August 29, 2025

Kaerup again in Q4 as rain fails to dampen form

With overnight rain delaying the start to Day 2 of the qualifying at the eBuggy World Championship and presenting drivers with very different track conditions, it still wasn’t enough to prevent Team Associated’s Marcus Kaerup from making it three TQ runs in a row in Portugal.  With the start to the fourth round of qualifying delayed by an hour, Kaerup topped the times from his team-mate Davide Ongaro, the TQ pace over 17-seconds slower than the Dane’s best from yesterday.  With Q1 winner David Ronnefalk and Top Seed Elliott Boots both having bad runs, it would be the Schumacher pairing of Michal Orlowski and Daniel Kobbevik who completed Top 4.  Playing a pivotal role in Kaerup’s third TQ run, French eBuggy Champion Clement Boda enjoyed his best run so far with the fifth fastest time ahead of Tekno’s João Figueiredo whose time saw him top the fastest heat group.

Summing up his latest TQ effort, Kaerup said, ‘It couldn’t have been better could it.  It was a bit of a rough morning, I was here early to make sure that I had everything prepared for the rain but thankfully before my run Clement (Boda) won his run and gave me his tyres and I was able to TQ my heat.’  In turn giving his tyres to Joona Haatanen, he said,  ‘for his (Haatanen) run they had too much running, they’d already done 15-minutes and normally we do only 10-minutes on mediums and these were three compounds softer.’  Regarding the track conditions, the 17-year-old said, ‘It was way more difficult now.  You had to be so precise to be fast but also not make the car slide.  The two last corners before the line were critical, if you went too wide the car would just push out.  If you pushed it too much around the corner it would slide out, it was about getting it right.’  With Ronnefalk the only remaining driver that can deny him the overall TQ here in Barcelos,  he said, ‘David can still take my TQ but I will for sure go for the TQ in the next one.’

Ongaro explained, ‘that was completely different from yesterday but the tyre wear was ok.  I lost say 1 second and a half with a car that was crashed outside the track and when he come back on the track he put dust every where so my car just starting spinning.’  The Italian Matrix tyres back drivers continued, ‘I think we are now on our side with tyres because the track is losing a little bit of grip’, something he said is to their tyres benefit.  Looking to the penultimate qualifier, the reigning European eBuggy Champion said, ‘It will be a challenge again but we will try.’

‘Again one or two small mistakes and I cased a jump and lost around a second and that was the difference to TQ’, was how Orlowski summed up his first round of the day.  He continued, ‘We are always there, always in the Top 3, it’s good but the track turned upside down from yesterday and it was pretty hectic so I am glad to see us still at the top, now we just need to stay on top of the track development and how its changes.’  Asked how the track had changes after the light rain, he replied, ‘its really loose and its crucial to staying on the racing line.’  For the remaining two qualifiers, 3 of the 6 to count, the Pole said, ‘we will try and get some good scores to try and be in the Top 3 on the starting grid.’

‘Finally a better run’, that was Kobbevik’s reaction to his P4 run.  The Norwegian continued, ‘the track was totally different with the slippery conditions but finally a Top 5 run.  I think the track suited me and I enjoyed the grip.  Yesterday I was always a bit scared because of the grip, I could sometimes traction roll so I was probably driving too safe.  Today I could be more myself.’  Looking to Q5 he said while he expects the track to get better he will keep the car as is and try get another good result to add to his counting rounds.

Asked about his first Top 5 run, Boda said, ‘It was good, I think I am 9th overall so we need to do one more to get the Amain.  It was a clean run without mistake.’  Asked about his first day of qualifying the 20-year-old said, ‘the last qualifying of yesterday was good, P7.  The first one was super good, like Top 3, but on the last lap in the triple I made a mistake, I don’t know why, and in the second one I made a mistake so I have a 21 and a 24.  We need to do the best in the next two.’

