The JConcepts Indoor National Series has arrived at the fifth & final stop on its 2013 calendar with HobbyTown USA Hobby Plex in Omaha, Nebraska, playing host to the ‘Finals’ of the popular electric offroad championship. Attracting a competitive entry, including newly crowned World Champion Steven Hartson, day 1 of the 3-day event is an opportunity for drivers to work on set-up with open practice being split between open wheel cars and Short Course. With most of the top drivers focusing their attentions on running their 2WD buggies, it is tyre choice and preparation that is keeping them busy so far.
Winning his first World title with a thrilling victory at the 4WD Buggy World Championships in Chico at the end of September, Associated driver Hartson is pleased with how his mid motored B4.2 is running so far. Describing the track as ‘overall pretty simple’, he said the height of the rostrum gives a ‘weird’ drivers view and takes a bit of getting used to. Switching between JConcepts Barcodes in Gold and Green compounds the 21-year-old said the Gold compound for now feels a little faster but a driver known for attention to detail & knowledge in tyre prep he still has a few things he wants to try in relation to pin sizes. Also racing 4WD Buggy and 2WD Short Course, he said he will run these in the evening practice runs in preparation for tomorrow’s qualifiers.
Team-mate Ryan Maifield has also focused his efforts on what he called the ‘prestigious class’. Running his mid motored B4.2, which features a number of new parts from JConcepts he said he was very happy with a set of Black compound Barcodes he ran fresh out of the bag. Describing the track as ‘not difficult’ he sad it still had its ‘own challenges’ but overall it was a fun layout to drive. Like Hartson, Maifield will also run 4WD Buggy and 2WD short Course, winning both classes at the previous round of the JConcepts Indoor National Series in Boston, and will switch his attention to these cars this evening.
Responsible for both drivers, Team Associated team manager Brent Thielke is racing 2WD Buggy and Mod Truck. His first time to visit the Hobby Plex facility he said the track is fun to drive adding that the surface is a little rougher than what he used to for an indoor track. Having brought a ‘bunch of used tyres’, he is using them to gauge how different pin heights effect his mid motor B4.2.
Winner of 2WD Buggy at the Fall Indoor Nationals in October, Team Losi Racing’s Dustin Evans said his day so far has all been about trying to figure out tyres. He said everything he has used so far works but its getting how much they need to be broken in and sanded that he is looking to perfect. Although he raced here at the 2009 ROAR 1/10 Offroad Nationals, this is his first time to race on the track since they enclosed it with walls and a roof. Describing the track as having ‘not a whole lot to it’ he added there are a few sections which to get right are a bit tricky.
One of the few top drivers to have raced here previously this year when he took part in the Novak Race, Cody Hollis said the track is a lot different now, the snow outside probably having something to do with that. The Team Losi Racing driver said so far he has done very little to his TLR22 saying it is all about getting the right tyres first. In addition to 2WD Buggy, Hollis will also race Mod Truck and 2WD Short Course this weekend.
Making his debut at Hobby Plex TLR’s JR Mitch summed up the facility as a ‘cool place’ and the Florida driver meant that both subjectively and literally. Joking that he had gone from ’82 to 22 degrees’ he was here for racing and he was looking forward to it. Having ran both his 2WD and 4WD Buggies he said he was like everyone else playing the tyre game and tyrying to ‘follow the leader’.
View our event image gallery here.
Track Name – HobbyTown USA Hobby Plex
Country – USA
Location – Omaha, Nebraska
Direction – Clockwise
Surface – Dirt
Previous key events hosted – 2009 ROAR 1/10 Offroad Nationals, 2011 ROAR 1/8 Electric Offroad Nationals
The JConcepts Indoor National Series is in Omaha, Nebraska this weekend with the impressive HobbyTown USA Hobby Plex facility hosting the Finals of the popular five event tour of America. Situated about 45-minutes from Lincoln where the HobbyTown franchise all began, the Hobby Plex facility will soon celebrate 10 years of business having opened its doors here in 2004. Housing an impressive hobby store, an indoor carpet track and a now indoor offroad track it occupies a total space of 32,000 sq feet.
Originally the offroad track was outdoor but when rain affected proceedings while hosting the 2009 ROAR 1:10 Offroad National Championships, owner Ken Kailen decided he didn’t want this to happen again and so decided to enclose the offroad track. After 2-years of going through planning it was completed just in time for its second ROAR Offroad Nationals when it hosted the 1:8 Electric classes in 2011. Luckily for drivers this weekend he made that decision as outside there is a covering of snow on the ground. The Onroad carpet track, which is in the same area in which all drivers pit, hosted the 2008 ROAR Carpet Nationals and will again host the event in February so they are no strangers to hosting key events.
As a race venue Hobby Plex caters for around 200 racers each week on its offroad track with dedicated nights of racing for Dirt Oval and Short Course with Saturdays set aside for the regular 1:10 classes. Such is the size of the track they also run 1:8 Nitro with the latest round of their Winter Championship attracting over 90 drivers.
Store Manager Alex Sturgeon, who is also responsible for the maintenance of the offroad track and who it is great to see is racing himself this weekend, has built and presented a very nice track for the JConcepts Indoor National Series finals. The layout of the large track, which is producing circa 22-sec lap times in 2WD Buggy, looks relatively easy but with a lot of elevation up towards the rather tall drivers stand it is proving a little more challenging. A nice touch is the blue painted infield which really helps define the track layout.
