoping and praying I was throttling & braking at the right points.  I think I overshot the first turn twice and the one at the back straight I think three times cause I couldn’t feel what I was doing.’  The reigning New Zealand National Champion continued, ‘then it came right again and I think I got back into third when Logan had his second flameout and I thought I’d be pretty happy with third after all this.  Caleb and Jayden were ahead of everyone in that one so I’m happy with third.’  On his pit stops, having lost out on a podium at the race last year due to a flame out, he said, ‘In the warm-up we ran the engine to test fuel mileage and at 10 minutes 40 we could still drive up the pit lane so in the main we knew we could run nines (9-mins) no drama and that probably helped me beat Kasey.’

‘Not good’, that was how McBride summed up his nitro final.  Having secured the eBuggy win earlier in the day and finishing on the Nitro Buggy podium in New Zealand last year, the World Championship finalist ended today’s the race in 12th & last position.  He continued, ‘I started off surprisingly pretty decent but then I got into the pipe.  I was putting in some clean laps but my car probably about 10-minutes in just felt like it didn’t have rear traction so I don’t know what happened whether it’s the track or maybe my tyres weren’t build for those conditions, I’m not sure.’  Asked if he changed tyre choice for the final he replied, ‘I was running exactly what I was running yesterday.  I didn’t make any changes but the car just wasn’t able to track straight.  I was trying to push and it was just going south so just one of those things and it turned into a bummer of a race and then I flamed out twice after that so game over from there.’  On the flameouts, asked if they were down to pushing fuel mileage or something else he replied, ‘I’m not too sure, I think it was just maybe the idle was too low, just happened twice but yeh a bit of a bummer I was expecting a lot better coming into the final but that’s RC racing for you.’