its better than a kick in the pants but is it enough to generate 2 way traffic to race and gee up folk to make the effort?
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its better than a kick in the pants but is it enough to generate 2 way traffic to race and gee up folk to make the effort?
Announcement here http://nzmotorracing.co.nz/revamped-...is-summer.html
And in a little more detail from the SIFF Club newsletter, but still abbreviated:-
SIFFC will manage and co-ordinate the NZ Formula Ford Championship from 2013/14 onwards
Motorsport NZ has approved our club as being the organiser for the coming national season. We also need to provide the coordinator to help bring life to the race day management of the class. The SIFFC Committee has provided MSNZ with a set of recommended changes to the 2012/13 articles and regulations. These are attached and will be highly interesting to you; in fact they might encourage you to go out and source a sponsor before entering the national series as well!
At a glance - significant features for the 2013/14 NZ FF Championship, and beyond include;
1. A 5 year moratorium for the Ford 1600 Kent engine beginning from 2013/14. This will be reviewed in 2016 so if changes are necessary a ‘fade in’ approach can be utilised.
2. Most current national FF championship rules remain unchanged. The cost of Formula Ford racing in New Zealand is a significant consideration as the attached table indicates.
3. A high level of motivation exists around encouraging drivers to race in Formula Ford. The 2013/14 changes should secure grids of between 20 and 30 cars consistently. The target is 25 cars or more at all rounds.
4. The Ace Hire South Island Formula Ford Championship will run independently but within the National Championship’s South Island rounds.
5. A new National Historic Formula Ford Championship will be introduced for cars that comply with the regulations. Successful in Australia and the UK, this Historic Class will add interest to the grids this summer. This will be known as Class 3 in the articles. Significant interest has been shown at the planning stages of this decision. Grid sizes will be positively influenced.
6. A variety of National Championship sponsors have been approached and are ready to support the national championship. While we are in a pre-advertising phase and class sponsorship arrangements are yet to be addressed, the following support is being prodigiously discussed.
a. A major tyre supplier
b. A significant car manufacturer
c. A test drive for the championship winner – which might extend to an international Formula Ford racing opportunity.
7. Where technical infringements occur a one warning approach is preferred; after which cars may not be eligible for championship points. The Championship co-ordinator will be included in such decisions so NZFFA assistance can be provided. We want cars to race within the spirit of the code.
New Members – an update.
Four new drivers have approached members of the committee with regard to joining SIFFC next season. One past member has indicated he would like to enter the new historic class.
2013/14 Membership Details
I will send out our new season’s membership details in a month or so but they will also feature on the SIFFC website.
Full Club Membership $100.00
Championship Fee $50.00
Associate Membership $50.00
The Associate Membership fee is new this year and is designed for those who would like to be affiliated to the club but not drive. This fee enables full participation in club activities including meetings and voting rights. Sponsorship regalia will be available so these members can promote our club and sponsors too.
SIFFC Website and Facebook
With James Dicey’s assistance a new website has been constructed. Once the Club Committee has critiqued this it will go live. In addition to this a Facebook page will also be used to carry the instant social media aspects of our racing. James is keen to receive images, videos and literature appropriate for our site. All material will be checked for accuracy, approvals and copyright before being used.
Please send material to James Dicey or myself. We are very grateful to James for his time and enthusiasm to help the club in this way.
James will continue to assist us as a media scoop and is interested in posting our race results etc as soon as possible after each event.
Promoting SIFFC
Mark Collins has put together a list of his real racing costs from last season and is happy for us to use these as part of an information brochure that will be available during promotional events and when driver enquires come through our new website. A target audience for this material will be Karting families and drivers. The Committee is interested in activating promotional displays of FF cars at major Karting events this summer, or earlier. Other suggestions are most welcome as would ideas related to this Karting focus.
2013/14 Race dates
I’ve set these and sent them to all the circuit managers for approval. Timaru has confirmed so I’m hoping the others will too. January will have two rounds (Teretonga and Levels) for SIFFC as part of the National FF Championship series – awesome but no dates yet from MSNZ. I will send the dates to you as soon as possible. There are 6 races this season but the committee will discuss adding a 7th race because there’s room in the calendar for one more. A robust pros and cons discussion will determine this outcome. Send me your thoughts if you wish. Because January will have two SIFFC rounds, our usual routine of having ‘about’ one race per month for 6 months will be accelerated.