Image Gallery
A perfect 60-minute display of driving netted Tadahiko Sahashi the 1:8 Onroad World title this evening in Japan. Making his World Championship final debut, the Serpent driver cruised to victory to becomes the 11th driver to lift the biggest prize in the sport’s oldest category taking a comfortable win over the Mugen/OS pairing of Takaaki Shimo and Atsushi Hara. The 19th running of the World Championship, Sahashi’s win marks Italian manufacturer Picco’s first World title in the sport’s Formula One category and the first title for Serpent since 1997. In the pitlane it was Picco’s Eduardo Picco and Serpent designer Michael Salven who ensured perfect fuel & tyre stops en route to the 24-year-old taking a hugely popular win.
Commenting on the race Sahashi, the younger of the famous racing brothers, said he was ‘super happy’ to win especially in front of a home crowd. Making two tyre stops, the first for just new ZAC tyres on the left side and the second for a full fresh set, he said everything went perfectly. Complimenting the handling of his 977, and the performance & run time of his engine, he was particularly thankful to his pit crew for their faultless stops. Running 5-minute fuel stops, he said once he got the gap over Shimo to above 10-seconds he started to control his pace. Unable to hold back his emotions braking into tears as he drove his final lap, all his rivals paid tribute to his flawless drive.
Shimo was frustrated by not being able to take the challenge to his fellow countryman. The pre-event favourite, said a wrong choice of set-up for the final left the rear end of his MRX-5 loose preventing him from staying in contact with Sahashi. Happy with every other aspect of the final, doing two stops to change all four tyres each time, he said ultimately Sahashi did the perfect job including getting his set-up right for the track conditions and is the deserving winner.
Not called a legend of the sport for no reason, Hara’s third place finish continues a run of World Championship podiums. Starting from fifth on the grid having qualified in the 1/4 finals, the former Electric Touring Car and 1:8 Offroad World Champion made it four consecutive World Championship podium finishes having finished 2nd in both the nitro and electric touring car Worlds and 3rd in the 1:8 Offoad last year. Declaring himself ‘maximum happy’, he said while everything in the final came together including his partnership with former champion Kenji Osaka, he said he lacked pre-event track time to be a title contender. Adapting his driving style more to how most 1:8 drivers race he said this helped a lot, highlighted by him recording the fastest lap of the race. Making three tyre stops in the race, the first and third only being to change the left side, he said the strategy from Osaka was a good one.
Finishing fourth, having started from seventh on the grid, Mugen driver Shinnosuke Yokoyama was disappointed to lose out on a podium finish by just 2-seconds. The 21-year-old, who was a 200mm Worlds finalist in 2010 where he also just missed out on the Top 3, said his MRX-5 was really good in the race but engine flame outs during both his tyre stops cost him the place.
Taking the honour of being the best non-Japanese driver, Xray/Max driver Carmine Raiola ended the race in fifth having started 4th. Making his first World’s final, the Italian National Champion said he was happy with result adding that having to make three more fuel stops than his rivals finishing any higher was always going to be a tall order. Doing two tyres stops, changing all four tyres on each occasion, the 22-year-old said he was pleased with his race pace which saw him set the second fastest lap time to Hara.
Making his Worlds debut and putting himself in the final having bumped up from the 1/8 finals, Swiss driver Silvio Hachler was happy to finish in the Top 6 saying he gave his best. The 21-year-old described the pace of the final ‘as incredible’ saying but for one mistake he felt he drove the perfect race but still it left him in 6th position such was the pace of the leaders. Making three tyre stops, the first and last only for replacing the outside tyres, he said he was happy with that strategy.
Flaming out on the start line leaving him a lap down, HB’s Teemu Leino would finish recover to finish 7th on his and the R8 Worlds debut. Describing 1:8 Onroad as the Formula 1 of r/c racing, he said he was happy to make the Main, with 1:8 Offroad now the only class he has failed to reach the final at a World Championship. Following his flameout, he said he knew he needed to try something if he was to salvage anything from the race. Starting the race with Protoform’s R18 which on new tyres worked well but then starting pushing as the tyres worn down, he changed to an R15. Giving him more steering he said he declared himself happy with his overall performance in Japan.
Unfortunately having put in a stunning recovery drive in the semi final to make the Main, we never got to see European Champion Jilles Groskamp take the fight to the Japanese. The Team Shepherd/Maxima driver was the only one to serious threaten the chance of a Japanese winner over the week, but a flame-out just 2 and half minutes into the race was the start of a troubled race for the Dutch ace. Working his way back up to as high as third, in the second half of the race after changing all four tyres on his Velox V8 the engine suffered the first of a series of flameouts. Pushing hard to try and make up time with around 5-minutes to go he hit a curb and with the car not feeling right he decided to pull in so as not risk interfering with the other drivers who where battling over podium placings. Watching the final few minutes of the race from the rostrum he said looking at Sahashi driving he said even had everything ran faultlessly it would have been hard to beat the Japanese driver.
View the event results here.
View our event image gallery here.
Final Result
1.(1) Tadahiko Sahashi (JPN) – Serpent/Picco – 202/1:00:10.891
2.(2) Takaaki Shimo (JPN) – Mugen/OS Speed – 201/1:00:02.178
3.(5) Atsushi Hara (JPN) – Mugen/OS Speed – 200/1:00:09.866
4.(7) Shinnosuke Yokoyama (JPN) – Mugen/OS Speed – 200/1:00:12.069
5.(4) Carmine Raiola (ITA) – Xray/Max – 199/1:00:11.554
6.(8) Silvio Hachler (CH) – Mugen/Novarossi – 196/1:00:17.373
7.(6) Teemu Leino (FIN) – HB/OS Speed – 190/1:00:15.105
8.(10)Charlee Phutiyotin (THA) – KM Racing/OS Speed – 187/1:00:07.416
9.(3) Meen Vejrak (THA) – KM Racing/OS Speed – 179/59:31.609
10.(9)Jilles Groskamp (NL) – Shepherd/Maxima – 178/56:13.274