IBC Greece
2017 In English!
I will tell
everyone just this: You MISSED a great race!
Now, let’s
go to the racing report…
This was
actually the second international rc bike race in Greece! Let me remind you,
that earlier this year, Sures from Germany came and raced his JABBER with us!
Preparation
for the Greek Round of the IBC really started around the beginning of the year,
when Clark suggested if we would like to do a round of the IBC series in
Greece. Since Clark has already raced in our local track, FRT, back in 2006 or
2007, running a 1/5th scale LS car, he liked the track and thought
of it! So, Clark talked with Fotis, the track owner and they made the date
solid: IBC would be raced on October 15, 2017!
So, to our
racing things, then. Initially four drivers from Europe showed interest in our
race: Pantovic from Serbia, two English drivers, Martin Woodcock and Lawrence
William, and a French driver, Christian Gossè, with whom I have raced before at
the Worlds!
Our Serbian
friend told me during the Worlds, in Bologna, that due to work obligations he
could not make it, while the second English driver contacted me twice and then
he never replied to my messages…
Clark, at
first told me he was thinking of coming to Greece and make some vacation, along
with the race, but a couple of weeks before the race, he told me he could not
come, due to work.
I felt it
was –sort of- a little shame that we could not enjoy at least two of the
fastest and best drivers in the world race at our track, because I think they
could –and would, I am sure- show us how to be better drivers and how to
prepare and setup the bikes better, among other things, no matter what kind of
bikes we really race.
I did my
part at the Worlds and the Warm Up and talked to almost every driver in person,
asking, begging, luring them to come race with us!
Anyway,
with Theo, who travelled from Crete island to race with us, but also with at
least three bikers I know in Athens, missing, we were nine drivers in total, to
race the Greek round of the IBC.
The track
was available for practice not only the previous two weekends, but also, and
especially for us, on Friday before the race and of course the whole weekend. In
fact, on Friday it was exclusive for bikes, since no car drivers showed up!
On Saturday, with everyone present we did a lot of practice runs and then when the darkness fell, we went to a local taverna, which is well known to the rc car drivers!!!
As for the
weather, not only it was sunny, it was rather warm, too, at 22-25C every day,
giving the track a nice traction!
The race,
on Sunday, started quite early: At 9 in the morning we did the first Q. heat.
Vasilis started winning, keeping it fast and steady! He actually won two of the
three Q’s, so he rightfully took the pole position!
Petros,
having won the second Q. heat, is in second position, while I managed to do a
good run, only in the third Q. and grab the 3rd position. I was
warming up while the day warmed too!!!
Of note is
the fact that Vasilis did 10:12.025 in the first Q., with 17 laps, and in the
third he did exactly the same time, only with 18 laps! Petros, also did 18 laps
in the second Q, but he did 10:16.7…
Typically,
during the Q. runs I did the best lap: 32.024! Just so to have something to
brag about!!!
In the finals
we had some good fun!
For
example, before the drivers got up to the rostrum for the 1st
A-Final, they all had a sip of local Raki, (made in Naxos island by my uncle!).
And of course, as it was to be expected, we all did better lap times!
During the
first A-final heat, Petros won after some hard fights with Vasilis. Difference
was less than 10 seconds.
This is
where we took some photos of the drivers, after the 1st A-Final, and
not before, so we wouldn’t lose the heat from the tires!
In the 2nd
A-final, the final standing is the same: Petros and Vasilis, out front, and I
am following, in 3rd position, again, just 3 seconds behind.
Petros is officially the IBC Greece winner, with his RG BK1R, but he decided to race the 3rd heat, too.
Petros is officially the IBC Greece winner, with his RG BK1R, but he decided to race the 3rd heat, too.
In this 3rd
A-final heat, Vasilis, driving his amazing JABBER 2013, managed to lead most of
the race, but being quite nervous, he lost it for less than a second, to
Petros. I finished 3rd, again, but one whole lap behind these two
guys!!!
In the
other positions, so that we mention everyone, Giorgio with his (noisy!) nitro
bike, an RG Evo 5, gets better every tank he runs, even though, admittedly, he
drives a bike that it’s possibly the hardest bike to drive. Anyway, he earned 4th
place.
Christian
(JABBER 2015+) is definitely a very good driver, he never crashes (not unlike,
me for example!) but he proved to be a bit slower, so he got 5th place. Maybe
it was the raki…
Aris, in 6th
position with his Nuova Faor T15 has some good excuses for his (lack of?)
performance: His GSXR’s front Nissin brakes weren’t up for the job, he told me,
and his friends said that they were worse than Yamaha’s. Go figure!!!
