January 6, 2017

Neumann & Rheinard take one TQ a piece in opening 2WD qualifiers

Joern Neumann and Marc Rheinard registered one TQ each in the opening two rounds of 2WD qualifying at the DHI Cup presented by LRP. In the opening qualifier it was Marc Rheinard who kicked off the 2017 season with a TQ run heading home Neumann and his own Yokomo team-mate Frederik Hovgaard. In the second of the 4 scheduled qualifiers, which brought Day 1 of the offroad action at the Danish classic to a close, the result would be reversed with Neumann getting the better of Rheinard with a faster time to hold the provisional overnight TQ on the tie-break. Behind the two Germans, Finnish Team Associated driver Karri Salmela would compete the Top 3 ahead of a much improved David Ronnefalk and top seed Michal Orlowski, the pair having got together in Q1 and ended up 17th and 13th fastest respectively.

‘I was a little faster than Marc that time and was able to catch and pass him’, was Neumann reaction after Q2.  Putting the improved pace of his Serpent SDX2 down to just refreshing the diff between qualifiers, he added, ‘It was also close in the first one but Marc was a little faster and after I had a bobble at the wall I settled for second’.  As well as his diff rebuild, the 2012 & 2013 2WD Champion said, ‘I also ran new tyres but so did everyone because of the tyre wear’.  The only driver to go 17-laps over the 5-minutes, he was impressed by his lap times over the final minute with him feeling that maybe used tyres could work for a second run but airing on the side of caution concluded he will run new tyres in the penultimate round and if that proves good he might use the last qualifier to try used tyres.

Summing up his Q1 topping run with ‘it was just a clean run and everyone else crashed’, Rheinard added, ‘but it was nice to start 2017 with a TQ run’.  A title contender in this season’s Euro Offroad Series having won the opening round, he said ‘Q2 was also not bad but Joern found more speed, my car felt more loose than before’.  Describing his YZ-2 as good in the long corners, he said the problem is he has ‘no forward traction on power’ but conceded his P1 and P2 is ‘still a good start so I can’t complain’.

Sitting third overnight thanks to a P6 in Q1, Salmela summed up his improved Q2 performance by saying ‘No big mistakes, drive better, there was nothing else actually’. On the opening qualifier he said ‘it was good but I drove too safe so was too slow’.  In terms of his car set-up he replied, ‘there is no problems with my 2WD’ adding for the morning’s third qualifier the plan was to leave the car unchanged and ‘keep it clean again’.

Reacting to his P4 in the second qualifier,  Ronnefalk said, ‘I knew it was going to be tough starting at the back but the speed is there for Top 3’.  The Swede continued ‘Q1 was pretty good until Michal made a mistake and he was letting me go but had more power and got stuck in my back wing and I lost 6-seconds’. Having to start at the back of the top heat for Q2 as a result of being last of the group in the first one, he would have a few mistakes of his own doing but was pleased to recover to get 4th. Happy with his car, his D216 using a new lighter chassis and prototype gearbox, he said for tomorrow ‘it’s just a matter of putting it (a good run) together’.

Having topped the seeding practice, Orlowski said his car was not really good in the qualifiers despite him setting the fastest lap in both rounds of qualifying.  Suffering two crashes in Q1, the second of which was with Ronnefalk, he said his KF2 was missing rear traction and under breaking the car slides around.  Also reporting, ‘I don’t have front steering’, the 15-year-old said his P5 in Q2 was not the worst result but he wants to be able to do better tomorrow.  Planning to running 3 degrees of rear toe in as well as also switching to a softer front spring for Q3, the EOS championship leader said, ‘I have the pace but the car is really difficult and the changes wont slow the car but should make it that bit easier to drive’.

View the event image gallery here.


