As I indicated in the bold sentence half way down my initial post the 2 posts above have been posted with only circuit racing vision.
Brian I suggest you have a look back at the records section of the rule book at the chart of classes available (which is dam confusing I might add with duplicates listed) and also in conjunction with the restricted noise records I count 33 nitro classes, 37 if you include tether hydro. 21 petrol classes and 7 electric classes on the chart and 14 if you look at the records held. You will need to enlighten us as to where there are more electric classes than anything else.
I am not knocking the Offshore series I think it is a brilliant series as it is getting people racing. I merely was pointing out the cost are prohibitive for us South Islanders to compete all rounds. Hell I would join in as well if it was cost effective.
How many north Islanders crossed the ditch to my round of the Offshore series last year to support us down here? Diddly squatt! Why? Bet costs played a big part and as well missing 1 round won’t greatly affect the final results given most of you did the other 8 rounds in your Island.
And yes like you mention Bruce has set the bar and totally deserves the accolades for his results last year.
On a similar note a member of our association has officially run over 100kmh in A,B C2 and sport petrol hydro. C2 tunnel and also a 6S hydro. Also unofficially on GPS he has run over 100kmh in 1/8 scale hydro, P2 and P3 hydro, P2 Mono and P2 deep Vee. That’s 11 different Classes!!! And believe me he has got as much satisfaction doing that as what Bruce will have by winning the Offshore series.
For your information some of our classes have originated from speed trials and grown from there. Others have just remained as speed classes.
My first Nationals were here in Blenheim in 1977. They ran for 5 days and needed that to get through all the events eg Teather hydro, and straight running. Naviga triangle and 100m speed. also held as well, was mono and hydro matrix heat racing then we also ran 1 hour endurances in each engine class. With over 30 competitors it was a busy 5 days.
They ran 100m speed in the Taylor dam on about 180m of usable water. Local man and one of our pioneers Ron Loader set the all comers water speed record at 81.81kmh in that pond with a K&B 6.5 engine in a Hughey Hydro. I can remember several of us newbees looking at each other and saying bloody hell thats fast! How are we ever going to beat that.
This started a quest not only to be the first to break the 100kmh barrier but to be the fastest in other classes. There were regular speed runs on Lake Rotongaio in Taupo every couple of months which saw Peter Collier John and Malc Belworthy Nigel Wong and his Wong Dong hydro and Tony Rutledge up from Wellington. Alf Christian from Taranaki and his petrol Barry Jessop and Skip Francis from Rotorua, Carl Hansen and Archie and Kenny West from Whangarei not to mention Dallas(DAG) Gibson Craig Poppe and Richard Hamilton from Taupo.And me of course!!!
We would be out there at daylight set up the sight poles then all sorts of creations would appear from the cars. And it was simply classed as either a mono or deep Vee , a hydro or a tunnel and the engines fitted into the respective classes. And away we would go. Crates of beer would be storred in the lake to keep them cool and when the water got too rough we’d hook into the beer . Someone would do a lunch run to the shop and come back with pies and sammies and rolls. When the water went flat again late afternoon we were at it again till dark. We would go again at it Sunday morning till the water turned then everyone packed up and went home in time for work Monday morning.
K&B released the 3.5 outboard so Nigel turned up with one on an A Hydro in 1980 So the outboard classes were created there and then. Then Merve Sowden from Auckland turned up with one soon after. Again they were either a mono Deep-vee hydro or tunnel. Then K&B released the 6.5 outboard so the B class was created at the speed runs first by John Belworthy in 1982. Then K&B released the 7.5 inboard engine for the US B class. We were still sticking with the Europeans and 6.5cc for B class. Merve Sowden and Archie and Kenny fitted the 7.5 onto the 6.5 power head to run C class in 1983. In mono Deep vee and hydro. No Need for committee meeting or AGM’S to approve classes it was simple. If there was not a class for it we created one so long as it fitted the hull criteria and engine criteria in the rule book. We kept it simple.
Peter Collier claimed the honour of being the first to crack 100kmh with a C hydro in march 1981 at 102kmh using his own designed and built tuned pipe. He was first over 110kmh in May that year with 115kmh. Oamaru’s Bruce Watt first to 120 in August 82 and tony Rutledge first to 130 in 2001
In B Hydro DAG first to the ton with his DAG stick June 82 at 111kmh and August that year Barry Jessop ran 114 with a DAG stick and (turbulator) and his own designed and hand made pipe. Jan 83 Barry runs 120 then in the May runs 122kmh a record that still stands today in the restricted noise category.
A Hydro took a little longer and I can claim the honours of first to 100kmh with a best of 104 queens birthday weekend 1991. It was also my first ever run over 100kmh after over 10 years of trying. I had got to 99.8 with a K&B 7.5 hydro several times but that 100 was so elusive
It is my contention that electric should be treated exactly the same as nitro and petrol. Where you have classes that are regulated soley by hull type and voltage. Where by it is a mono, deep-vee hydro or tunnel. Then you have the battery voltage N2 P Q S T same as the USA and Europe. No restriction on hull length or size except for the sport or scale classes.
Generally for speed you run 1 hull size down for speed than what you would run for oval racing eg you run a B motor in an A hull, a C2 motor in a B hull etc. . Electric will be the same .SAW boats will be smaller than their circuit racing counterparts.
As I pointed out in a previous post regarding disabilities we have to deal with, we sometimes have to adapt to what we can do and not what we want to do.
Same goes with racing for us down here. We can’t get the circuit race events that you have in the north island so we are focusing on speed as we have the course and as I proved last year you can also run those boats round the 2 lap oval as well up at Tauranga. And claim records.
So let’s get these electric classes up and running for speed then we will have a better chance of growing something from that.
The Open classes have to go from record and 2 lap classes as every class we run will covered in our rules.
As I said above the open class should be a regatta only event
In Speed or 2 lap it is just another avenue For someone to gain presidents cup points out of something already covered in the rule book.A double Wammy as it were. The Open class will also always favor the bigger engine/voltage classes anyway so there is no incentive to build the smaller set ups for those that can't afford to the way the electric classes are at present
Nitro
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