When the wheels come off…

Date: 27th February 2015
Track: Teamsport Gosport
My PB at this track (before this session): 29.956s
Best lap time this session: 30.599s

As my wife was out for the evening for her leaving party, I thought what better time to do a spot of karting. Speaking to the guys at the front desk, they expected me to top the timing boards on the night, but I wasn’t too sure.

I was first out of the pits in the first session and after a spot of warming my kart up (it hadn’t been used in the previous session, so felt very slippery at first) I started accelerating over the bridge to get up to full speed before the start-finish line. As I prepared to turn into the first corner, I saw a kart coming head-on at me! It turns out that when the other driver came out of the pits, she had turned left instead of carrying straight on.

The track seemed very busy; a number of yellow flags were shown throughout the three sessions, which does nothing for consistency and there was a LOT of overtaking to be done each lap, also compromising my lap times. My fastest lap in the first session was a disappointing 32.5s, but I did top the timesheet. In hindsight, that wasn’t the worst time that I could have pulled out – 11th place had a best lap of 51s.

I had a good chat with the duty manager at the track between the first two sessions and chatted about the upcoming karting with my colleagues at work. There will be 12 karts on track that day and there were lots of concerns that the track will be too busy for proper racing. But the manager wasn’t concerned (as I am a member and I wouldn’t organise it with people who will be crashing all the while) and actually was looking forward to it!

The second session started with me leaving the pits in kart 7, but finishing in kart 11! I wasn’t particularly happy with the response of the kart after the first corner; I tried to turn into the hairpin under the bridge, and had to turn the steering wheel over 90 degrees to get any sort of movement (normally, just a twitch of the steering can start the kart turning in to that corner). I thought that I would just have to drive through the “problem”, so I continued to struggle around the track with lap times ranging from the low 32s to very slow 38 second laps (where I literally had to wrestle the kart around the corners). I persevered until the end of lap 7.

Coming down from the bridge, I heard a clunk and then massive vibrations started to go through the kart. I slowed down and looked at the wheels, but everything looked fine. It was only when I sped up that I noticed that the front right wheel wasn’t going round and round, but wobbling side to side! I drove as carefully as I could back around to the pits to park that kart and get into another. It was almost a seamless change (hats off to the marshals tonight), but this was a true spare; the engine was only started when I pulled into the pit lane, so it being cold was an understatement. Anyway, I warmed this kart up the best I could with the limited time remaining and amazingly, set the fastest lap of the session again (a 31.3).

I had a bit of a chat with lots of different people in the break between session two and three and also had a bit of time to myself. I felt very relaxed having topped the leaderboard in the first two races and set out to have some fun in the final session. It started off quite messy and stop-start with the interruptions of yellow and red flags, but I totally blitzed it. Overtaking isn’t easy at the Gosport track, but I was finding new ways to pass at every corner (my favourite manoeuvre was going around the outside of the wide hairpin under the bridge in order to pass another driver). I managed to post the fastest lap of the evening in this race, a 30.5s lap.

I really enjoyed the evening and I will remember it as the night of many firsts; the first time I have encountered someone driving the wrong way on the track, the first time I have had a kart malfunction, the first time I have overtaken so many people (and not get overtaken on the track myself) and the first time I have topped the timing sheets three times in a row.

On another note, I hope that I can grab someone with a camera to do some photography during my upcoming practice sessions (for the blog) and also the unofficial company karting event that I have organised on the 14th March.

Back to reality… with a bump!

Date: 21st February 2015
Track: Teamsport Gosport
My PB at this track (before this session): 29.956s
Best lap time this session: 30.830s

So, after a brief hiatus following the BRKC, I got back into the swing of things at my home track this weekend. I certainly noticed the difference in the karts and the set up; it felt very awkward and I couldn’t quite get into a comfortable position in the kart (I think I had been spoilt with the GT5 Sodikarts at Formula Fast).

Anyway, I was back doing my usual three-for-two Saturday evening session at Gosport. It was quite a nice evening; I arrived a little late after remembering that I left my helmet and gloves at home whilst driving to the track and it was sub-zero temperatures outside!