ACE Hire – Title Sponsor – The Ace Hire South Island Formula Ford Championship
Russ Noble will sponsor our Championship for the second year. Substantial prize money will be distributed to drivers at the end of the season. The distribution will be governed by the number of drivers competing and the points they accumulate. All classes are included in this process. Cars will be required to ‘wear’ the appropriate decals and driver/engineers will be asked to wear ACE Hire caps around the pits and on pit wall. This year could be a significant opportunity for Russ to have his company logo displayed on a ‘grand’ scale. The website, car displays, televised races, race day programmes, race commentaries and many mores situations will arise. It’s very appropriate that we help to maximise these opportunities for him; not forgetting Russ will be racing too. Many thanks for your continued support.
SIFFC Archives
We have saved the content from our old website including the historical pages. A committee member will be working on the archives section of the new website so a very interesting and accurate account of our club’s history and the impact we have had on the careers of NZ racing drivers and racing engineers, will be available. If you have material, images, clippings or memories that could augment what we have already or add to it, please email me.
Regards
Steve Edwards
SIFFC co-ordinator
Anyone wanting the full details contact me and I will email the full PDF files
Early days yet, but SIFF now has a new website up and running. Contains all the latest info, newsletters, next seasons race dates for SIFF and NZFF. And much more.
Trying to showcase FF and provide hard facts easily accessible to anyone about competing in FF. Also trying to promote FF through the social media. I'm too old to know anything about Facebook, Twitter etc but apparently it's the way to go. We have to thank SIFF committee member James for setting all this up. Check it out, details below......
"Hi All,
Just like to announce that the new South Island Formula Ford website has gone live over the weekend. Please check it out - your feedback and comments are welcome, as is content (news, photos - new and old, items for sale etc). It will be the prime place we publish the racing calendar, technical articles and regulations, communicate news and race results as well as act as a repository of relevant information.
http://www.siff.co.nz/
We have also created a Facebook page for more interactive updates and content - please "Like" the page to help build our online presence. It can be found at:
https://www.facebook.com/SouthIslandFormulaFord
We have also created a Twitter account as well as an Instagram account for the social media savvy amongst you... look for southiff on both platforms.
I welcome any comments, suggestions, feedback and particularly content on all these.
Cheers
James"
I have just found this thread. I have a dog in this race so here is my 0.02cents worth. We all want to see our next young generation do well at Motorsport. Almost all of these result from father/son combos that come thru karting. By the time 2-3 years of karting have gone by, the son might be good enough, keen enough and the dad able to cope with chassis setups, tyres, engine stuff, trailers, going away to events, bacon and egg pie from mum etc etc. I would go so far to say that without a karting background, FF is a step too big for mortals.
The cost for father/son teams would not need to be much beyond a full karting season. Many such teams have podium finishes at SIFF and National level with engines I know were 3-5k in cost. Think of Barry and Brendon just this year, same last year. I do not think cost is the barrier to entries for our young ones.
I think the issue is marketing. This is a problem because no-one owns FF anymore. This is not the case with Suzuki or Toyota or the V8s. In our world, the marketing is left to ........
Luck has it that SIFF has taken this up and congrats to Russ and Steve and James. Fantastic.
Of course, this just affects what might be just 25% of a field at most (ie the young ones). Ian Bisman calculated that there are 100+ FF in the SI alone. I would love to know while they live in garages.
Mark
Latest announcement on the News section on the SIFF website http://www.siff.co.nz/#!news/cgra
The National Secondary School karting Championship received a boost today - the winner of a class of the Championship and a 'spot' competitor who meets selection criteria will be given the opportunity to test drive a Formula Ford.
Formula Ford has traditionally been the stepping stone for successful kart drivers with aspirations to progress into high echelons of single seater racing. Previous F1 champions such as Ayrton Senna, Damon Hill and Michael Schumacher all got their start in single seaters in a Formula Ford. The cars are much more technical and complicated than karts and are a natural progression for aspiring race drivers. The South Island Formula Ford Club has worked hard to secure a fantastic prize of a test drive in a Formula Ford with Motorsport Solutions. Motorsport Solutions owner John Crawford has provided two prizes for the weekend so the lucky karting drivers can enjoy a free introduction to Formula Ford racing, including laps at Ruapuna.
A member of the South Island Formula Ford Club, Mark Collins (whose son Michael won the 2012-13 Ace Hire South Island Formula Ford Championship) has also organised a display of Formula Ford race cars to help promote the class.
See link below for a couple of Ray's for sale in U.K. 80 & 84 cars.
http://www.racecarsdirect.com/listin..._for_sale.html
For anyone interested SIFF Club membership forms posted on the club website here. http://www.siff.co.nz/#!siff-membership/c235h.
Note this year there is also an Associate Membership at half price for non-competing supporters. The more interest and support we can get, the better.