January 6, 2017

Chassis Focus – Alexander Hagberg

Chassis – Xray T4 ’17
Motor – ORCA RT 4.5T
ESC – ORCA VX3
Batteries – ORCA 6300mAh
Tires – LRP (handout)
Radio/Servo – Sanwa
Bodyshell – Protoform LTC-R
Remarks – Xray factory driver Alexander Hagberg is running the ’17 version of the Slovakian made T4 here at the DHI Cup in Odense. His car features an aluminium chassis, an aluminium steering system and low friction belts. The Swede’s T4 is also equipped with Hiro Seiko titanium and aluminium screws and Avid bearings. The wing of choice on his LTC-R body is the hard version of the Protoform wing.

Image Gallery


January 6, 2017

Chassis Focus – Marc Rheinard

Chassis: Yokomo YZ-2 CA
Motor: Muchmore Fleta ZX 6.5T
ESC: Muchmore Fleta Pro V2
Batteries: Muchmore Impact 5000mAh
Radio/Servo: Sanwa/Xpert
Remarks – German Yokomo driver Marc Rheinard is running the CA version of the YZ-2 equipped with the new Yatabe springs, a Yokomo front wing and mount and is not using the front anti roll bar which is actually detached. He is also using titanium screws and a new, harder graphite compound for the rear wishbones.

Image Gallery


January 6, 2017

5 time 4WD champion Neumann tops DHI Cup seeding

Joern Neumann set the pace in 4WD seeding at the DHI Cup presented by LRP. The unbeaten 4WD Champion of the Danish event, who is going for a sixth consecutive title this weekend in Odense, topped the times with an improved run in the second of the two rounds of controlled practice. Behind the Serpent driver, 2WD top seed Michal Orlowski would post the second fastest time with his CP1 when he set the early pace and Neumann was P4. While Neumann’s advantage was 2/10th, the gap between Orlowski and third fastest David Ronnefalk was much closer with only 3/100ths separating the Schumacher and HB Racing stars. With Yokomo’s Marc Rheinard P4, Finnish driver Samppa Orhanen would make it five different manufacturers at the top of the seeding times taking his Associated to the fifth fastest time. One noticeable absence this year is that of factory Xray team, with 2016 podium finisher & World Champion Bruno Coelho and 2015 podium finish Martin Bayer both opting to not make the trip this year.

The ‘car works very good and is super easy to drive and fast’, was Neumann summary of practice. Running a preproduction example of Serpent’s new SDX4, having just received his first fully production version which is under his pit table and needs building, he added, ‘I moved the shocks in one hole for more steering and that is about it (in terms of changes made to the car for the DHI Cup track)’. The reigning European Champion said here the car has less grip than at the EOS where the car wants to traction roll from having too much grip’. Describing the tyre wear in 2WD as ‘crazy’ for 4WD he said, ‘it the same as 2WD, its pretty high’. Asked about qualifying, which for 4WD gets underway tomorrow after the conclusion of 2WD qualifying, he said the only thing he needs to do to the car is ‘fit new tyres’.

Orlowski said his ‘car feels good’ after some ‘small changes from the basic set-up’. The former European Champion added, ‘again the tyre wear is pretty high’. Setting his quickest 3-consecutive laps in CP1, the Pole said, ‘I ran the same set of tyres for a second time (in CP2) to check and it was pretty difficult so it is going to be a new set a run for qualifying’.

‘Really good’ was how Ronnefalk summed up controlled practice. With HB Racing designer Torrance Deguzman at his disposal at a European carpet offroad event for the first time, he said while the car is pretty much how he ran it at the World Championships at Yatabe, it now has a different lighter chassis. Offering more, the 1:8 Offroad World Champion said with this it is ‘super easy to drive and very consistent over the 5-minutes and it still has the outright speed’. Continuing ‘I think it will be good for qualifying’ he also added, ‘I think the chassis will also work good on dirt’ outlining he will remain on in the US after the 1:8 event the Dirt Nitro Challenge to test it as part of preparations for this year’s 1:10 World Championship in China in November.