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The first session of the three was quite slow and uneventful by all of the drivers; there were a couple of yellow flags where a couple of people misjudged the speed they were carrying through the corners, but other than that, it was fairly unspectacular. My fastest lap was a disappointing 31.8s.

If the first session was slow because of the temperature outside, the second session really heated up on the track! We lined up again in the same karts and in the same order as we had done for the first, but there was definitely an increase in aggression in some drivers this time around. We circled for a few laps until the fireworks started! I had caught up with the driver in front of me, but was biding my time until I found the best spot to overtake him. This waiting did very little to help me as he was driving a very defensive line and it gave the others chance to catch on to my tail. Rammed from behind several times with no real attempt to get past me, I was beginning to get frustrated with the drivers behind. I was eventually caught and overtaken after I was pushed off line again at the final corner.

wpid-photo-2-8.jpg.jpegIt wasn’t as if they disappeared off in the distance, I was just fourth in the queue of drivers making their way around the track in convoy. The defensive driving clearly got to the drivers who overtook me and there was an almighty crash at the first corner where the three drivers in front of me collided with one another. I took an alternative line through the corner and thought I had squeezed through unscathed. The drivers behind me had other ideas; one smashed into the other three, pushing them towards me on the inside of the corner and another then hit me from behind. This jarred my back somewhat, and whilst I slowly made my way around the track again, I seriously contemplated pitting and retiring from the session.

Whilst crawling around the circuit one of the marshals came out in a kart and asked if I was okay. I also saw at least one driver get black flagged, which made me feel like people were being punished for their reckless driving (I haven’t seen it happen before on a timed session). I picked up the pace again, with my last lap being my fastest in this session, a 31.5.

I spent a little time alone in the changing room before the final session; stretching my back out a little and just generally relaxing. The third session was very clean, with no yellow flags at all (possibly because we were placed in the order fastest to slowest in the pits and, ironically, it was the slower drivers who were the most dangerous when trying to overtake others in all the wrong places!). I was satisfied with my times in the last race; consistently (90% of my laps) lapping in the low 31’s, with a fastest lap of 30.8s.

I now feel that I need to compete with others more often down the track, rather than just turning up for the open timed sessions, however, I will be down the track more regularly in the coming weeks; I’ve organised an unofficial karting event with 11 of my work colleagues on March 14th. Everyone is expecting me to win, but I think that the weight disadvantage that I will be carrying compared with my colleagues (30kg+ in some cases!) will massively outweigh the experience I have down there!

#BRKC2015 – What an event!

Here is the long awaited and eagerly anticipated review of my weekend at the British Rental Kart Championship in Milton Keynes.

As readers of my blog and my friends will know, this was my first competitive championship. I didn’t expect to do particularly well in it, but it was an immense challenge for me to even compete against some the best kart drivers in Europe that I couldn’t pass up, even at my early stage in my “career”. I relished the opportunity to test myself, but I became very nervous on the Friday before the designated practice rounds and even more so during the session.

The first thing I realised is that is the gulf in class between the competitors at the BRKC and at my local track is HUGE. The karts were superb (I honestly never drove a bad kart all weekend) and the circuit was very enjoyable but unforgiving; the slightest mistake on the brakes, missing the apex, or not carrying enough speed through a corner was punished. I tried to feel my way around the track on the first practice session; find a reference point for braking into each corner, where to position my kart and what kind of traction I could get on the exit of the corner. Well, that went out of the window after a couple of laps! I just couldn’t find anything to help me and my head was just full of the feeling that I had launched myself in at the deep end and was about to drown.
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I had calmed down (slightly) before the second session, but I was still struggling to come up with anything close to what I thought was respectable (my fastest out of both sessions was 36.085s, when the leaders were setting lap times in the 33’s).

I didn’t have a sleepless night, but I did have a very nervous morning with my stomach doing somersaults before the 7:30am driver briefing. I had read the rules many times before the event, but now it seemed like an encyclopedia of information was being pushed into it.