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August 28, 2025

Kaerup doubles to hold overnight TQ at eBuggy Worlds

Team Associated’s Marcus Kaerup produced another TQ run at the eBuggy World Championship to hold the overnight TQ in Portugal after backing up his TQ from Round 2 with another fastest time of the event in Q3.  The Danish teenager topped the final round of Day 1 of qualifying at the Barcelos track from Schumacher’s Michal Orlowski, his advantage over the Pole 1.5-seconds.  On a potential TQ run in the previous round until a late driver error, Sworkz’ Juan Carlos Canas posted his first Top 3 of qualifying just 0.034 shy of Orlowski.  The big surprise of Q3 was Ryan Cavalieri, the multiple 1:10 Offroad World Champion steering his Mayako right into the mix with the 4th fastest time.  Behind the American, Noha Ben Mohamed showed his run to the fifth fastest time in Q2 wasn’t a one off as he again recorded a P5 with Davide Ongaro completing the Top 6, the Italian again suffering a mistake over the 5-minutes.  Taking the opening qualifier, David Ronnefalk ended the day with a 10th after a mistake on the final run to the loop.  Despite this, the Swede sits P2 in the overnight qualification ranking thanks to his third fastest time in Q2.  For his Xray team-mate Dakotah Phend it was a tough day, the American having started out the day with a 6th in Q1 but ending up 20th for Q2 after a mistake and then suffering a DNS in the day’s final round due to a mechanical.

‘Definitely a great run, I lost a couple of tenths in traffic but I managed and brought it home’, that was how Kaerup summed up his latest TQ run.  With little else to report on his run or buggy set-up, asking him how he felt the track is developing, he replied, ‘the quad is getting quite beat up so you got  to adjust the line because the tyre we are running on is not suited for a lot of dust so you have to watch you line because if you hit the dust the car is going to feel different for the next couple of corners.’  With the forecast showing a 20% chance of rain in the morning, asked about that Kaerup said, ‘I’m not too worried because we have a good rain tyre if it comes down to that.’

While most drivers would say they had an unlucky mistake, Orlowski said he had ‘a really lucky mistake’.  He explained, ‘We made a change and definitely had more pace but we had a really lucky mistake.  I tumbled over and it could have been a marshal and 3 or 4 seconds lost but it was a second or maybe less so I was really lucky. I had another bad lap so if it was perfectly clean I would have been close to Marcus but the car is too difficult to drive and I see from the drivers stand it is not doing what we want it to do.  The track developed a little bit and went away from where the set-up was in the morning and yesterday evening so we need adjust the car for tomorrow.  We have some good ideas we are confident about but let’s see what the weather does.’

Happy with his finish to the first day of qualifying after the disappoint of Q2, Canas said, ‘Q2 was my mistake, I think the pace was exactly the same and the time without the mistake would have be the same (as Q3), but I can do nothing about it now.’  On his car performance the 2024 Nitro Buggy Worlds Top Qualifier said, ‘I’m going slow but finally I am getting confidence.  I am driving the car at about 95% so I will try something on the car for tomorrow.’  He added, ‘I also need to improve a little bit my driving so I will watch videos tonight and see how the other guys are driving.’

Asked where his surprise turn of speed came from Cavalieri replied, ‘Honest I don’t know.  Yesterday was in the right direction just missed a little bit of set-up from Pekko (Iivonen) and we’ve all been working really really hard and been sharing as much information back and forth. I just felt like yesterday and the day before we were strapped on time.  We could never really prepare the every time and we missed a few laps on each run so today we went through the car and I had a few things in the rear end that was a little bound up so I freed up the rear end and the car honest from then has been awesome.  We made a small change now that I got comfortable with the driving I said I need a little more steering, a little more responsive, and the pace was good.  It took me a few laps to get adjusted to it but overall it was just overall fast.  I was 60th the first day on the track, got down to 24th yesterday and we shot up today quite a bit. It’s good to show up today.’

The leading Junior driver here at the inaugural eBuggy Worlds, Ben Mohamed summed up his latest effort as ‘another good run’ adding, ‘it was a little better in the 5-minutes so it was very good.’  The 16-year-old electric racing specialist, who joined Sparko at the beginning of the 2025 season, is happy with his Buggy set-up opting to leave it unchanged all day and that is his plan again for tomorrow adding he will just try and keep doing what he is doing, a formula that has worked well for the French driver today.

