Event>> Wtac – Part 2

Well I'm back in Japan after what was whirlwind visit to Australia last week and now that Rod, Casey and I have had a chance to go through more of our pictures from the World Time Attack Challenge it's time to dive in deeper into some additional coverage from what turned out to be a really exciting event.

On top of the top level "Pro" class everyone was out to see there were of course a ton of equally impressively built track cars at Eastern Creek and throughout most of the event I made sure I checked everything the pits and paddock had to offer. I couldn't stop looking at Benny Tran's EG Civic, which managed to get a best lap of 1:41:236 in the Motor Magazine Open Class. Loudest car at the event by far and one of the coolest looking. 

AWD machines are always among the favorite in Time Attack with Lancer Evo's and Subaru Imprezas being the most popular.

The two R35 GT-Rs racing in the Clubsprint class were both running 1 minute 45 second laps, putting into perspective just how fast Tarzan's winning 1:30.587 lap really was.

Jacky Yick in the Link International/Pro Concept S15 was running similar times to the new GT-Rs with a best of 1:45:168.

My attraction to any S13 Silvia soon had me finding Luis Poblete's ride…

…a car usually used for drifting but doing its best to grip around Eastern Creek. Best time Luis managed was a 1:49:120

I couldn't get over how professional the Sierra Sierra Lancer Evolution looked. I see so many highly modified 4G63s in Japan but there was something very different about this motor, like it was one level up from your regular tuned cars.

It was much the same story around the car with the exotic carbon body panels lowering curb weight dramatically. Inside I may well have been looking at a fully-fledged race car with pushed back seating position to line up the driver with the B-pillar, carbon dash and a beautifully constructed roll cage. 

Now that's a diffuser!

Here is driver David Epringham getting ready to go out for one last attempt late on Saturday afternoon.

A driver's concentration is just as important as the car's outright performance. Just look at the determination in his eyes!

Despite the Cosworth tuned engine boasting more power than the Cyber Evo, the team was unable to edge closer to Tarzan's record-braking time (a massive 1.297 sec faster!). Their second position was well deserved.

Import Tuner's Editor Carter Jung taking a shot of one of Sierra Sierra's mechanics.

Sure looks the part out in action.

The pink Mal Rose Racing Holden Commodore, wearing the very recognizable pink Donut King livery, was one car many were talking about before the event. It was interesting to see how the V8 race car stacked up against the best purposely built time attack cars from Australia, Japan and the US.

Racing fuel tank in the trunk and what looks like an oil tank for the V8's dry sump.

With Mal Rose behind the wheel the Commodore managed a best of 1:39.323 putting it in 12th pace in the Wynn's Pro Class the top cars were competing in.

It was all looking so promising for the Panspeed team on Friday afternoon but it seemed like everyone else stepped the game up on Saturday. Here is one of the mechanics doing some last minute telemetry checks to see what could be changed to give Sasaki-san a better shot at lowering his time.

Kouta Sasaki drives the R&D Sport Legacy B4 in the GT300 class of Super GT back home in Japan. 

He managed a best of 1:32:454 landing him and the Panspeed team in 5th position.

Like the Commodore, as well as the Falcon we will see further down, the GT3 specification Lotus Exige of Prep'd Motorsport was a pure race car. I didn't quite understand what these cars were doing at an event I thought was reserved for modified street cars, but it was nonetheless interesting to see how they all compared against each other.

With Warren Luff at the wheel it managed to lap in a fastest time of 1:32:273, allowing it to slot in front of the Panspeed car in fourth position.

I'm sure Kinoshita Mitsuhiro would have been able to do so much more with the beautifully prepared R-Magic RX-7. A few small problems kept them from getting the best out of the FD3S on the Friday practice session but it was ultimately a gearbox failure that drastically put an end to their hopes.

This is probably the car that got the best reception out of the Japanese cars present, the new wild wide-body kit inspiring rotary fanatics! R-Magic guys, if you are reading this, please do us all a favor and put that kit into production!!

Staring in admiration.

To throw in some variation into the event and to keep the crows entertained the organizers also run a short drift competition on the series of corners before the main straight. We will be taking a look at the above drift cars in action in Part 3.

Mark Berry and his Advan/Hi Octane Racing R34 GT-R was one of the favorite locals. People cheered every time he headed out onto the track…

…but problems kept him from getting the best out of the black widebody BNR34.

After the head gasket problem on Friday the car was back out on Saturday and managed to record a fastest lap of 1:34:109 putting him in 7th position.

I found this Ford Falcon of Fernandez Motorsport to be extremely cool. Having seen so many of these big sedans out on the streets of Australia it was a pleasure to see a race version out in action at the WTAC. Powered by a turbocharged 4L straight six it seemed the driver, Jose Fernandez, had some traction issues. This big six-cylinder motor is becoming very popular in the Australian professional drag scene, able to take some serious power! 