My first race was at 9am, so I had the chance to watch the first two heats before I had to take the hot seat. I’m not too proud to say that I was overwhelmed at the quality of drivers out there and I was worried that I was going to compromise their races by making a mistake. Which I did.
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I was trying to push for my fastest laptime in the first qualifying session and I had one of the predicted front runners, Remigiusz Drzazga, behind me. Well, I pushed too hard and slid around the hairpin at the end of the back straight, compromising my lap and, unfortunately, also slowing the driver behind me. I was gutted and I couldn’t stop apologising to the driver I had. Fortunately, Remigiusz is a true gent and accepted my apology (as best you can in two karts and with all the noise on the circuit!) and tried to calm me down a little. It did work a little and set the tone for the championship for me; all of the drivers were ultra-competitive, but the majority were also incredibly kind, sporting and supportive towards me during the competition.

I qualified tenth, at the back of the field, with a time of 36.244s. In the race, I just couldn’t keep up with the other drivers. I couldn’t seem to get the whole lap together; I would make a mistake at one turn and this would slow me around the next two corners, the next lap I would nail the problem corner but then mess up the rest of the lap. I also made my first ever “pit stop” in this race, which also showed my nerves. I swung into the pits and stopped in the first box. Only just. My front wheels were just inside the box, but I worried that they weren’t, so pulled forward a little bit more, stopped again and was waved on my way to the second box. No such mistakes in the second box and I raced to the chequered flag.
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I was faster than before, my fastest lap during the race was 35.290s, a significant improvement on my practice sessions. Just when I felt that I was getting to know the track, it changed! One of the features of this year’s championship was that for rounds two and four, the circuit was modified and no driver had ever experienced the new track before their first lap in qualifying.

My second race was at 3pm on the Saturday – 5.5 hours to recover from the first race and boy did I need it! Having taken part in longer sessions than here in the past, I thought a 20 minute race would be a breeze, but I felt that there was an increase in the physical nature of the karting here. My arms ached and my lower back was strained.

I really liked the new circuit; I like to think of myself as a technical driver (I’ve since reconsidered this statement!). Down on the track, however, it was different story. During qualifying, I forgot what track I was racing on, so like a couple of other drivers, I missed my turn-in point on the back hairpin. I ended qualifying with a 38.249s lap; almost three seconds off the pole sitter.
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I performed better in the race, but was nowhere near anyone in front and there seemed to be a steady stream of people coming around to lap me during the race (I was lapped twice by the lead group). Thanks to early pitstops by Arnaud Tinet and Marques Riddell, I spent the best part of ten laps in eighth place before I pitted! The other positive from this race was my pitstop; it was well-timed, clean and probably the best pit stop I performed all weekend! My fastest lap from this race was 36.491s, a massive improvement on my qualifying lap in this session, but a long way off the others.
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I was one of the lucky/unlucky ones who had three heats on the Saturday. My final heat was at 8pm, but I felt physically and mentally exhausted at this point. I can’t remember a great deal about the third heat, I was in auto-pilot mode, just trying to get around the track 35 times without crashing into the barriers or anyone else! Surprisingly (to me at least), I set my fastest lap of the weekend in this race, a 35.015s lap.

I had planned to have a nice relaxing morning on the Sunday, perhaps a lie-in and maybe even pancakes and sausages for breakfast as my final heat on the Sunday wasn’t until 2pm. That didn’t happen, as I was too excited (despite me hurting and being as stiff as a board!). I believe that I was up at 6.30am and was up and about having a shower, getting ready for the day ahead, watching TV in our room (surprisingly enjoying the engineering side of the programme “Edwardian Farm”, which we watched back-to-back in order to stay in the room and relax a little bit more!). Anyway, I was ready for the off at 11am, so we stopped briefly at McDonalds before heading to the track.