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August 28, 2025

Kaerup takes Q2 in Portugal

Team Associated’s Marcus Kaerup has taken the second qualifier at the 1:8 eBuggy World Championship, the Dane redeeming himself following a disappointing first effort to top the times from Top Seed Elliott Boots.  Ending up with a 41 for Q1, Kaerup would take Q2 in a new fastest time bettering David Ronnefalk’s opening TQ time by over 1-second.  Ronnefalk would back up his TQ run with a P3 for the round with Boots just getting the better of him by 0.049 of a second after the British driver produced a better final lap.  Schumacher’s Michal Orlowski posted the 4th fastest time ahead of young French talent Noha Ben Mohamed who steered his Sparko into the Top 5.   It was a frustrating run for a number of leading title contenders.  Davide Ongaro lost almost 3-seconds with a mistake on lap 7 of 9 but still salvaged a 6th such was his pace, Juan Carlos Canas had a final lap mistake that cost him 4-seconds, and Dakotah Phend lost any chance of a strong Q2 with a mistake on his second lap.

Describing his TQ run as ‘really good’, Kaerup said, ‘I found my ryhthm right from the first lap and just keep it on and made it work.’  Asked about Q1 the 17-year-old replied, ‘the less said about that the better’ before continuing, ‘I got off to a really good start but overshot a jump and then I just lost my head.’   Overall, the 1:8 Nitro Buggy and 1:10 Electric Offroad World Championship finalist said he has the car and package to get the job done and it is just a matter of him putting it together with the goal for Q3 to repeat what he did in Q2.

Commenting on his run to the second fastest time for the round, Boots said, ‘That was a bit better, super close, just a little time off him (Orlowski), less than half a second but I had a little traffic I had to get through so I lost a few tenths there.’  The Sworkz driver continued, ‘Its still a second which is a good counting round and well just go again and hopefully have better luck with traffic, it would be nice.’

‘Not a good run I though the car was a little looser that time but overall a pretty consistent run.  He added. ‘I had Canas behind me starting the clock and we were pretty much dead even, I think I was a little faster the first 2-3 laps and then I caught traffic so he gained on me and probably ahead and then he caught the traffic I had to go through and he kind of slowed down the last couple of laps.  Unfortunately this traffic cost me a possible TQ, I didn’t feel I had any clean laps out there.  It’s the same for everyone but its what happens when you divide 36 people in the three top heats.’  The subject of the heat make-up following seeding has been a point raise by a number of drivers, the current process effecting both fast drivers as they caught traffic and slower drivers as the have to open to let drivers through.  Looking to the day’s final qualifier, 3 more on the schedule for tomorrow, Ronnefalk said, ‘I am going to adjust a little bit to see if I can get a bit more grip.  I don’t know if it as a bit more dusty but I felt my car being a little bit loser so I need a little bit more traction for the next one and it will be all good.’

‘OK, small mistake’, that was how Orlowski summed up his second qualifying effort.  The Pole continued, ‘Now I need to try and find more comfortability and speed from the car because I need to fight for the first win.  We’ll test something now for Q3 as I have driven two good scores and I know I have the pace to be there but we need to find something to drive and be there in the Top 3.

Asked about his impressive Q2 run, Ben Mohamed responded with ‘zero mistakes’.  Having had a less competitive Q1 due to driver errors, he himself describing that run as ‘bad’.   The 17-year-old is pleased with how his buggy is working and having changed nothing between Q1 and Q2 he said that is the plan again for today’s third & final qualifier.   Pleased with his Top 5 run he hinted he believes he has more to come.

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August 28, 2025

Ronnefalk TQs opening qualifier at eBuggy Worlds

Xray’s David Ronnefalk has TQ’d the opening round of qualifying at the inaugural IFMAR 1:8 Electric Offroad World Championship in Portugal.  Winner of his fourth European 1:8 Nitro Buggy Championships title at the Barcelos track earlier this month, the Swede took the first of the six qualifiers from the similar car of Michal Orlowski, the Schumacher team driver only half a second off at the end of their respective 5-minute qualifying efforts.  Having been missing from the radar over the previous 2-days of practice, qualifying would see Davide Ongaro turn up with a Top 3 run ahead of Top Seed Elliott Boots, the Sworkz driver having a late issue with traffic on his run.  Boots’ team-mate Juan Carlos Canas opened his account with the fifth fastest time with Dakotah Phend continuing to be the top non-European as he steered his Xray to P6 ahead of Infinity’s young Japanese protege Kouki Kato.