Its looking to be an exciting season, lots of interest. All next seasons race dates for NZFF and SIFF are tentatively confirmed already, see the calendar here. http://www.siff.co.nz/#!calendar/cdub.
Anyone with a car they haven't raced for a while should dust it off and be part of the fun and action. We are trying to make running in either championship as hassle free and affordable as possible. Good prize money in SIFF, all the way down the field too! Get out and have a go :)
Example of the prize money structure based on the 2011/2012 results are shown at the bottom of the page here . http://www.siff.co.nz/#!articles-and-regulations/c1wzy. Obviously this season we are expecting better than 13 competitors, but the principal remains the same.
Because of the calendar some NZFF competitors from the NI are considering doing most of the SIFF rounds also. Next season for FF it just keeps growing better and better! You need to get in and be part of it. Four months to prepare your car, make the most of it. :)
Go High Pockets love Jamie A
It is looking good for you guys down there one thing that came up in discussion over here was the Ford contribution or lack of it and the notion that Formula Ford should be re branded Formula Kent whilst the old crossflow motor is used and ditch Ford name as they have brought no "beers to the party".
What tyres are you looking at running?
Ae you implementing a limit to the number of tyres per round or the number of rounds per set of tyres?
Your implementation of classes for varying age of cars will entice the old boys out with cars in garage or even the son or grandson to drag the car out too.
I noticed that you mentioned finding a supplier for a new chassis- Why?
There are enough cars running just keep them going FFord has run for 20 years since the last real Kent chassis was built the rest have been Zetec/Duratec conversions and there are still plenty of cars in the UK that can be acquired and modified to run a Kent motor.
Hope the series takes off and as you are in the dark days of winter the garage light is burning while you toil away at rebuilding the many FFords that have been parked up over the last 10 years.
Apparently the Aussies have pulled the plug on their national FF series - reverting to State series only
Yes i heard that CAMS ( morons of motorsport) have ditched FFord without consulting anyone in favour of F4 thats means now someone has to go and buy new cars ship to Oz and get a series running
best thing the Ozzies could do is not buy any cars and kill it off now and stick to FFord
Congratulations to all those trying to rejuvenate "Formula Ford". The field that was on show at Teretonga last weekend was a big improvement on recent years and surely is just the start of better things to come. Well done to you all.
Clive Campbell
Things are getting better all the time...
Formula Ford racing in NZ, driven by the SIFF who have promoted a level playing field of worthwhile, enjoyable, competitive and inexpensive racing, is enjoying a resurgence which is feeding into the National Championship. This has been additionally enhanced by a stability of regulation in the form of a five year moratorium on any major changes. On the back of this certainty then it is a major boost that the “Mazda Road to Indy” programme has seen fit to provide the winner of the NZFF Championship this year with entry to their prestigious initiative. Details are contained in the latest newsletter on the SIFF website
http://www.siff.co.nz/
Could not resist entering this thread Noble. NO BULL and spot on.
Anything that encourages racing outside of the cheque book stuff deserves support.
When you talk about the 'national series' for FFord in Australia you'll find that many are quite pleased that it's been detached from the V8 Supercar meetings.
It was a costly arrangement and very testing, not on the driving or preparation but on the logistics and bank overdrafts. And I gather, though I may be wrong, that it's more than just 'state' series now. It just doesn't go as far afield.
Not that I keep abreast of FFord, it's a category I've never considered worthwhile though it's gained fame because it was the only one there. Remember how it came about?
A Pommie racing school found it was cheaper to put Cortina GT engines into cars than try to keep up their F3/FJunior engines and it all went from there. And it led to people spending more money keeping engines standard than turning them into real race engines.
It's all about keeping costs down. The Australian 2015 National Formula Ford Series is six meetings spread through Victoria, NSW and Queensland.
It's also gained fame as with stable regulations it has outlasted all other single seater classes. It's all about keeping costs down.
As stated it's all about keeping costs down.
In motorracing there will always be some people who will spend up big to get an edge. They have in the past and they haven't won the Championship. The point is you don't have to and you don't get that much of an edge. It's all about keeping costs down. Those that spend would still do the same with "real race engines" but they would spend a hell of a lot more! The number of Kiwis successful on the world stage who have come through NZFF is legendary plus most F1 drivers for the last 40 years have come up through FF in different countries.
It would be nice if we could get rid of some of the negative stereotypes of FF because largely they are incorrect. FF1600 is and will continue to be relevant in providing relatively cheap and close single seater racing for not only aspiring F1 drivers to cut their teeth on but also many of the more mature competitors who merely enjoy close competitive racing which is very cost effective. It's all about keeping costs down. And maintaining stable regs.