I don’t know what had happened to me mentally, but I was raring to go for this final heat. I was facing Ruben Boutens, the reigning BRKC champion (who later went on to retain his crown) and I was so motivated to at least compete with him even from the back of the field. It was also my last chance to compete on this stage, so I laid everything out on the line. My driving may not have pretty, but I was determined not to lose contact with the other drivers as early on as I had in the previous heats. Yet again, on the technical course, I qualified tenth (with a time of 37.257s), but when the race started I was all over the back of the ninth place driver, Paul Hedger (for the third time this weekend) and then, due to an early pitstop by Liam Brierley, I found myself battling for 8th position!
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I might have misjudged the timing of my pitstop in this race, because I felt compelled to pit early to follow Liam’s pit stop. This didn’t quite work out for me as I slipped back into tenth and Paul pitted a lap later to cover off my stop. I did close the gap slightly to Paul during the early pit stops, but I couldn’t keep my early pressure up, when I turned my head to see Ruben closing in on me and it was only lap 11! On lap 12, it was all over in a blink of an eye. I moved to the outside to let Ruben past and put a lap on me.

I thought this was going to be a great opportunity to close back in on ninth place by following Ruben as close as possible and trying to use his lines through the corners. It did work to a point… I set my fastest lap on this course during the first lap of this “following” technique (a 35.731s lap). Alas, whilst I managed to keep him in sight for five laps, this tactic wasn’t going to make up for the massive difference in class and Boutens disappeared out of sight until he pitted. I had another couple of good laps after he passed me again on his out-lap but it wasn’t enough.

Ruben was running away with the race win, so much so that I feared that the only other action I would see was him lapping me for a second time! I was determined not to let this happen after my colleague had tweeted me with a target: Not to be lapped twice in this race. I looked over my shoulder with about four minutes of the race to go and he was within touching distance. It sounds pathetic, but I was not going to be lapped again if I could help it (obviously I wasn’t going to block him if he made it close enough though!). The clock ticked down, to what I thought was about two and a half laps left and Ruben was on the back straight bearing down on me. I managed to complete that lap, but I wasn’t sure if I could hold him off on this lap. I looked straight forward and drove my heart out. As I came around the final hairpin, I saw the marshal come out with the chequered flag. It wasn’t for me (I had another lap to complete to see it) but I loved seeing it wave for Ruben behind me. I really enjoyed the next two laps; it was probably the most minor victory ever, but it was a victory for me. I held myself back from punching the air but I was definitely smiling under my helmet.
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I want to close this post and the BRKC weekend by saying that whilst it was tremendously tough and I was out of my depth this year, I didn’t finish last, I wasn’t the slowest and I WILL be back next year, I WILL be slimmer, fitter and more experienced and I WILL be competing for the bigger points.

To all of the drivers this weekend, thank you. It would have been quite easy to ignore me, to ridicule my poor performances (some of you probably did!) and to write me off as just another amateur, but all I experienced from the guys I chatted to and raced with over the weekend was encouragement and advice. P.S. Thanks to Slawek Piskorz and Matt Curtis for some of the photos on this post!

Mr. Philpot, Mr. Stanley and Mr. Fox, thank you for an amazing event; the organisation was fantastic, the karts were superb and the staff at Formula Fast were exemplary

Mr. Philpot, one last thing… put me down for BRKC 2016!

Useful links

As I have had various requests from work colleagues and friends to give out the links for the coverage of the BRKC weekend, here they are for Android, iOS and various other web addresses that could be useful:

Livestream app (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.livestream.livestream&hl=en

Livestream app (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/livestream/id493086499?mt=8

Livestream website (Official BRKC account): http://new.livestream.com/accounts/6733014/brkc

Brett Gaskin Racing Facebook Page (which will also be streaming my heats live): http://www.facebook.com/brettgaskinracing

BRKC website: http://www.brkc.net

If anything can go wrong, it will!

Date: 10th January 2015 (6 days until the BRKC)
Track: Teamsport Gosport
My PB at this track (before this session): 29.956s
Best lap time this session: 32.054s

My last planned “home” practice before the BRKC, was meant to be a confidence-boosting session where I could try out some new equipment, tactics and practice my race craft. That was the plan anyway…

I could just feel that it was going to be one of those nights when I got to the track, but little did I know what was going to happen when I was racing. We were already slightly delayed before four of the drivers in my session arrived late and we waited for them to get kitted up.

