Hey Tony, these are fantastic images! Both the Baigent and Crichton BMW's ran the 1984/85 NZ endurance series, prior to the street race. The Crichton car ran in stark black with little or no signage on it, but still looked amazing. I think the Wellington event might have been the first time it appeared in JPS colours?
Pit stop time for the Sytner/Morton BMW. Of all the leading contenders, this was really the only car that wasn't delayed by some sort of drama, be in mechanical or through being bitten by the track. The biggest issue the pair had was that this car wasn't fitted with power steering, which made each driving stint incredibly tiring. Morton spun towards the end of the race, which allowed the Volvo to close right up. I wonder if this spin was as a result of Morton becoming exhausted through the lack of power steering?
This is a stunning race time. To put it into perspective, in the 87 WTTC event Ludwig got pole on 1.29.42, on very sticky qualifiers in an RS500, and the fastest cars lap times in the race were in the mid 32s. Does anyone know if the track was different for the WTTC race?
Hi Jim, yeah the track changed on a regular basis so unfortunately lap times can't really be compared. This first year there was a tight left-hand hairpin bend off the end of the back straight which I don't think was used again.
Neat bit of tv coverage here showing the first 5mins or so of the race.
I'm stunned this track every passed international safety rules
It meet the requirements of the time, things have sure changed in the 29 or so years since then.
The organisers were borrowing torque wrenchs and crew members to check all the Armco bolts after the track inspectors found that the contractors had left some loose. That was just one of the many hold ups we endured before the meeting got under way but then it was all part of the fun of the occasion and everyone just mucked in to make the event happen.
This is a better thread to put my Nissan / Cue series pics...
Pukekohe 1985
There sure are some variations in same car engine capacities in that entry list! Did the person entering the car state the capacity instead of what it was supposed to be under group a regs?
Hi Ray
Manfield Organisation did their usual timing system that had be proven over the previous 20 years at the Castrol 6 hour motorcycle race, and which you allude to. If you look at the photo of the hairpin I was marshalling on, and you can see Shoreboy's flag point in the background. Just to the left of Shoreboys container was another that had a timing stand erected on it that looked down the front straight to the start finish line where the 40 odd timekeepers sat. Personally; I think the BMW won, and some of that has come from information from some of those timekeepers....
I love the 'stories' around racing and find them fascinating and it seems that this race has more than most - and is indicative of the times.
History will show that the red tape is so much tighter now and that many so called loopholes will have been closed but with fewer colourful stories behind the later events. Although there may be hiccups now and again, they are relatively few as organisers and MSNZ know what they are doing.
Reading Maurice O'Reilly's brilliant book "A Series of Small Explosions" for example, is a classic example that a lot of the colour has now been drained out of life and I am not at all sure that it has been worth it - and the current preoccupation with one make racing hasn't helped at all.
It was still a fantastic race with a great variety of cars and one I'll always remember, even though it was from the couch. The classic racing was quite memorable too as I recall, with Roger Townsend's Escort three wheeling around the place (if that was 1985!).