Reacting to his TQ run, the reigning European 1:8 and 1:10 Offroad Champion running in Group 8 of 10, Ronnefalk said, ‘That was a good start and what you want from the first couple of runs of qualifying to have points that count for the overall early on so you have room for set-up changes or improvement towards the end.  It give you a bit more margin and you can drive a little more relaxed towards the end of qualifying.’  The former European eBuggy Champion continued, ‘It is not normally my strongest part of the race, qualifying, but I think I have improved a little bit in the last month or so.  The car and everything has been feeling really good so I just had to keep it on the wheels and step back a little bit to do that and luckily it was enough for TQ.  They were not far behind but it worked out in the end.’  For Q2, he said, ‘we are keeping it the same, gluing up a new set of tyres, the same ones, and it should be good.  I haven’t touched that much from the start of the race up until now and I don’t think I am going to have to either as the track is fairly consistent now that they put some concrete in the jump section.  The landing after the quad is a little more grippy than before.  The car balance felt like it was right where I wanted it now and I can just work on my driving.’

Orlowski wasn’t overly impressed with his own performance for the midday qualifier, saying, ‘It was OK, the car is really good, the whole balance, everything is good, but I drove better in the morning practice.  Now I started off pretty OK had a slightly slower second lap and I had three really slow laps in a row without any major mistakes’.  The Polish ace continued, ‘It was clean run but maybe I think a little too clean.  I wasn’t pushing enough.  I don’t want to push much but in the morning (practice) I did a lot better.’  For Q2 the reigning 1:12 World Champion said, ‘as the race goes on we are not making changes now, we are happy with where we are, I was just driving way too cautious this time round.  I am sure I have the pace to top some rounds.’

A much happier looking Ongaro reacted to his P3 with, ‘Definitely way better, we found some speed finally.  Now that the base set-up is good we need to find some little things that can help me more but I’m super happy.’  The Nitro Buggy World Champion continued, ‘I think my pace was the same as David (Ronnefalk) but I crashed on the warm up lap so I had to let everyone go and I was last so the last 4-laps I found like 5-cars in front of me so instead of crash and make some mistakes I stayed behind them and lost maybe one second or more.’  Planning to change the centre diff oil for Q2, asked what the big change was that brought him into contention today, the Team Associated driver explained, ‘When I built the car I put a thing on the car that was supposed to be the same but it was different and that thing changed the caster, camber, everything.  So when I say ok this is different I put the original one on and the car from then started to work.’

Boots felt his run ‘could have been a bit better’.  The British driver explained, ‘We just wanted to go for a steady run and start off on the right foot and got a fourth which is not terrible but I think we were on pace for TQ, there or thereabouts, but I had a problem with traffic.  Pekko (Iivonen) crashed a pipe and bounced out and hit me, just one of those racing things.  Without that I think it would have been Top 2.’  For the next round he will not change anything saying ‘the car felt good and I just need to try be a bit luckier with traffic and get called through.  Hopefully I can get a clear space for most of the run which would be great.’

‘I don’t expect that was P5 when I came off the driver stand’, was Canas’ reaction after Q1.  The Spaniard continued, ‘I feel that my driving is not really good so it would be slow but finally it was Top 5 and that’s good, it’s less work for the next one.’  On his buggy set-up he said, ‘this morning in practice I tried some things and it didn’t work so I went back and tried to make a safe run to get some points’.  For Q2, based on the rising temperature, he will change tyres and ‘some little things’ on the car but he feels the biggest area for improvement will come from his own driving.

Summing up the first qualifier, Phend said, ‘It was a pretty clean first round, I had a couple of small bobbles and probably lost around a second, a second & a half, or so but good to have a first clean run in and a decent point but yeah I just need to find a little more speed for today,’  On the track, the ROAR National Champion said, ‘I think it has a little less grip than it did the last couple of days so I think everyone is going a little bit slower.’