I was first out on track, so I had some clear air to feel the kart underneath me. As many had said that night, the track was very slippery and, additionally, the karts were not very responsive (I believe that all of the karts were fuelled heavily as there were a lot of empty fuel cans being taken out just before our session). One recurring issue through the three sessions were the number of yellow and red flags; in the first session I was feeling comfortable and warming the kart up nicely until lap 8 when the red flags came out.

Nearly ten minutes later, I was still sat underneath the bridge waiting for the lights to change to green (apparently one of the other drivers had come over the bridge at such speed that he crashed and shattered the barriers at the bottom and we had to wait for that barrier to be removed and another one to be fixed in place). I finished with the fastest lap of the session, even though it wasn’t that fast!

The second session was very stop-start with another scattering of yellow and red flags. The next drama was during one of these yellow flags, where a marshal fell over the barrier trying to assist a driver who had buried his kart in the tyre wall. It seemed like a nasty sprained ankle (as I drove past with the marshal on the ground). Again, I finished 1st in the session with a slightly faster time.

In between the second and third sessions, I chatted with a few drivers who were racing against me and I was very pleased to hear them complimenting me on my driving and we got chatting about the track (overtaking and fastest lines through corners) and then we got on to talking about the BRKC.

Maybe my tips helped the other drivers in the third race, or maybe I was just caught behind some back markers as I tried to set my fast laps, as I missed out on the hat-trick of fastest laps by 0.05s. I did stay out of trouble and managed to squeeze out of some tricky situations where other drivers were taking each other out (much use of the “No Bumping” sign here).

All-in-all, it was a satisfying trip to the track and I’m in a good frame of mind to tackle my next big challenge – the BRKC!

The BRKC 2015 draw – ONE WEEK TO GO!

Last night was the live draw for the heats of the BRKC. After a few technical difficulties (and counting difficulties!), we finally found out who we would be facing in the four heats to qualify for the semi-finals and finals.

It was a strange feeling watching and waiting for your name to be pulled out of the trophy; there were nerves, people you wanted to be drawn with, people you definitely didn’t and a lot of first-timers, like myself, who are unknown quantities. For those who watch the FA Cup draw on TV, imagine the nervousness and anticipation that you feel when your team is pulled out and multiply that by 100.

All in all, I think I’ve been given a fair chance with the draw; obviously there wasn’t going to be an easy heat throughout the 36 races in the first four rounds, but there were some “death heats” that will clearly be brilliant to watch but ridiculously tough to compete in.

Below, I have given a summary of the heats that I am participating in with the , with a brief overview and my “one to watch” out of the other drivers.

ROUND 1 (SATURDAY 17th JANUARY 2015) – 09:00:00
Heat 3: Sam Spinnael, Mark Whitelegge, Remigiusz Drzazga, David Birrell, Brett Gaskin, Paul Hedger, Xavier Andrew, Alex Vangeen, Michael Woods, Alexandru Damian

An early race to get me up to speed (quickly!) in the championship. Glad that I can get myself into the swing of things without a lot of waiting around and I will also get the opportunity to watch the first heat to pick up some last-minute tips!

One to watch: Alex Vangeen – Apparently “Mr 3rd place”, but a driver I have a lot of respect for and someone who can challenge for the overall win this year in my opinion.

ROUND 2 (SATURDAY 17th JANUARY 2015) – 15:00:00
Heat 4: Brett Gaskin, Marques Riddell, Jack Woodfield, Paul Hedger, Michael Coppin, Michael Moore, Slawek Piskorsz, Arnaud Tinet, Tim Andrew, Anwar Beroual Smith

Nice break between my first and second heats… Enough time for a light lunch. Maybe a nap? Of course not. The nerves will be building as soon as I finish the first one! In terms of form, this heat will be one of my toughest; Slawek Piskorsz, Arnaud Tinet and Anwar Beroual Smith will all be hugely competitive in this one.

One to watch: Anwar Beroual Smith – Multiple champion (by his own admission on the BRKC page!) and 6th place last year in the BRKC.