With his carpet offroad experience limited almost entirely to the Euro Offroad Series, Rheinard said ‘It just feels like no grip so it is difficult, it is completely different to EOS’. The 4-time Onroad World Champion, who is having his first DHI Cup Offroad experience, continued, ‘It just low grip and I still have to get used to it’. In terms of his YZ-4 he plans to make a small diff oil change for qualifying but added, ‘every run new tyres, this is horrible’.

View the event image gallery here.


January 6, 2017

Volker from team-mate Akiyama in DHI Cup seeding

Ronald Volker has topped seeding practice at the DHI Cup presented by LRP in Denmark. The reigning champion was fastest from his Yokomo team-mate Naoki Akiyama being the only driver to run 3-laps in 38-seconds. Fastest by almost 3/10ths from Akiyama, Volker would set his quickest time in the final practice with Akiyama having topped the times in the first of the two runs. Also improving his time in the second run, Alexander Hagberg would complete the Top 3 followed by his Xray team-mate Jan Ratheisky. While 2016 podium finisher Viljami Kutvonen would struggle to only the 10th fastest time, Awesomatix team-mate Freddy Sudhoff would round out the Top 5 times ahead of the VBC of Yannic Prumper.

‘I’m satisfied with how the car went’ was Volker’s reaction after practice. Chasing an 8th DHI Cup title this weekend, which marks the 16th running of the event, he added ‘we kept changing the set-up each run and managed to improve, the grip went a lot higher than expected with the car lifting tyres on the long corners’. Overall happy with the car for the final practice he said ‘it is a little edgy at the beginning of the run so we’ll probably adapt the tyre prep for Q1’.

With the biggest change to be made to his BD8 over the practice rounds being a switch to a harder diff, up & coming Japanese star Akiyama said the car was ‘better’ after the change. Having made his DHI Cup debut last year, finishing 6th, the 17-year-old plans to leave the car unchanged for Q1 feeling his driving is where the greatest improvement will come from. Running a ‘very different set-up’, he said the track which was designed by Volker has a ‘good flow’ but for the 5-minute qualifiers he needs ‘to be more smooth’ and try to get through it with ‘no mistakes’.

‘A bit better, the car feels pretty balanced’ was how Hagberg summed up his ORCA powered T4. Racing in his 13th consecutive DHI Cup, all of which he has been accompanied by his father Bosse, he added, ‘we’ll see how pace is over minutes but it feels alright’. Describing the traction levels as ‘medium-high’ and describing the track as ‘fairly open compared to last year’, the Swede said for Q1 they will make some ‘minor tweaks’ to the set-up but overall the car ‘feels alright’.

With no Formula class at the DHI Cup to dominate, ETS Formula Champion Ratheisky said his P4 pace was ‘a lot better than expected’. Asked about his car the German said ‘I just drive it and have fun’. In terms of changes to the set-up he said the only thing he changed between the two rounds was to ‘just drink coffee with milk & sugar’. Describing the layout as ‘very good’ he is confident his 3-lap pace is a true reflection of his pace saying, the car can run that time consistently for all the run’.

‘So far so good’ was how Sudhoff summed up what is his first race outing since the ETS season opener in early December. Running Awesomatix’ A800, he explained the preproduction run of the first of their new A800X kits has just started and while they have an example of the car here they don’t have enough spare parts to race it. Running his car ‘nearly the same as at the ETS’, he said the big thing is that ‘the driving style is a little different due to the tyres’, the DHI Cup using a handout LRP tyre for touring car. Looking to qualifying he said, ‘I need to make it a little more stable in the long sweepers which is our weak point for now’ concluding ‘on this track consistency is important’.

Prumper described practice as having gone ‘so so’. The German added ‘the car is to edgy and is always on two wheels and I don’t know what to change anymore’. Running a different but unchanged VBC chassis to that which he used at the ETS season opener he said ‘there is a lot traction, its normally not that high here’. For the first of the qualifiers, which will bring Day 1 of the event to a close tonight, he said, “I will keep the same set-up and change tyre prep but don’t know what exactly’.

View the event image gallery here.