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Great Glen Rally - Sunday 21st July Report and photos by Jim Paterson
Raymond Rollo and Maurice Millar in Glendoe heading for overall win
Raymond
Rollo guided by top navigator Maurice Millar took his 1972 Ford Capri
to win the innaugural running of the Highland Car Club Great Glen
Rally on Sunday 21st July with some 'spirited' driving through the
tests. A warmup on the first test at the Kart Track set the scene for
the rest of the day. As Raymond reported when I sent him the above
photo "I told Liz (Ray's wife) I had a fine canny day, but the photo
blew that right out of the water!" The pair had a great day with
Maurice quoting memories of "lots of dust and press-on motoring".
Dave
Spence and Roddie Main along with the team from Highland Car Club put on
a great Targa rally, covering a 100 mile tour along the Great Glen toward Inverness visiting
13 test sites on the way, Under blistering sunshine that
reached well over 25 degrees at the start in Fort William, the 24 starters set
off. Plenty of water for crews and cars required,
along with sunscreen and hats for the marshals, like myself, and club
members Douglas Anderson and Ton Niven, to survive the heat and enjoy
the action as you can see from a selection of photos taken at a couple
of the test venues.
We arrived at the start which had quickly reformed at JJ's Cafe, as used on the CCHMSC Bealach Na Ba
back in June, on the Mallaig Road out of Fort William. Crews were
putting finishing touches to their cars for scutineering whilst
fuelling both cars with petrol and themselves with copious amounts
of coffee and bacon rolls.
Soon we were off, and Douglas and
myself were marshalling on the first test at the old Kart Track, just
along the road from the start. This site had been used on the International Autoecosse back in June and is a great way to warm crews up at the start of a day.
Three
laps of the Kart circuit were on offer and some of the crews used the
test to blow away the cobwebs and settle their cars down for the long
day ahead. Leading us off were Andrew and Scott Jamieson in their 1966
Vauxhall HA. Not a model that you see too often any more, but the
Jamiesons' car is a regular at classic events. Their performance on
this first test led to a class T1 award by the end of the day. They
certainly enjoyed their time in Glendoe where I met up with them again.
Being
quickest is not all about foot to the floor and wagging the tail
around, as was proven by the 2005 Corsa of youngsters Scott Morrison
and Andrew Young who took the smooth and steady line to record one of
the fastest times of the test. They would go on to repeat this
technique at later tests proving that smooth and steady wins the day,
but that you can still have a lot of fun doing it. They also secured
the class T4 award.
However,
if you have an Escort Mk2 you
just have to hang out the tail.That is what they were made for, and
Paddy and Lewis Munro gave us all a show of how it should be done in
their 1979 model, both at Fort William and Glendoe, leading to the
class T3 award. Chasing them were Kenny cocker and Alan Patterson from
Perth in their yellow RS2000 version. I hope they were caught on film
as the BBC Alba crew
arrived to video the action for a forthcoming programme later in the
year on the channel. Don't worry if you can't speak Gaelic, they offer
subtitles for us less knowledgable folks.
Now you don't often
see tigers in Scotland, at least not out in the wild. Well we saw not
one but two Avenger Tigers in full throttle in Fort William, as they
chased each other round the track, and through the dust in Glendoe.
Brian Fraser and Allan Clark crewed the 1972 car whilst the 1973 model had Len and Andrew Morrison in the hot seats.
Club
member Chris Donachie from Blairgowrie is normally seen in his Triumph
TR4 but recently came across a 1974 Humber Sceptre which he told
me had been lying in a garage for a more than a few decades in Tomitoul. He has
successfully recommissioned the car with new brakes poly bushes springs
etc and lightly breathed on the engine and it goes really well. The car
warmed up at the Kart track,with Alan Aitken guiding him round
but when I next saw them in Glendoe they were really enjoying
themselves, throwing the dust everywhere. Now all Chris needs is a
Holbay engine and there will be no stopping the Sceptre!
As a
personal fan of Spridget cars I closely watched the 1972 MG
Midget of club members Colin Rose and Bob Shearer. This well
sorted machine is devilishly quick and their performance on the Kart
track and later in Glendoe shows in the photos. They must like the
northern roads, having been over many of them in the recent Bealach Na
Ba in June, though it was through the night then.
Misfortune
visited Colvin Howie who arrived in a tidy Clan Crusader. We noted some
pretty heavy blue smoke from the exhaust as it started the first test
and by the second test at the Lime Quarry it had decided to blow a hole in the engine
block! Ouch, and just after some serious work on the cylinder head and
cam on the Imp sourced engine.
The
second Corsa crew , Donald and Harris Wilson in their 1999 car were
determined to have fun, but unlike Scott Morrison did not go for the
smooth and steady line at all. On the Glendoe test Donald put too much
lock on and nearly ran out of road. Thankfully he stopped before
dropping into the 3 foot ditch at the side! I really expected to be
looking at a tailgate pointing at the sky.
Jon
Huffer brought his Triumph Doly for a blast, with Joe O' Leary reading
the notes. Jon had recenly fixed the steering rack when he discovered
split aluminium fixing colletts, making the steering somewhat odd! No problems on the Great Glen as the Dolomite Sprint charged through the tests.
Still
a few Nova's around and Scott Macdonald and Nicky Anderson from
Mayburgh crewed a 1990 model to have fun through the tests. Not
so many Mk1 Golf's around either so it was great to see Paul
Gitsham and David Munro in a silver example.
No rally is
complete without a mini somewhere, and Inverness man Scott McQueen can
usuaully be found behind the wheel. With Andrew Mackinnon,
also from Inverness, on the notes they pushed the little car through
the tests. By time they got to the showground the hot summer afternoon
temperatures were starting to get to the car, calling for a bit
of extra cooling. Off came the bonnet which seems to have allowed
better airflow around the overheating A series engine, allowing them to
get to the end of the last test, which was so long you almost required
sat nav just to find the right route.
Dan Scoular brought his Porsche 911 Targa for a blast. Fresh from last weeks relaxing Summer Saunter
in Argyll he and Cyril Craig, both from Aberdeenshire, were
able to kick up the dust. "Glen Shira last week had the tail well out"
said Dan, and he had fun doing the same again, though the Porsche is
pretty well planted with all its modern tech to help.
A
complete success for the first running of this event. Everyone had a
great time if the banter at the Fairways finish in Inverness was
anything to go by. Hopefully we will see this event again the HCC
calendar next year.
Just
to show the modern cars can have as much fun. The Astra SRI of Stewart
and Melani Hurst, and David and Margaret Straube brought a Suzuki SX4
diesel FWD.
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Updated 24 July 2013 Webmaster
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