ROUND 3 (SATURDAY 17th JANUARY 2015) – 20:00:00
Heat 3: Oliver Bayani, Alex Vangeen, Harry Neale, James Shrimpton, Kyle Power, Gregory Laporte, Mark Whitelegge, Michael Weddell, Robin Kassam, Brett Gaskin

My third heat on the Saturday and the second time that I will be facing Whitelegge and Vangeen. Looking at the previous experience of the other drivers in this heat, there is last years’ 10th place finisher in the BRKC, Michael Weddell, in this heat along with a former world champion. Not knowing much about the other drivers in this field means that I will be watching them in their first two heats because I’m not up to speed on their experience and form at this point in time.

One to watch: Gregory Laporte – Former world champion and winner of various championships around the world. Formidable.

ROUND 4 (SUNDAY 18th JANUARY 2015) – 14:00:00
Heat 6: Will Buxton, Kristian Jennings, Andrew Duff, Ruben Boutens, Lee Jones, Paul Hedger, Nathan Bull, Brett Gaskin, Daniel Truman, Liam Brierley

If I end up needing to win in the final race to get into the semi-finals, I will have to beat the best to be the best. The one driver that I was hoping to avoid through the heats (but also secretly wanting the challenge to race him) was Ruben Boutens. It’s also the third time that I will be facing Paul Hedger this year! But don’t think that this is going to be a “one-man heat”, anyone could cause an upset on Sunday afternoon (I think that fellow blogger, Andrew Duff, could tear up the form book here!).

One to watch: Ruben Boutens – Reigning BRKC Champion. Need I say more?!


All other heats and drivers can be found on the BRKC website, www.brkc.net.

I’m off karting again tonight for the last time before practice on Friday in Milton Keynes!

Excited much? I am.

Getting excited!

With only 10 days to go until #BRKC2015, things are getting exciting and plans are falling into place for the Championship!

If you want to experience the BRKC (and my first competitive championship), you will need to follow me on Twitter, on Facebook and here, on this blog, where you will be able to read my thoughts in the lead up to the events and my views of how things have gone afterwards.

You’ll probably want to look at www.brkc.net, the official website of the BRKC, where you will find all the information, rules and facts about the Championship alongside other driver blogs.

Finally, you will definitely want to sign up (for free) to www.livestream.com (Official BRKC account: http://new.livestream.com/accounts/6733014). It is here that you will be able to watch TV coverage of the event with multiple cameras/angles, expert commentary and all of the live action wherever you are in the world! The coverage starts this Friday (9th January) for the heat draws to find out who I will be challenging to get through to the semi-finals and final!
The heats, semi-finals and final will also be shown LIVE on this channel on the 17th and 18th of January from 7:30am each morning (put it in your diaries now!).

Alternatively, you can come to Milton Keynes for the weekend of the 16th-18th January to cheer me on in person (remember to bring banners and vuvuzelas if they are still around now!).

I can’t wait!

My First Race – Chase the Ace!

Date: 30th December 2014 (18 days until the BRKC)
Track: Teamsport Gosport
My PB at this track (before this session): 30.446s
Best lap time this session: 29.956s

Wow. What a year it has been!

But it wasn’t over until this race, my first competitive race ever. To fill you in on the format first; there was a 5 minute practice session, followed by a single “hot lap” qualifying session, completed by a 45 minute, non-stop, endurance race.

To say that it was daunting to have an endurance race as my first competitive race and amongst all of the “regulars” of which I have heard and seen so much of, was an understatement. But I have to start somewhere and quickly with less than three weeks to go before the BRKC!

I was drawn kart 12 which, during practice was very slippery and continued to be throughout the rest of the race despite my best efforts to keep the tyres warm on a freezing night!

Practice was mediocre, but I think everyone was still trying to warm themselves up, let alone the karts! The one lap qualifying was nerve-wracking. Everyone sitting in their karts, lined up in the pits, as one by one, we had the track to ourselves to set one flying lap to decide our grid positions. I didn’t think that I had done too badly around the first three-quarters of the track, but the slipperiness of the kart bit back on the final hairpin where I pushed slightly too hard and slid around the corner into the start-finish line. From experience, that cost me at least 0.5 seconds which would have pushed me at least one and possibly two places on the starting grid. In the end, I qualified 11th out of 12, which was slightly disappointing, but I think a fair reflection on my performance this far in the evening.