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August 27, 2025

Boots is eBuggy World Championship Top Seed

Sworkz’s Elliott Boots is the Top Seed at the first ever IFMAR 1:8 Offroad World Championship, the British driver set to carry the No.1 sticker on his buggy in the top heat as qualifying gets underway in Portugal tomorrow.  The former Nitro Buggy Worlds Top Qualifier claimed the Top Seeding ahead of Michal Orlowski after he bettered the Schumacher team driver’s first round time by 6/10ths of a second.  Fresh from winning the European Championship title in 1:10 Electric Touring Car for the very first time over the weekend, Orlowski couldn’t better his opening time ending up fifth fastest for the second round.  Behind Boots it would be the Xray of David Ronnefalk who set the second fastest time to end seeding in P3 ahead of team-mate Dakotah Phend.  Completing the Top 3 times for CP2, Team Associated’s Marcus Kaerup completed Day 2 of the championship in P5 ahead of the Sworkz of Juan Carlos Canas.  Reigning back to back Nitro Buggy World Champion & back to back European eBuggy Champion Davide Ongaro ends practice seeding P8 behind Mayako’s Pekko Iivonen.

Reacting to topping seeding, Boots said, ‘It was good in the end.  We made a few little changes throughout the day.  We’ve kind of been there or thereabouts and it was just finding that time of between half a second and 8/10ths over 3-laps really and then I think we found even more on the overall time so that was really good.’  Asked about his set-up and if he made any significant changes the multiple European Champion and reigning British Champion replied, ‘Not really, I mean we kind of drifted back to our original kind of set-up.  We’ve done like the usual try some stuff and then go back to what we know so I am glad we have done that going into qualifying.  The car was fast, some places it was a bit edgy but I was watching a lot of cars and I think the track changes depending on the sun.  Other than that I’m very very happy.  We found a bit of pace so I’ve got time that I can back off the car and still have good pace.’

On his performance Orlowski explained, ‘We tried something since we already had one good round and I thought maybe we could find some more speed but the car became really edgy so we are just going to go back’.  Asked what the change was, the 2023 European eBuggy Champion said, ‘I tried different rims and they made the car really difficult so we will go back to the one we know works well and it should be good.’  He added, ‘In the morning we have an 8-minute practice so maybe we can try something in that but also it would be nice to have a good run just for confidence going into qualifying.’

Summing up CP2 Ronnefalk said, ‘I struggled a lot at the start of that one.  I changed a few things on the car and it drove really different to the run before and I guess I didn’t realise that I had to drive different so I crashed a couple of times.’  Securing the 2025 Nitro Buggy European Championship title for the fourth time last month at the Barcelos track, he continued, ‘I reset and drove a lot better towards the end and was able to ticked off 5,6 laps.’  Asked if once he adapted his driving to the set-up if he liked it, the Swede said, ‘I definitely liked some of it.  I think now I had a different kind of issue, I was missing a little bit of rotation in the middle of the corners so when I was on power it was pushy on the exit.’  He concluded, ‘A little more mid corner rotation for tomorrow and I think we’ll be good.’

So far the only driver taking the challenge to the Europeans, on his CP2 performance Phend said, ‘Not as good but I learnt which was the important part.  I went a little bit too hard on the tyre but now I know with this weather where I need to be at tyre wise so that’s good.’  The American continued, ‘I think I kind of know now a little bit car wise a couple of things I need to do from the team and things they tried so we’re going to make some small changes to the car for tomorrow and we will be in a good position.’  Looking to qualifying he said, ‘I feel it is a little bit different the 5-minute qualifiers versus a 10-minute qualifier, you kind of have to have that intensity right away and be on pace really quickly.  Keeping that in I’ll keep an eye on that in the practice in the morning and how quickly we get out of the gate compared to the others and go from there.’

‘It wasn’t eating the ground this time’, a reference to his CP1 ride height error, Kaerup was pleased with his second effort.  Also changing shock oil to make it softer, he said ‘it was better’ adding ‘we may even go softer but the package is working really good and I am pretty satisfied so we don’t want to make too many changes.’  On his approach for the first of the five rounds of qualifying he said, ‘we’ve tried different compounds (of tyres) and I am pretty sure we can push it out of the gate so we have a good chance for a Top 3 tomorrow or TQ, but it is going to take a hell of a lot of concentration.’  The 17-year-old explained, ‘the track is easy but it is hard to go fast without crashing.’

