Back in the UK after ten days in California at Rennsport Reunion IV. Jet lag be damned – have got straight back to work on the new garage/studio out the back and processing some pictures from my ten-day working tour. Here’s a hole worth 40 tonnes of spoil: 140 tonnes removed from the back so far and I think we may hit 200.
Anyway, back to Porsche. The TwinSpark Racing blog carries the story of Waldegard’s 911T from the 1968 Monte which was at the event. I didn’t spend half enough time with it, but I’m sure I can get more info from Björn when next we meet. I was born the day after this car crossed the line in 10th place. Love that.
Björn is driving a Tuthill Porsche for Race4Change in next month’s Safari Rally: I am blogging for all the interested parties and have a Waldegård feature in this month’s Total 911 magazine. It’s a good piece and a good-looking piece: more details when the issue is on sale.
Friend of Jamie Lipman, J F Musial and his team did the official Porsche video post-Rennsport. Jamie describes it as ‘shrink-wrapped awesome’, and he is right. Have a look at this and put Rennsport 5 on your bucket list. Don’t let us down!
I recently drove to Paris, to meet a Porsche on the Peking to Paris Motor Challenge. Lasting 37 days and 14,000 kilometres, and bringing competitors into countries normally closed to western traffic, Peking to Paris is the ultimate endurance rally.
Porsche 356 Peking Paris
Imagine arriving in China to find your rally Porsche waiting for you, along with one hundred other classic cars, from right across the world. Leaving Beijing, you race along the byways until you come to the Great Wall, where the Government have reopened a long-closed border gate, to allow the rally into Mongolia.
In Mongolia, you run the gauntlet of the Gobi Desert. Tents are pitched yards from the Trans-Siberia Express railway, with overnight temperatures dropping to -12 Celsius. After Mongolia you cross Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and into Iran, before roaring through Turkey and Greece, and arriving back in mainland Europe.
Weeks are spent driving tracks strewn with bunker-sized potholes and rocks like grapefruit, with what little time there is left after a 650km day’s rallying spent servicing or fire-fighting the latest mechanical disaster. Though I can visualise the whole thing in glorious technicolour through the windscreen of a classic 911, I may be choosing the wrong fantasy classic Porsche.
‘In inexperienced hands, a 911 can be too fast for this sort of event”, Francis Tuthill tells me. Francis is just back from the Morocco International Historic Rally, where three of his 911 rally cars finished in the top five.
Michele Mouton, rallying’s most successful female driver, was the first Tuthill Porsche pilot home, in a Safari car fitted with the ‘Challenge-spec’ 3-litre engine. These carburettor-fed engines, built for next year’s innovative ten-car Tuthill Rally Challenge, make a torque-rich 250 bhp. Despite her power disadvantage versus the winner, after nearly fifteen hours’ full-speed rallying, Mme Mouton finished second, just four minutes behind.
At the end of a trying first day, run over stages from the Paris-Dakar, Michele emerged assuming her 911 would be ruined, but was amazed to see that the car looked just as it had that morning, despite losing half an hour after a freak impact with a rock snapped off a brake caliper and wiped out the brakes.
The nature of good rally preparation on top of early 911 build quality, means these cars can take much more than you think. Nevertheless, when Francis built a car for the first Peking to Paris of recent times, in 1997, he chose a 356, as did my American/Australian friends on the most recent event. Lower power means the car can run on low-grade petrol, and the nimble little 356 steers clear of many obstacles that bigger cars cannot avoid.
Having driven through Asia on a number of endurance rallies, including the 1993 London-Sydney, which he won in a 911, Francis is well aware of the classic 911’s ability to outlast all comers. But, as we stand in the sunshine studying Lola, the WEVO-prepared Primrose 356C that has just won the post-1957 class of the 2010 Peking to Paris Rally, it’s clear that there’s more to taking a Porsche around the world than pure grunt. Success here is more about controlling the power you have, than how much you have to begin with.
Porsche’s coverage of Walter Rohrl Rally Porsche on Targa Tasmania has started with two videos: a quick report from the start line, and a stage-by-stage account of how the contenders are playing themselves in.