With a 5 minute break between qualifying and the race, I needed desperately to warm my hands, so I ran them under the red hot tap in the hope that they would thaw before the race.

As we were in the same karts as before (I had hoped to have a different kart), we then had to arrange ourselves in the order we had qualified on track. This proved quite difficult for some! One rolling lap behind the “Santa” kart and we were off!

In the first few laps, I was all over the back of the two karts in front, and I seemed to have lost the guy behind me, so I could focus on the overtaking possibilities. I believe that it was lap 8 or 9 where I managed to overtake the only woman in the field. I would love to say that I made it stick and then plowed through the field to win. But I can’t. It was a real challenge and about 5 laps later, I lost the place back to her and stayed there until the end. But breaking my 87 laps into manageable chunks, I set new PB after new PB during the race, including making sub-30s laps on no less than three separate occasions (lap 35, lap 60 and lap 78).

I found the racing very disorientating; I had no idea how many laps I had done, how much time had passed/how much was left, or whether I was doing well in terms of my laptimes. All I remembered, despite being focussed on each corner, was that there was a lot of spectators all around the pits and start-finish straight and that there were a lot of camera flashes as we were racing (I hope to see some of these photographs soon and hopefully add them to this blog!). There are also a lot of onboard youtube videos if you would like to find them (search for “Chase the Santa”).

I ached after the race. My ankles had gone completely. I was sweating. I had lost a fair bit of weight. But nevertheless, I had completed the race and was only 2 minutes off the leader at the end. 10th place was a success for me (at least I wasn’t last!) and I had upped my game to break the 30s barrier for the first time at this track.

I was also pleased to hear that I had been commended for my sportsmanship for allowing the leaders past without causing them any trouble. I was very aware that I was not racing against the leaders, so I shouldn’t disrupt their races and battles.

It’s a start… Now I need to finish it in Milton Keynes!

I’m back… But am I back on top?

Date: 23rd December 2014 (25 days until the BRKC)
Track: Teamsport Gosport
My PB at this track (before this session): 30.486s
Best lap time this session: 30.446s

Well it has been a long time since I was last on the track. After my last blog post, I suffered a severe chest infection (the dosing up that I mentioned in the last post didn’t help, I was put on strong antibiotics, a course of steroids and given inhalers from the doctor who was so shocked with the symptoms I was displaying wanted to send me to hospital!).

So I had an enforced month’s break from my karting, but on the night before Christmas Eve, I ventured out on track again.

It was actually a pleasure to drive in this session; there was a mix of very experienced drivers and novice drivers who, surprisingly and refreshingly, were very aware of their surroundings and generally moved out of the way of the regulars whenever they saw an opportunity.

In the first session of two, I was feeling my way back into it in the first couple of laps, even making some amateur mistakes (bumping a couple of the inexperienced drivers whilst they were slowing and moving to the side [I really didn’t read their movements well!]). But, after that, the kart felt good and I was putting in good laptimes (14 out of the next 19 laps were in the 31s’s or better), culminating in a best lap time in this session of 30.988s.

The second session was amazing; I was actively racing the more experienced guys all over the track and there were some amazing overtaking manoeuvres being pulled off. A couple of laps from the end, I fell victim to one of these overtakes. If you were a fan of Formula 1 in the 2000’s, you will most likely remember Hakkinen overtaking Schumacher at Spa. If you don’t, there is a video below.

It was almost a carbon copy of the above video, where I played the part of Michael Schumacher. I couldn’t be angry with the result; I chose my normal, outside line around the back marker, he took a chance and went inside. I was amazed that this had just happened (I didn’t think three karts could squeeze through side-by-side at that point on the track). I congratulated the other driver following the session on this move because I was still in awe.

I created a new PB in this session of 30.446s, which I am pleased with, but I am still struggling to break that 30s barrier.