Panagiotis
was certainly fast, but somehow was out of tune, so he managed the 7th
position with his RG Evo5/BK1R hybrid.
Theo, driving
his trusty “old” TT SB5, despite tunring into parts twice during the finals, he
managed to be always in contention and always competitive. While he is surely practicing
a lot less than us in Athens, he showed that he can do it, and I personally
think that the 8th position is not indicative.
Martin with
his JABBER 2015+ was really the slower driver on the track, probably due to his
13.5T motor, but he did a fantastic driving and was always walking around
happy, smiling and certainly enjoying the Greek sun. When asked about his
position, he just shrugged and smiled. A true Sportsman!
We had an issue with the prizegiving ceremony, because the trophies that Clark sent us, didn’t make it in time for the race, so the track managed to get just three cups to give.
Our own Rcbikes.gr
on the other hand, tried to fill this little adventure, giving a free t-shirt to
all the drivers!
We are
expecting the trophies in the mail, though (there’s a reason they call it snail
mail!) and when we get them, they will be given to everyone, or sent,
respectively. Mind you, they left Germany 12 days before the race…
I must
thank here the XRS Stock Class Touring Car drivers who happily helped not only
with the marshalling, but also providing close up insight to our driving,
inspiring us (sometimes so loud!!!) and also taking photos and shooting
videos!!!
A special
mention and thanks must also go to Giorgio’s three sons, who are always on the
track and marshal for us, and they also do an excellent standing start of the
bikes. So nice in fact, that there has never been a crash due to a bad start.
This and
that!
Christian,
at some time told me this: He could not hear his own thoughts with all the “Greek
Noise” that was going on, on the rostrum during the race! Don’t think he was
complaining…he just told me casually…
Fotis, our
race director for the day, managed to keep the drivers silent for the rest of
the day! He has his ways with us!!!!!!
Our friends
from Drone Solutions Greece came and shot some nice video (maybe photos, too,
not sure). Not actually “some” but rather complete finals and Q. heats! We will
with a few days for them to edit and make the videos, and then we will post
them in the usual social places, like Youtube, FB, etc.
Aris, and
me, among others, were talking after the races and realized we both crashed at
some time, because we were trying to avoid the drone’s shadow on the ground! It
was funny!!!
We have seen
their work on a previous 1/5 LS race, where we also ran our bikes. Drone
Solutions made a 5 minute video, mostly with cars, and with a few shots of our
bikes, so I believe that now that they were dedicated to rc bike racing only,
we will soon see some great footage!
In the
pits, the atmosphere was always friendly, and our Fotis never said no, to some
driver who needed 5 or ten minutes to repair something or prepare their bikes.
Speaking
about my bike and my race, I managed to break the carbon lower steering plate
twice, but thanks to Giorgio’s dremel I managed to fix it, terrorizing my
friends around me, a little, with the carbon powder (I’m still alive, by the
way! You’re out of luck!). Anyway, I broke the damn plate again, and then I
realized that the variable caster angle makes for better lap times: from 32.02
in the Q. heats, I went down to 31.8 in the finals, and managed to grab the 3rd
position in the race, overall!!!
On
Saturday, my bike was a bit weird: while it would take left turns nicely,
whether on the throttle, or braking, or just coasting, it would do all sorts of
strange things in right turns.
Sunday,
first thing in the morning, I disassembled my bike’s steering system, and I found
that the carbon top plate was cracked as well. Do you think it was due to me
crashing? No way! I never crash… not on purpose, anyway! So, after changing
that plate, the bike was transformed and started behaving! Then during the
race, I saw the lower plate also broken… But I told you about that, right?!
Bragging
Rights!
Just so we
make some cafeteria talk, and bragging rights, (mine is bigger, etc!) Petros
did the absolute best lap of the day at 31.628, during the 2nd
A-final.
I am just
curious to test a theory: If Clark, who is definitely one of the top SBK
drivers in the world, could do 27 or 28 sec laps, also doing more than 20 laps.
I had this thought, because at Leipzig, during the 2016 RC Bike Worlds, he did
23.5 laps, while I (one of the slowest in Stock class) I was doing a best of
27.4 and usually 28.5 to 29.5…
Statistically,
also, Pantovic, one of the fastest guys in Stock class, was doing 24.1 to 24.3
at Leipzig…
I guess we
will see this at some time in the future…
Maybe at
the Worlds @ FRT!
Just
saying!!!