August 24, 2016

Track Focus – Fengtai R/C Model Area

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Track Name – Fengtai R/C Model Area
Host –  Car Modelling Association of China
Country – China
Location – Beijing Fengtai
Direction – Anti-clockwise
Surface – Asphalt

Having successfully hosted the 1:12 World Championship indoors in the Fengtai Science, Technology and Sports building, the Touring Car Worlds moves outdoors to another part of the Fengtai Sports Center which centres around the 2008 Beijing Olympics Softball stadium.  They say first impressions last and on arriving at the track one cannot but be impressed.  Obviously putting some of their Olympic experience to good use on entering the facility you immediately get the feeling this is something a bit special.  Situated next to the offroad track that was built to host the 2013 1:8 Offroad FEMCA Championship, the unique aspect of the 9th running of the 1:10 Electric Touring Car World’s is that the surface and layout has never been driven on prior to the opening round of free practice.  Originally built in September of last year, the track got new asphalt last month in preparation for China’s first hosting of an IFMAR World Championship, it expected to host its second next year for 1:10 Offroad, and with no teams or drivers having run on it before it has added a extra element to this year’s title.

Arriving to a security check, where you pass through a scanner, you then enter the massively long pit area.  120-metres long and all glass down the right hand side about half way down is the door to the track and impressive driver stand structure which houses everything needed to run a World Championship event.  Such is its size that on the same floor as where the drivers stand for their races there is a press room on one side with race control mirroring it on the opposite side.  Two stairways up to the top floor keep the flow of drivers, officials and press flowing without disturbance to racers.  One nice touch of these and the 1:12 event is a drinks area just off the pit area for racers where they can get complimentary juices, tea, coffee and bottles of water.  For lunch, a huge marquee has been erected across the street with this also set to be used for Saturday night’s award ceremony.

In terms of the track, which is over looked by a 300 + seater grandstand, it covers an area 68-metre long by 38-metre deep.  Featuring 16 turns, the layout is defined by steel dividers with the infield painted blue. Commenting on the layout as he watched the first heats of practice, reigning World Champion Naoto Matsukura said, ‘It’s a good layout, I think I will like it’.  Designed by Lung Chuan Lee from Tawian, who has designed many tracks in China include the Fengtai R/C Model Area offroad track, Matsukura feels the layout maybe a little tight.  He also pointed out that the curbing is nice and low in some areas but quite high in others and with a straight edge on the inside of the higher ones he said if you go off you will be stuck inside the curbing.

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August 22, 2016

Matsukura is 1:12 World Champion

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Naoto Matsukura is the 1:12 World Champion for a fourth time.  The Japanese ace, who burst onto the international r/c scene when he won his first World title in 2008 aged 15, took back the sport’s biggest prize with an impressive recovery drive to make it 2 wins from 2 in the second A-Main in Beijing.   Starting P2, China being his first Worlds not being the Top Qualifier, Matsukura came out best from a third lap pile up involving the Top 3 to go to the lead but almost immediately threw it away with a mistake of his own dropping back to fifth. With Sobue the new leader, Matsukura set about his recovery with his Roche clearly the fastest car on the track.  On the limit trying to keep his lead and under pressure from Matsukura, Sobue would too lose the lead with a mistake and once passed Matsukura took complete control of the race to win ahead of Rheinard to put himself into the history books as the first driver to hold both the 1:12 and Electric Touring Car World titles simultaneously.  A win of a very entertaining A3 would give Rheinard the overall runner-up spot with 1:12 Worlds debutant Sobue completing the podium for the 18th running of the championships.

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‘I don’t remember any of the 8-minute, I know I made a mistake one time’, was Matsukura’s reaction after the race.  The protege of Masami Hirosaka, from whom he is now only one title away from matching the 1:12 legend’s world title tally, the 22-year-old continued, ‘the feeling of this win is the same as when I won my first World title,  I am so happy to take back the title’.  Making this title even more sweet he said was the fact that this is his first race having his father as his mechanic, his dad clearly overcome by the win as he congratulated his son after the race.  His first world championship since his shock departure from Team Yokomo, Matsukura thanked Roche owner Max Ma and Patrick Poon, along with his team-mates, for making today’s win possible.  He said he also owed a huge gratitude of thanks to his family and his girlfriend for their ongoing support.  With the historic significance of today’s win, he said he was now more determined than ever to complete the 2016 Worlds by doing the double come Saturday, when the Touring Car World title will also be decided at Fengtai Sports Centre with the racing moving outdoors on to a brand new asphalt track.

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Commenting after another disappointing race in A2 Rheinard said, ‘I had no grip. I was just sliding around trying to hold the car on the track. I think the breaks before the final are effecting the traction’.  Asked about the early incident with Matsukura and Sobue, of which he came off the worst, the German said, ‘Somebody touched me but I don’t really know what happened’.  With Rheinard taking the 1:12 win from Matsukura before the then Yokomo driver went on to win his first touring car World title, the 3-time Touring Car World Champion said , ‘I lost this one so all I have to do now is win later in the week’.   Finishing the event by winning the closing race and reflecting on the finals as a whole he said, ‘It was not my day but I didn’t drive good’.   Even though he won A3 he wasn’t happy with his early driving over the 8-minutes, ‘I spun out and dropped to fifth and thought I am not even going to make the podium but got my head down and got back to the front so it worked out’.

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‘I’m happy to finish on the podium for my first time (doing 1:12 Worlds) but its not the best result, I wanted the win’.  Commenting on A2 which he led, the CRC driver said, ‘my car was difficult to drive, the track as loose and I was super on the limit trying to keep the lead’.  Losing that lead with a mistake when he tapped the corner pipping, he said ‘Naoto was faster’ adding it was only going to be a matter of time before he would take the lead.  Switching for A3 to the same set-up he used yesterday when he TQ’d the opening qualifier, he said this gave him a ‘super good car’ adding it was a ‘maximum close race’.  Making a mistake while trying to get passed leader for much of the race Hideo Kitazawa as they battled for second, Sobue would drop to 7th in the final 2-minutes of the race recovering to 5th by the finish. With 2014 podium finisher Kitazawa getting second it was Sobue’s P2 race time in A1 that would give him the tie breaker over Kitazawa for the final podium placing.

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With Kitazawa taking fourth ahead of fellow Japanese driver Toto Ebukuro, Japan the power house nation at this year’s championships filling 4 of the to 5 spots, Juho Levanen would be the best Team Associated driver finishing 6th ahead of team-mate Keven Hebert.  Shanghai based American JJ Wang gave the locals someone to cheer on finishing his first 1:12 Worlds in 8th with Masatsugu Ido and Hayato Ishioka completing the Top 10 of what is the sport’s original electric World Championship class.  With China doing an impressive job in hosting the World Championships for the first time, and while the 50 entry count was up slightly on the 2014 numbers, with all A-finalists clearly the best in the world, it is clear that in the best interest of keeping 1:12 alive, IFMAR, the drivers and all involved manufacturers need to collectively work together in finding solutions that make the class more appealing and try and return it to it hayday when far more World Championship touring competitors took part.

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