By late Friday afternoon the Garage HRS/Cyber Evo's hopes were beginning to look pretty doubtful. A blown engine meant they had to replace it with one they managed to source at the track and were up all night mapping it on the Haltech dynamometer.

But as soon as Tarzan took it out for the first morning session on Saturday he shocked everyone by posting the fastest lap straight out of the bat. Here he is coming into the pits as a swarm of mechanics from Garage HRS and Voltex rush to check the car over.

Hirayama-san of Garage HRS looking on as Tarzan heads out for another crack at the lap record. 

Tarzan was of course driving both the Cyber Evo as well as the Tomei/Cusco/Voltex Imrpeza and to allow him to do so the organizers put the Tomei car in Group 2. As soon as he was done with the Evo it was a quick drink to hydrate before jumping into the Impreza.

Warp speed!

Despite having blown the gearbox the day before, the Impreza performed well on Saturday allowing it to secure a third position, landing Tarzan the double podium finish.

Here is Jason Round, Editor of High Performance Imports, chatting to fans of his tuning magazine.

Despite the Police and the Government doing everything in their power to stop people enjoying and modifying their cars the Australians seem to have an admirable passion that keeps them going. It was inspiring to see just how many publications catering to all the different scenes and styles there are out there.

Out of all the GT-Rs this red BNR32 from drgtr.com.au had to be my favorite.

I spotted D1 driver and president of T&E, Takahiro Ueno, out on the paddock enjoying some nice company from the Royal Purple girls! Thumbs up for sure!

Among all the show cars on display in the concrete paddock area it was this little orange NA Roadster sporting a pretty aggressive stance that stood out the most.

At one point a plane began pulling crazy stunts in the clear blue skies above Eastern Creek. It was pretty cool when it shot down at full speed and seemed to almost touch the tops of the green hills at the center of the track.

More to come tomorrow in Part 3 as we look at some more behind the scenes stuff as well as some drift action.

 World Time Attack Challenge Coverage on Speedhunters

-Dino Dalle Carbonare

ADVERTISEMENT

Comments



Comments are closed.

40 comments

by Oldest
by Best by Newest by Oldest
1

Casey rocks!

2

Eric Hsu of Cosworth on the 2 Evos.



http://www.motoiq.com/magazine_articles/articletype/articleview/articleid/1577/world-time-attack-2010--results.aspx



"Needless to say, SSE learned that a proper race car doesn't necessarily make an ideal time attack car. A proper race car cage, brakes, chassis, and coolng system does not make a lightweight time attack car. Clown the CyberEVO's cage, safety equipment (or lack of), and rough attention to detail, but it is fast as hell and does exactly what it is supposed to do very well. You can bet there will be some changes and/or plan changes with the new Sierra Sierra car (whatever car it may end up being)."

3

Why the bitchin about the Lotus Exige runin with all the other race prepped cars...The Exige is a street car not a purpose built race car..... It's a shame that he did so well against all those mega buck "street cars".....lol

4

how about a wallpaper of the eg?

5

he is cool! love his pics!

6

with reference to your comment about the Exige GT3 being a pure race car and not belonging at the event; let me clarify..

the Cyber and Sierra Sierra EVO's, Panspeed RX7, Cusco Rex etc are less closely based on their street car equivalents than the Exige is. These cars were purpose built (to very loose rules) as one lap screamers and are hardly modified street cars ( ididn't see any number plates on them) . The Exige is based on the road car with stringent rules to retain its production-based integrity.



Why was it there? because it complied completely to the rules and spirit of the competition, AND because we needed some last minute testing for a one hour enduro race the next week. We entered the Time Attack as a joke....the car had never even run on treaded tyres before and it's maintenence throughout the weekend consisted of refuelling. The other big cars had multiple sets of tyres, engine changes and professional teams running them. Modified street cars.. hilarious!

7

Exige GT3...sure I agree with you there, the final product of the Japanese/US teams may share little with their street car equivalents, but unlike your GT3 spec race cars were all built in house not bought directly from the factory as ready to race cars. That, for me at least, greatly separates these cars from each other. I have nothing against GT3-class machines competing in this event, but would have loved to see how a true tuned Exige, not based on any rules or regulations, would have compared against all the other cars. These events are all about ingenuity of specific and single race teams. Like Eric Hsu of Cosworth says a race car obviously doesn't make a good time attack car. I just find it extremely funny how cars built on extremely low budgets in tiny workshops in Japan can be so much faster than factory built race cars. This is the stuff that gets enthusiasts excited as it's somewhat tangible compared to race package kits ready for FIA certified events.

8

We need more info on that crazy EG civic,love grip prepped FF Hondas

9

well done, i wish the event had more competition and was a tid bit longer

10

is casey married? can i marry him?