I am trying to step up my practice for the BRKC, so before this session started I booked on to the “Chase the Ace Santa” on the 30th December at Teamsport Gosport, which is an endurance race: 1 lap qualifying followed by a 45 minute non-stop race. It’s going to be tough!

Being outstanding is good, but standing-out is better?

Date: 21st November 2014 (56 days until the BRKC)
Track: Teamsport Gosport
My PB at this track (before this session): 30.486s
Best lap time this session: 31.113s

With a change to my normal karting schedule (a Friday night after work, rather than a Saturday) and, as my work colleagues would tell you, I have not been particularly well over the past few days, but I still hoped for a good perfomance out on the track having dosed up on cold/flu/cough remedies all day. I was on my own this week too, as Mary-Anne had gone to an awards ceremony for work.

A lot of you will be thinking that this post starts with a lot of excuses for a bad performance, but I want to make it clear that none of this had any impact on what happened out on the track.

Gosport-trackI was almost going through the motions at the start of the first session. Stuck in some traffic at the beginning, but a couple of good moves pushed me up the field. It was on lap 13 that the fireworks started! For those who know the Gosport track, you’ll be aware that there is a bridge that goes over the top of the track to bring you back to the start-finish line. I took the fastest line at the hairpin, leaving me the inside line at the bridge. The bridge is about three karts wide, but this driver forced me into the tyre wall even though, at the point of impact, I steered full-lock into his kart to avoid being buried in the barrier. I’m not going to name the driver that did it, but for the rest of the evening this kind of behaviour continued from him. I backed off massively after this incident but still managed to put in a series of faster laps together at the end.

This group of sessions were also different for another reason; we kept the same kart all the way through and the karts were not used for the other group (the other group consisted of a group of kids so they were using the 125cc karts instead). This was both good and bad; good because it gave you the opportunity to learn the kart, but bad because if you got a stinker of a kart, you were stuck with it!

I was hoping that the incident in the first session was a one-off, but I knew who I was looking out for in the second (I remembered the kart number from the previous race). I thought by starting first in the pitlane, this would allow me to have the clean air for at least a few laps, but no, this wasn’t to be the case. I’ve been in some aggressive races in the past, but when one driver forces you out of the way, throws his fist in the air at you and then cuts straight across you whilst making an inappropriate gesture, that just is not on. The red mist descended and for the rest of the race, I was determined to re-overtake him (which unfortunately didn’t happen!).

wpid-dsc_0007.jpgI was so angry after the second session that I walked out of the pits with my helmet on and didn’t take it off for a good few minutes. I swore that I would be getting him back in the third session. I stood in the pits with my helmet on and my visor up staring at him as he got ready for the next race.

The third session began with the rival, kart 16, two places in front of me in the pits. I sat in my kart at the end of the pit lane just staring right at the back of his head, almost as if he had a massive target on it. But as soon as the lights went green, I changed my attitude and allowed everyone behind me to overtake. Four slow laps later, I took the bull by the horns and put in 14 consecutive quick laps with no-one infront of me (all within a second of each other), including my fastest lap of the night. I then got caught in a little bit of traffic at the end, but kart 16 was nowhere to be seen (apart from overtaking me and another kart under yellows right at the end!!)

Normally I would round it up here, but it didn’t quite end there. I went into the cafe to pick up my print-out and someone had put mine into a spillage of some sort, so my printout was soaking wet. I really wasn’t impressed, but at that point, I just wanted to get in my car and get home.

Looking at the data analysis, I was again Mr. Consistency, with my second best session average ever at this circuit. I am slightly concerned at my lack of overtaking in recent races leading up to the BRKC.

Also, on a different note, whilst wearing my white helmet made me stand out somewhat compared to the other drivers, with my full race suit on, I feel like I am the target for the bullies/jealous drivers.

photo 3
Before…
wpid-photo-5-2.jpg.jpeg
After…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Does anyone have any tips that they would like to share with me? Or does anyone fancy coming racing with me one day? (I would like to organise a private session, with practice, qualifying and race session soon)

My next session is on Tuesday after work (a freebie), so we will see how I do then!