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August 27, 2025

Orlowski tops first seeding round at eBuggy Worlds

Michal Orlowski has topped the opening round of seeding practice at the inaugural eBuggy World Championship, the Schumacher driver fastest from the similar car of Xray’s Dakotah Phend.  Over the first of the two 10-minute seeding rounds, the Polish driver improved on his P6 Free Practice pace by half a second with Phend just 0.15 of a second off over his best 3-consecutive laps of the Barcelos track.  Sworkz’s Juan Carlos Canas would complete the Top 3 ahead of David Ronnefalk with Mayako’s Pekko Iivonen backing up his strong final free practice run to set the 5th fastest time.  Having topped free practice, Marcus Kaerup would open seeding with a P6, the Team Associated driver unable to match his FP7 pace and putting the 0.8 of a second lost down to not driving as well.

Summing up his first appearance at the top of the timing screen so far here in Portugal, Orlowski said, ‘We’ve been making small changes from the very beginning of the race and FP7 was a very positive run and now I just got a bit more used to the car and put some good laps in.  I was doing the triple single for the first part of the run and that is when I did the fastest 3-laps and then I thought should have good enough 3-laps and I tried the quad but it wasn’t working out in the dusty conditions we have now.’  Asked what he had done to the car in term of set-up changes he replied, ‘Not much’.  He continued, ‘we had our experience from the Nitro Euros and the looked at the set-up from the other teams and started with that.  We have been playing with diffs, pistons, just stuff like that.  The geometry of the car is same as we started.’  On the track layout revisions from the European Championship, ‘I really like it, it is an awesome track. It is a much better layout than the Nitro Euros I think.  I hate the quad, I think it is horrible for racing and for marshalling I am marshalling number 10 and I am scared ever time a car goes over there.  These two jump sections should have been changed from the Euro, other than that I really like the layout.’

‘Solid’ was how Phend summed up his first seeding effort.  He continued, ‘I thought I had a good 10-minute pace, I thought was pretty consistent and stuff, so yeh I think we are in the ballpark with everything.’  The leading non-European so far, the American said, ‘The car is comfortable but I wouldn’t mind getting more speed in the beginning but we do have that 3-minute warm-up for the the qualifiers so that is good. It just gives time for the tyre to warm-up, shocks, diffs, and that stuff.’   Planning some changes for the second seeding he said he wasn’t sure yet what those changes would be.

Giving his thoughts on his first seeding run, Canas said, ‘I think that as the best car we had so far.  It is still a little bit difficult but the pace was pretty good over the 10-minutes.  I know 4 or 5 guys have faster lap times but only one lap, that why I am third, but we will keep working on the car and make me more confident with it.’  Making a shock change this morning that ‘worked good’, he said it ‘made the car more easy but I want to have it a little more easy so I will work on that for the next one.’  On the quad, the Nitro Buggy World Championship Top Qualifier is still sticking with the safer option of triple single saying ‘I know the guys ahead of me I know they make the 4 but I think it is a risk for the qualifying.’

Reacting to his P4 in the first seeding, Ronnefalk said, ‘It was OK I would say, I kind of started doing the triple single in the beginning. I got three decent laps and I went over to try quad and had a couple of rough landings lets say like we all had.  It’s not easy in that section especially when it gets as broken as it was in our heat or the last couple of heats that round.’  He continued, ‘It was very broken at the fourth jump there so it’s super dusty and even if you quad and nail the landing it’s super dusty and your car will push wide to the outside. I’m not really sure which one is the best one.  I think triple single is obviously a little safer but in term of the car and everything it felt very good and the clean laps were fast.’

Asked about his run Iivonen said, ‘The actually felt better than in the last practice and I was super comfortable driving around the track.  Only thing was that I went out with used tyres and the went completely bald at the end so I was maybe loosing a bit of grip but still I got the best laps at the end.’  For his second seeding effort the Finn will put on new tyres and just check over the car but is planning leave it the same as the first round.

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