11

Such a good set

12

amazing images kudos to all the photographers that where working on the day def be there next time

13

Great coverage of a grea event. I didnt see any modified street cars in the top 10 though, they were all race cars.

14

Awesome work guys!

15

looked like an awesome day!. Awesome photos!. Llove the photo of the R magic rx7

16

the R-magic FD3S is amazing

17

More on the Time Attack Kraftwerks superchargered EG Civic... PLEASEEEeeeee!!!

18

Perfectly said Dino!!!! The first time I visited Tsukuba there was a 996.2 cup car lapping. It was interesting to see what others garage built cars could do against Porsche's race car in a box.

19

Hey you should put up a pic of that rx8 with huge wheels, airbags and a tv in the bonnet! that car was hilarious!

20

Cool to see a GT3 car in the mix. I have always been wondering how fast "street modifieds" are against GT3 cars and so on.

21

The EG Civic ran a 1:40.9480, for 8th in Open class, and fastest NA and fastest FWD outright. I'm not a massive Honda fan, but it was impressive!

22

Thanks for the awesome pics Speedhunters. Nice meeting you lads. Thats us in the bronze honda civic.



Here is a link to the 1.41.2 laps if you guys are keen on watching. Spec list youtube comment.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcdbwOMfCig

23

@Dino Dalle Carbonare

Extremely low budgets, don't make me throw up.

24

So stoked I've got two images of my car on here. (J's Racing DC5).



Can't wait till next year. We've already started planning!!!

25

Sam, your car looks great, what is your e-mail address?

26

Seeing the pro cars run was nothing short of amazing, so much better in real life than on a laptop screen! I can only hope they build off this for an even better one next year.

27

sharp tinks

28

Fantastic photos guys. It was a great event.

29

@ Dane: That was a different EG Civic. The one pictured above is Supercharged...

30

@ Dino: " I just find it extremely funny how cars built on extremely low budgets in tiny workshops in Japan can be so much faster than factory built race cars."



Im not sure what cars you were watching, but I didn't see any "extremely low budget" cars besting that GT3 Exige.

31

lolwut...you would be surprised, trust me;)

32

@ Dino: " I just find it extremely funny how cars built on extremely low budgets in tiny workshops in Japan can be so much faster than factory built race cars."

That may apply to the lesser classes with the home made aluminium aero kits. However, the pro class was a very expensive affair. Your fooling yourself if you think anything different,

33

Have to say I agree re: "low budget" Time Attack cars vs. GT3 race cars.



While I don't have anything against them, in fact I love their outright craziness, but the tuning house-built TA cars are probably closer to full-on GT1 spec cars than GT3. Modified steering columns to push the driving position further back, full carbon dashes, unlimited engine mods with no intake restrictors, unlimited aero mods with all carbon body panels? The Pro TA cars are ANYTHING but low budget, the fact that they're running times faster than race cars while using semi-slicks shows that.



Like I said, not taking anything away from the cars or the workshops that built them, but to compare them as low-budget garage jobs taking on the race car "big boys" is a misnomer.

34

Lovely coverage guys,some very fast car indeed.

35

hahaa @ Dino. Are you serious?

36

Great pics as usual Dino - I'm sure it was an amazing trip!



Anyone have a link to watch some of the runs - would love to see how some of the cars behave at this track.



Thanks

37

#1 - CyberEVO - big bucks here

#2 - Sierra Sierra - bigger bucks here

#3 - Tomei/Cusco - big bucks here too

#4 - Prep'd Motorsport - was at the event unexpectedly!!! He didn't fly the car out for this event!!

#5 - Pan Speed Racing - you know Pan has big bucks



This wasn't a low budget raceoff. These guys brought their racing crews out, swapping engines, trannys, etc...anything to get top marks for the magazine covers their sponsors love. Look at the sponsors on the cars...Dino, come...we're not stupid. The Elise did well because it's a super light weight car, extremely well sorted out, and matched with a great driver.

38

Casey, such stunning photography. Great to see some nice coverage of this event.



Dino, the elise although GT3 built is based off the standard car, the original chassis and frame rail is still in place like all the time attack cars, just like its allowed to use a GT3 RSR (with street legal tires obviously) in time attack.

39

Casey, such stunning photography. Great to see some nice coverage of this event.



Dino, the elise although GT3 built is based off the standard car, the original chassis and frame rail is still in place like all the time attack cars, just like its allowed to use a GT3 RSR (with street legal tires obviously) in time attack.

40

It is not GarageHRS to make CyberEvo.

UNLIMITEDWORKS does everything.

The image is not HIRAYAMA-SAN of GarageHRS.



I am very sad to be misunderstood.

OFFICIAL SPEEDHUNTERS SUPPLIERS