Drama at Kimbolton

On the dummy grid at Kimbolton

When Sam started his karting adventure, the ambition was always to get to proper MSA racing. With Sam having passed his ARKS test and with 2017 MSA Licence in hand, we were keen to get to our first MSA meet. Kimbolton always had a facination for me because of the history. The Hunts Kart Racing Club venue is one of the originals, established in 1959 on the site of the base of the 379th USAF Bomber Squadron in World War Two. It is also the closest kart track to us but only open one weekend a month for the race meetings, no corporate karting aspect at all.

The HKRC Chairman was very welcoming when I enquired about going for our first taste of MSA racing. We made our entry, booked a pit bay and turned up on the Saturday for practice. Our first error was not getting there early enough for a track walk. The error became apparent when Sam failed to find the pit entry after the first session and spent extra time on track looking for it! Tears followed and I got a roasting by the officials. The later sessions were better and Sam quickly got up to pace. The weather helped as temperatures reached over 20ºC with clear blue skies. Sam’s practice lap times were eventually down to 51s a real achievement for his first time at Kim.

Our next error was not doing more time on the harder MSA LS2 tyres. We only shod the kart with these for the final practice session and they really needed more heat cycles and laps on them before race day. Having said that the qualifying session on Sunday morning saw Sam just 0.3-0.4 secs off Sam’s friends Charlie and Ollie from Red Lodge who are also novices but with previous experience at Kim. Sam started the first heat in P11 in a grid of 15 and immediately dropped a place to Charlie, which was to be expected as he totally missed the start as the start light sequence is different to RLK. Sam held 12th until the penultimate last lap where he span thanks to a tap from behind. Then in 14th Sam passed two stricken karts to finish in 12th. At least we could say Sam was on the pace with other novices, no shame there.

Heat 2 was red flagged first lap after a collision saw Ollie tended to by paramedics on track but fortunatley walking wounded. Unfortunately that turned out to be a bad omen. The re-run heat 2 saw only 12 karts start and Sam played a blinder passing Charlie and Macie to move into 9th. Sadly a coming together with Macie saw Freya and Charlie pass Sam and eventually 11th was the best he could do.

Heat 3 was where our real drama came. Sam made a great start again to pass Freya and with kart 86 off Sam was into 10th. He tried to hold on to Charlie but couldn’t and with Freya, Macie and 86 closing he went into lap 5 looking back and defensive. For some reason Sam span in Kestrel and hit the tyres hard. The first I knew was he didn’t appear as expected down the start/finish straight. Waved yellows and then a red flag heightened my fears. Running down to the far end of the circuit I could see Sam being attended to by the medics. Eventually I was let onto the track and saw Sam taken from his kart, immobilised on a spinal board and then onto a trolley. I joined him in the ambulance for the short trip the medical centre at the circuit. That was to be the end of our racing for the weekend. A later ambuklance ride to Hinchingbrooke A&E confirmed all was infact okay, spinal X-rays all clear. But this was a real scare for a time, unfortunately our cadet drivers often forget about the dangers and show little fear in the heat of the race.

I need to take this opportunity to thank everyone at the HKRC for the care Sam recieved after his crash and the reassurance they gave us. The marshalls, medics and officials have my utmost respect and thanks. We will be back I hope, with a new suit (previous one now a trophy, Sam having been cut out of it!) and a checked kart (no major damage obvious).

Result: 13th of 15 on the day…without the drama in Heat 3 and spin in Heat 1 Sam would have had sniff at 9th and the novice trophy. But congrats to the girls (Freya and Macie), it was their time to shine!

Next Month: Club2000 and the East Anglian Trophy meeting at Kimbolton??

