Race report
Packing tetris complete, I began the 2 and a half hour drive up to Donington on Saturday afternoon with a view to getting a good spot in the paddock, unloading the car and then heading to the hotel for the evening.
An uneventful journey followed but they weren't letting any Sunday competitors into the paddock until after 5pm, so I joined the queue up to the main gate.
once in, there was plenty of space and I pitched up next to our friends at Recycled Racing who surprised me with their "Jarman" broom. so named apparently after i borrowed it from them many years ago after an excursion into the gravel and duly ruined their nice new broom!
With the gazebo arriving in the morning, it was just a case of dropping the car beside the trailer to reserve a spot for the night.
The next morning John and i convened at the track at 7am for a track walk as the sun came up. Always a nice way to start a race day and we always do it if we can.
And after that it was down to business setting up.
Although I had packed as much as possible into the car, in theory there wasn't much to do so we only unpacked the bare minimum.
The car was already brimmed so we just swapped the front wheels for some fresher rubber and set the tyre pressures ready for quali. After that Rob arrived and we discussed the day's strategy over a coffee.
The weather was clearly going to play a part but what that would be remained to be seen but we were hopeful for a dry qualifying at least.
With new brake pads in it was decided that john would take the first stint, bed the brakes in and then build speed and settle in. He was nervous having never raced at Donington. (although he's done many laps of testing there)
This is what a nervous John looks like!
john's stint went well and he set a decent time that would put us where we wanted on the grid so I took over with the hope to improve if possible.
But after a couple of laps getting warmed up I tucked in behind Joe Hathaway (who's Clio is the same spec as mine with my race engine) and decided to see if I could keep up.
Although he was faster in a straight line, in the bends and under braking I was probably quicker...until the car started stuttering.
Just when we thought we had sorted everything it started losing power at the top end and I decided to pit just before the end of the session as i clearly wasn't going to go any faster. P3 in class which was good enough.
As the race wasn't until 5:20 we had plenty of time to trouble shoot the issue and i was pretty certain it was fuel again.
By this time the rain was coming down and with the wind the gazebo wasn't giving us much protection. Pretty miserable conditions to be working on a car but at least we weren't crawling around underneath it!
After isolating the high pressure pump we wanted to confirm fuel was getting out of the tank. but priming the lift pump wasn't showing any fuel at the rail.
Next we disconnected the line from the swirl pot and found fuel was getting there fine.
more bashing heads and a decision to check the filter again. ( we did this at Snetterton already)
Sure enough though it was clogged! The new fuel tank must have some crap still in it. Once this was cleared fuel was flowing nicely.
Problem solved!
Throughout the day rain continued until about 4pm. With at least an hour and a half before our race we were hopeful the track might dry but with it being so cold it was looking good and sure enough by the time we were called to the assembly area it was clear the race was going to be challenging.
Lined up in P11 on the grid, Matt Churton in front of me in a lower class Clio (no throttle bodies) had done a great quali itme but as we stood by the cars he mentioned that he would be braking early into Redgate at the start so feel free to take a lunge but please don't go into the back of me! So that was one place made up before we even moved!
Beside him was Peter Parkin in his 306 who was P2 in our class. So he was the target at the start.
We had agreed at the beginning of the day that a podium spot would be a good result considering the issues and lack of testing.
The time came all too soon to start the green flag lap and straight in to a rolling start.
If you can be bothered, the on board video is here. It might seem painfully slow but you will see from my steering wheel that it was pretty greasy, especially at the start.
Donington Race 29-3-26
I had a decent start and as planned, passed Churton and also Parkin through Redgate but not before John Bellamy in his pesky, but pretty quick, Pug 106 got past and prevented me keeping up with the lead pack. It was so slippery off line it just wasn't worth the risk of making a move. (watching it back now of course I'm shouting at the screen at every corner!)
We had a fair fight though until the pit window opened and simulaneously there was an almighty shunt on the start finish straight after the leader made a mistake, lost the lead and then tried too hard to retake it by trying to get through a gap that wasn't really there. He was turned in to the pit wall and very nearly flipped. The end of a beautifully prepaired Civic TypeR and sadly ended with Andrew Windmill, the driver in hospital.
We changed driver as they red flagged the race afterwhich there was a pause for about half an hour or so while they cleared up the mess and gridded everyone up for a restart.
So John continued where I left off, battling with the 106 and that's how the race ended.
P2 in class and 9th overall will do for the first race of the season on a stock engine.
CSCC Live streaming of the day. Our race at 8hrs 42minutes roughly