Targa regulars Rex Broadbent and Jim Richards, both multiple winners in Porsche cars, finished the first day 7th and 8th in their respective categories. Former World Champion, Walter Röhrl and co-driver Christian Geistdorfer finished joint 4th in their 911 SC. The videos show two old friends on a proper road trip in a wicked 911 – just too cool.
Walter Rohrl Rally Porsche on Targa Tasmania
It’s great to see Walter rekindling his relationship with this classic 911 on a rally event, and not on some half-arsed marketing exercise to the end of the road in Austria. Targa Taz is worthy of such a huge effort from everyone at Porsche and the guys at the Porsche Museum. I hope it stays this positive for the best part of the next week.
Some great Porsche Targa Tasmania video has just gone live, featuring Walter Röhrl and Christian Geistdörfer talking about the SC rally car from the Porsche Museum they are using on the Targa Tasmania. It’s not on Youtube yet, so you’re getting a sneak preview.
Here we learn that the boys are apparently using their actual original SC from the 1981 San Remo Rally; pretty cool. Can’t wait to get more information on the chassis and that engine. I want to know why the Almeras stickers on a works 911 – I reckon it was maybe rented from France for Walter but we’ll find out: 1981 was a funny old year for Herr Röhrl. I’ll likely be queued up to see the SC when it gets back from Australia, where it’s helping to celebrate 60 years of Porsche down under.
Also on Origin are some nice pics from the Carrera Cup meet at Brands Hatch last weekend. While I was dropping back the C4S this morning, a friend at Porsche GB told me that the pics had come out well and she wasn’t kidding.
Meanwhile back on Youtube, this privateer vid has also gone up, featuring some of the museum cars as they take to the track at the Longford Revival Motorsport show. Porsche have certainly shipped some talent out to Taz – no wonder I only bumped in to one Porsche Museum acquaintance at Essen!
The Porsche Youtube Channel’s Targa Tasmania reporting starts tomorrow.
I wrote a few days ago about the upcoming Porsche Youtube coverage of Röhrl/Geistdörfer at Targa Tasmania. Some questions over the classic 911 rally car they’re using: is it an SC RS? Engine shots do look similar, but the chassis is quite different to the SC RS that was being restored on my last Stuttgart visit. I’ll find out when it comes home again (edit: see the SC rally video Porsche have just posted).
Here is an SC RS though, in the closest finish I can remember in Irish rallying. The Donegal International Rally is a tough three-day event that takes no prisoners. Running through the rugged terrain on Ireland’s north west Atlantic coast, it is all mixed weather and dry stone walls. There are no second chances here. One slip and you are in deep trouble – as the video shows.
1985 was a landmark year. Legend Austin McHale in his Manta 400 was chasing a win after two years of playing bridesmaid. The rest of the field was Manta 400s and hot rod Escorts: the last gasp of old-school RWD rallying before the AWD philosophy really took hold.
Tony Pond was present in the first real outing for the Group B Metro 6R4. By SS6, the car had a 1 minute 45 second advantage over P2: over two seconds a mile faster, and Pondie was not flat out. If you’ve ever seen a 6R4 apart, you know that is utterly terrifying as they are made of fresh air. Thankfully the car retired before anyone could impact the scenery.
When the event gets going, Billy Coleman (the King of Irish Rallying), is on mesmerising form in the Rothmans 911 SC RS. 911s always went well at Donegal: Cathal Curley won here three times in a row in a 911 in the early 1970s. Coleman too has tasted success on the event: winning in a Lancia Stratos in 1977, and then in a Manta 400 in 1984. He’s the natural choice for David Richards to take on Donegal in 1985.
At the end of day two and a fairly major hold up, the man from Milltown has climbed back from being over a minute and a half behind McHale, to what he thinks is 9 seconds behind. Turns out he is 39 seconds behind, with 40 miles to make it up the following day. In fact, it is less: the final stage is cancelled due to spectator problems.
Can Coleman do it? You’ll have to watch and see. Coleman came back in a 6R4 the following year and won the event.
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