April Meeting Club 2000: A bad day at the office

Unfortunately the Club2000 April Meeting at Red Lodge continued where we left off in March, in other words not great. Despite arriving at 7.35am we couldn’t get our trailer opening into the awning space behind Rob’s van but we got set quickly. The new DEP exhaust was added quickly before scrutineering, a new regulation requirement from this month. Transponder check was uneventful but Dad got mixed up, reading the wrong time against Sam’s name. It looked like a good 3s off the pace but in fact he was fine just lots clocking the same kind of time. Conditions were nice and dry so for the first time this year we were on SL3 slicks straight off.

For us there was then a long wait, Sam was placed in Heat 3, 4 and 5 so all our racing would be in the afternoon despite the early start.

Heats 3 and 4 saw Sam starting mid-pack and unfortunately lose places after gains off the start. Discipline in holding the racing line and hence being able defend position seemed to be a key learning this weekend.

Heat 5 started well with Sam making a blinding start beating one of the front runners into turn 1 and 2 only to be apparently deliberately punted off by that same experienced racer. This was made worse by Sam getting a warning for contact when I fact he was just the middle domino in a series of contact caused by the kart to Sam’s rear. A visit later to the Clerk of the Course initiated by Sam had us clarifying the incident, all part of racing they say.

For the first time in the last three races Sam found himself back in the B final. Starting from P9 and looking for a top 4 finish to get into the A Final it looked to be a tall order. Off the start Sam was up to P5 with one more place get but sadly an error meant an off and places lost. Frustration reigned and eventually 12th was the best we could muster although the silver lining was PB lap of 47.98s. When we first came to Red Lodge and lapped in 55s in the warm & dry 47s seemed impossible. Yet here we are and 47s it is! However, Sam was very disappointed and it showed, we stayed to watch the A Final for some inspiration but not much helped.

So May next (unless we get to Kimbolton)  see you there!

10 Quick Tips to Start Karting

  1. Try it first…We did Arrive & Drive Bambino at Daytona Manchester
  2. Find somewhere close…within 45 mins so you can go and practice then race without hours in the car/van
  3. Join a Bambino/Cadet Club….We joined YoungStarz at Red Lodge Karting. Good for the basics and get seat time
  4. Decide why your doing it….Yes we all want a Lewis but most importantly have fun, time with the kids, good life lessons!
  5. Go Honda…i.e. 4 stroke not 2 stroke just because the engine work and are cheaper….
  6. MSA or non-MSA…the latter is easier, plenty of Independent Kart Racing series and local circuits including Red Lodge, Rye House, PFI
  7. Avoid eBay for buying a kart…too many nasty old karts out there Karting.co.uk is better or a reputable kart dealer at the local ciruit
  8. Take advice….but realise you will get differing opinions and eventually you need to make your own decisions!
  9. Keep it simple at first…keep the cost down and just get lots and lots of seat time.
  10. Go Racing…the buzz is great! But only when you’re ready. Don’t rush it…confidence gets knocked initially but it will get better.

ARKS Test: Passed!

Very pleased to say last Wednesday Sam took his Association of Kart Racing Schools (ARKS) Test and passed. Having tried last year, this return trip to Rye House was a bit of catharsis. With no previous experience at Rye, it probably wasn’t my best idea to just go and expect Sam to be up to speed on that circuit. The requirement for the driving part of the test is to be within 10% of a mid grid time. On Sam’s first attempt we couldn’t get times down under 48s. Sam didn’t even get chance to sit the paper part of the test.

This time around Sam was more prepared, having done a practice session a week or so ago and lap time down to 44s, things were looking up. Sam sat the paper test first, only getting one question wrong and 100% on his knowledge of the flags. The driving part turned out to be a breeze just 10 laps observed and the examiner was happy. In fact he remarked it was one of the most convincing test he’d seen!

Within the hour the MSA Licence application was in the post!

Sam finds some pace…

So here we are 3 months and 3 races into 2017, F1 is back on the TV and all is well. Having competed in just 4 of 12 Club2000 races in 2016 Sam and I have been looking forward to our first full year racing. Of 59 Cadet drivers scoring points last year Sam finished in 41st position, most importantly we got some experience and we can start this year at least knowing a bit about what we need to be doing.

