Well I’ve got some pics. and video footage from camp corner, but no in car footage i’m afraid, Castle Combe’s policy, suction type camera mounts aren’t allowed; quite right really.
Unfortunately it wasn’t a trouble free day today :'(, but I still returned home under my own steam in a normal fashion, and happy with the cars overall effort; more on that later.
To start, what glorious weather we had yesterday morning. Rain!
Just what you want, I think not. The day would be split by sessions of various driver skill level. I always go for the novice group on the basis it’s not the fastest car in the world, but i’m not the slowest driver (Well I like to think I am), I had 4 sessions, 20mins each. From around 2ish it would then become open pit lane so all can mix and “play”. I was going to fit the track tyres when I got there but it was so wet, I thought road tyres were only the way to go; how I was wrong. First thing was the sighting laps, 4 laps at around 50mph to get you used to the track and your car, I was struggling so much I was fighting to keep it on the track never mind behind the pace car. Considering all shocks were on fully soft and I was using road tyres, every corner even though I was doing maybe 30/40mph the back end was stepping out of shape; things didn’t look good for the rest of the day
.
As soon as we came back in from the sighting laps, it was time to go out for my first session. Yet again I struggled through the session tail happy at every moment, managing a top speed of around 80mph down the straight, and on about lap 4 of the session under reasonably light braking the nearside rear locked up out of the blue spinning me 360 on the track, luckily with no-one around and plenty of distance away from anything which would damage the car. After completing the session, it was straight on with the track tyres, and what a difference. Even though you wouldn’t think it, I had something new for the day, some grip.
The track was still wet but there was much more grip. The back felt solid now, and it was now only understeer under acceleration, which I was much happier about. The rain stopped and the track started to dry out, this is where we get to the 4th session. As the track dried I was finding more grip and was starting to go quite well; a Porsche 944 and Caterham were no match for the HPE and were overtaken during the session, then here’s the BUT.
As I approached quarry corner (25% of all uk track day accidents happen at this corner!) the engine suddenly died, but managed to slow the car down enough under braking and going through the gears to get round and pull to the side of the track. As I waited to be towed back in, my initial thoughts were, is it a belt, has something let go engine wise, or is it fuel starvation. As soon as I got back to the paddock it seemed ok engine wise and all belts present and correct. As it was reading a quarter of a tank of petrol and the amber light flickered going through the chicanes I thought it was down to this. Held the air flow flap open, built fuel pressure up, turned her over and started first time. I went straight to circuit motors, you got it, right next to the circuit and put £20 of fuel in, job done i thought.
It then went to open pit and the track was almost fully dry, so I stiffened the suspension by 8 turns all round. The car was absolutely flying around that’s all I can say. I still overtook the 944 even though the driver was starting to become half decent and the track was dry, matching it for pace down the straights and much faster than him through the corners. After almost a lap of holding me up, he finally gave way. I say gave way, I mean had a drag race down the main straight to get past him; Italian horses won
.
Few laps later, and exactly the same happened again, turned out of the chicane and the engine just died, this time there was well over a half a tank of fuel so that ruled fuel starvation out, and being the same again I was confident it wasn’t belts, it wasn’t. I had no spark! Exactly what I didn’t want, like you do, we fitted a spare coil (2), ignition amplifier and distributor, no luck. Put all the original parts back on, then eventually noticed the yellow wire on the battery terminal wasn’t looking brilliant. Forced it into its connector and presto I had a spark! I’m guessing due to the forces being put through when cornering this was disconnecting the wire just enough to cut ignition while still looking as though it was connected. Tightened everything up, put the road wheels back on and drove home without a problem. The first time it happened I can only guess I knocked the wire or battery while playing with the air flow meter.
Generally I was pleased with the car, in the dry it handles superbly, not too differently to an impreza estate! Brakes seemed good for what they are, the quick shift is good, found all the gears with ease, and the gearbox shock seemed to help with cornering through the chicanes, so generally all positives for the day. Only criticism would be when reaching the limiter in 4th, changing to 5th is like hitting a brick wall, where trying to squeeze that last “19mph” is a struggle; I was told the maximum reading was around 108mph on the speedo.
Quotes of the day come from two friends, which were passengers:
Ben, “Its certainly got some grunt”
Mark, “It handles and brakes much better than I thought, it’s great fun I’m well impressed”
That’s far too much writing
, so here’s some pic’s:
More pics. can be found here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lanciamad/sets/72157622768683859/and some video’s:
Castle Combe November 2009 Lancia Beta HPE McMillan SupportLancia Beta HPE Castle Combe November 2009 McMillan Cancer Support Track Day 28/11/09Castle Combe McMillan Cancer Support Lancia Beta HPE November 2009