Horizon Hobby UK Report from the Second Off-Road Wars Round
Sunday 11 November saw the second round of the Maritime Off Road Wars Winter Championship sponsored by TLR and Horizon UK take place at the popular Chatham Dockyards indoor venue.
Once again, a near full house entry with nearly 100 drivers, spanning 12 heats were greeted by a revised track layout that featured some high speed sections along with some tricky, low grip corners. A star-studded entry list saw TLR’s top European driver Darren Bloomfield take on the likes of Kyosho’s Elliott Boots and X-Factory’s Ellis Stafford. Schumacher’s established Off-Road driver Grant Williams was joined by his Top Touring Car team-mate Chris Grainger, who was once again trying his luck in the unfamiliar surroundings of electric Off-Road racing alongside BRCA Large-Scale On-Road National Champion Dave Bowen.
Movember – Raising Awareness for Male Cancer
As has become the norm in recent years, the month of November has been replaced in the UK by the month of Movember; a time of the year when men can revel in their facial hair growing prowess in the name of charity to raise money and awareness about men’s health and in particular, male cancers. Ellis ‘Rafa Staffa’ Stafford was seen sporting his Rafa Benitez moustache whilst Racer’s Ian Peckett was perfecting the art of upper-lip slug balancing with his effort. Top marks though have to be awarded to Kyosho’s inimitable Tony Evdoka whose Super Mario-esque effort was unmatched. It’s a great cause that these guys (and many others) are helping to raise money for and they should be applauded for their efforts.
Back to the Racing…
Racing got underway with a frenetic start that saw some very close racing throughout the field and across all heats but it was Xtreme RC’s Ed Kerry who emerged as the early front runner in 4WD ahead of TLR’s Karl Jackson whilst X Factory’s Ellis Stafford headed up the 2WD challenge ahead of Spektrum’s Grant Williams with both drivers securing 19 laps ahead of the on-road duo of Dave Bowen and Chris Grainger alongside Kyosho’s Elliott Boots.
Remembrance Day
The 11 November is better known as Remembrance Day; a time when we remember all of the people who fought in World Wars and conflicts for their country and at 11am, all proceedings were rightfully halted and a perfect silence for two minutes was observed by all.
As the drivers got more and more used to the track, round two saw a terrifically close battle in 4WD between the two previous front runners but it was Karl Jackson who emerged fractionally ahead of Ed Kerry with less than 0.1 of a second separating them after five minutes of intense competition. In 2WD, 19 laps was becoming the order of the day but Ellis remained top of the pile but TLR’s Darren Bloomfield put himself straight into contention with a time just 0.41 of a second outside of Ellis’ TQ. Grant Williams headed up teammate Chris Grainger for third and fourth respectively whilst the quiet man of RC, Horizon Hobby UK’s Glenn Doman put in a great run to grab fifth overall.
Round three saw no improvements to the 4WD top duo but in 2WD all the front runners improved with the top three of Stafford, Boots and Bloomfield recording times that were demonstrably faster than any in the 4WD class proving that only having two driven wheels was not necessarily any disadvantage on the fast flowing indoor track. Horizon Hobby UK’s Chris Delves popped himself into the frame with a superb 19-lap run after making subtle adjustments to his TLR 22’s rear suspension making it now six drivers all on the magic lap. Just outside 19-lap pace was Racer’s Matt Benfield, Schumacher’s Dave Bowen and Horizon’s Glenn Doman just ahead of Super Mario Evdoka rounding out the top ten.
Last Chance Saloon
Round four saw Ed Kerry hook up a good run with his Durango DEX410 in 4WD to smash the current FTD of Karl Jackson to safely secure the coveted pole position ahead of the TLR man. However in 2WD, there was still much to play for with FTD seemingly within the grasp of any of the top three drivers. Darren Bloomfield, starting third on the stagger grasped the opportunity and quickly established himself to be on a potential TQ run. With every driver pushing as hard as they possibly could, it was inevitable that mistakes and errors would occur but in the end, none of the front runners were able to match their earlier times due to traffic problems, congestion on track or simple error making and so they’d line up with Stafford on pole, Boots second and Bloomfield in third with all three drivers comfortably ahead of fourth place man Grant Williams, the fifth place Cougar of Chris Grainger and the sixth place TLR 22 of Delves. The lower order was completed with Benfield in seventh, Bowen eighth, Doman in ninth and Super Mario in tenth. The BQ spot was taken by the unlucky Rich Cree who lost out to Tony by less than half a second.
Finals
On to the finals and the 4WD class were up first. It had been a two-way fight all day for the pole position during qualifying and Ed Kerry didn’t let his advantage go to waste, eventually coming out a comfortable winner ahead of Karl Jackson. Further down the field though and third place was a much tighter affair between Matt Reuben and James Clifford with Matt edging it to take third from fifth on the grid.
In 2WD, a clean start saw Ellis lead the pack around the first turn and the lead three eked a small advantage over the rest of the pack. By lap four, Elliott was applying considerable pressure to the X Factory driver and inevitably, a slight touch of wheels after the corner table top spun the leader around whilst simultaneously forcing Boots off line and enabling the Bloomfield to take the lead. A further slight mistake from Boots gave second place back to the recovering Stafford who then also made a mistake to allow the Kyosho man to re-take the place. Try as he might, Elliott was unable to exert much pressure on the leading TLR 22 of Bloomfield and a further mistake from the Kyosho man was all the breathing space that Bloomfield needed to take the win with a near perfect, faultless drive. Boots came home in second place, some three seconds adrift of the TLR driver with Stafford a further three seconds behind.
With two rounds now complete, the Maritime Raceway Off Road Wars Winter Championship, sponsored by TLR and Horizon UK is already shaping up to be a real classic with some of the UK’s finest racers duking it out and mastering the challenges of the multi-surface layout. Horizon UK would like to congratulate all of the winners and give a big thanks to the Maritime Club organisers, helpers and the Maritime Munch canteen crew, without whom none of this would be possible.
The next round of the championship will be on 13 January. Will the New Year see a new winner or will the previous winners be able to take their pace and good fortune forward and into 2013?
Click here to be taken to the full Horizon Hobby UK report and gallery.
Source: Horizon Hobby UK