Here’s a run down of what’s happened so far…

January Race:

Sam doesn’t much like the wet and January was wet, having said that he is growing in confidence in when conditions are not so good. That was proven by a 5th fastest time set on the Odd Practice Session. Heat 2 was Sam’s first heat, starting in 17th things didn’t go well on lap 1 losing 2 places. Lap 2 he got them back as others struggled and further gains put him up to 14th. Eventually he lost one place to his friend Aaron (who had dropped from 2nd to 20th himself after a mishap on lap 2) just one lap before the end.

Heat 4 was next and heading out from P2 was going to be a challenge. In fact a spin on lap 2 saw Sam drop to 15th and then battles with Olly and Freddie saw Sam gain a place and lose it again.

Heat 5 was plagued with difficulty first with a late start due to issues with the timing system. Then Sam plunged from 11th to 19th.

In the B Final we were in P9 of 15 drivers. Sam made steady progress chasing Sophie and eventually overtaking her. A defence then of 6th from the 14 kart gave Sam his best finish in a final to date. In fact, Sam accumulated 65 points over the day so his best race meeting so far.

February Race:

The February meeting was to prove to be Sam’s best meeting to date, scoring 90 points towards the Championship. A chassis change at the end of Jan to a late 2015 Project One seemed to be a positive move. Right from the outset Sam was looking positive even on a cold damp track setting a 3rd fastest time. Heat 2 was Sam’s first race and lap 1 saw him take Freddie and Rocky to move up to 13th from P15. Freddie got that back and move on up to P10. Sam went on to chase Olly down and take a decent 13th. More notable perhaps was the 4th fastest lap on his last lap which was just 0.5s off the leaders best pace.

Heat 3 saw Sam in P3 on the grid. A confident start meant Sam was able to give chase on the leaders whilst the pack were held back for a lap by the 4th place kart. I could hardly watch as Sam continued lap after lap in P3, the two quicker karts worked their way through to 4th and 5th but battled one another leaving Sam to finish in P3. I shed a tear, so proud of him and his first podium in Club2000.

Heat 4 was not so good starting from 10th and with a first lap tangle taking Sam began lap 2 in 18th. Quickly those he chased down his old chassis now being raced as number 11 and moved up. A pass late  on around Macie got Sam 15th. The accumulated points put Sam straight into the A final which was another first. Early gains over the first 2 laps saw Sam up to 16th. But he lost those positions later finishing as he started in P19.

Another best meeting ever with 90 point scored was a great result.

March Race:

Expectations were high going in to March but things would not pan out as expected. Once again it looked like the race meeting would be spent on intermediate tyres, with the track wet and slippery but no rain falling. Sam showed well on the 3 lap transponder check 7th fastest of 14. The draw was good with Sam in Heat 1, 3 and 5. In Heat 1 Sam started in 17th and finished there too, that doesn’t tell the whole story though as places were traded up and down and Sam posted the 5th fastest lap (50.77s).

For Heat 3 the track was much dryer but with a few damp patches and the temperature struggling the choice was still inters. P10 on the grid and a 10th place finish was a solid performance.

Heat 5 was drier still and now a mix of tyres was seen on the grid. Our choice was inters as in P2 we hope to make a good start and then defend. In the end though places slipped through Sam fingers and 9th was a respectable finish even if Sam didn’t think so.

So for the second time ever Sam would be in the A Final. This was however to be a brief affair. Starting back in 20th place Sam made a good start passing a few karts through turn 1 and into turn 2. However, kart 74 our friend Charlie had been punted into a spin out of turn 3 and Sam was unable to avoid him. The resulting bang was hear across the circuit with Sam ripping a tyre from a rim, breaking a rose joint and bending a track rod plus mangling a stub axle badly on the front left. Sam was naturally disappointed but no one was hurt and we spent the rest of the race as spectators in the marshal’s post on the 180 hairpin.

Anyway another 80 points earned toward the championship putting Sam in 21st of 42 drivers.