It’s not every day that lap records are shattered while the wind tries its best to sweep everything off the track. But then again, this isn’t just any day – this is the 2024 Yokohama World Time Attack Challenge.
After a long, frosty winter, a well-timed warm spell left Sydney Motorsport Park feeling as if it was on fire over Friday and Saturday last week. Spring had arrived down under.
The warm, windy weather was pleasant for spectators, but it threw an extra spanner in the works for all the teams – especially those at the pointy end of this circuit-based competition.
Track temperatures fluctuated wildly, keeping everyone guessing and adjusting their setups. It’s all par for the course at the world’s biggest time attack event.
The unpredictable August weather meant the wind could pick up with 80km/h gusts at any second and instantly disrupt teams’ best laid plans.
While many crowd favourites made a return to WTAC this year, a fresh wave of new international teams and faces brought an added layer of excitement.
Luke Fink, Jay Duca, and the entire Wrecking Crew unleashed Australia’s angriest drift machines for full-track exhibition laps. And then there was Mad Mike Whiddett.
Competing in both time attack and the nighttime Garrett International Drifting Cup, the crazy Kiwi kept everyone on edge.
Mad Mike made WTAC history as the first to enter both disciplines in the same car – Bullet, a 1,400hp turbo four-rotor and rear-wheel-drive-converted Mazda3 originally built for the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb. The TCP-Magic mechanics must’ve been fueled by adrenaline and Red Bull as they constantly switched between grip and drift setups.
A debut entry this year was the first electric vehicle. If you thought the Nürburgring was the only playground for EVs, think again. Misha Charoudin swapped the Green Hell for Sydney, debuting an electric time attack machine that turned heads.
Team Hyundai N, WTAC regulars, entered the Clubsprint class in a lightly modified IONIQ 5 N. With some custom Alpha Vulcan aero, a full roll cage and more, the EV hatchback was transformed from a high-performance home appliance into a bonafide race car, allowing Misha to give Sydney Motorsport Park a silent but scorching go.
We can’t overlook Yashio Factory’s Nissan Silvia S15, piloted by the man himself, Kazuyoshi ‘Oka-chan’ Okamura.
The neon pink Pro-Am class contender and its animated driver added a fresh burst of colour to the event.
Ando Yasuhiro, another Japanese time attack legend, returned with his formidable Team Scoot Mazda RX-7. Ando’s FD3S was a crowd favourite, showcasing the relentless pursuit of speed and innovation that defines time attack racing.
Daigo Saito returned for the International Drifting Cup, but luck wasn’t on his side this year.
Alongside these Japanese heavyweights was Miji Kang from South Korea, showcasing her driving talent from behind the wheel of a borrowed K24-powered Honda Civic EG hatchback.
As always, the World Time Attack Challenge delivered its share of drama, and Feras Qartoumy’s journey provided plenty.
After a frantic engine rebuild at Warspeed Industries, the American’s twin-turbo V8 Corvette arrived just in time for Saturday’s action.
Was it flawless? No. But Feras pushed his Corvette to the limit, proving that even when everything is stacked against you, it’s worth giving it your all.
Meanwhile, the mad Finn Sami Sivonen arrived with a faster, fiercer Audi R8 1:1 ‘Fat Cat,’ bringing all the energy and fun you’d expect from Scandinavia.
Together, these entrants added a rich layer of diversity and competition to WTAC 2024, making it a truly international event.
Another major drawcard for this festival are the rare and sometime obscure racing machinery cutting demo laps alongside the international guests. 2024 was no let down.
Rodin Cars from New Zealand demonstrated an open-wheeler – think circa 2010 F1 car…
… and ran their Sintura S99 in the Pro class against RP968. The bespoke GT1-inspired machine pumps out 650hp and 530Nm of torque from its screaming 4-litre V10 engine.
Up close, both cars are absolute works of art.
My advice, never skip an opportunity to see and hear a Rodin up close.
Off The RecordThroughout the categories, competition was fierce and quite often decided in the final ‘Superlap Shootout’ session. In the Emtron Pro class, Barton Mawer didn’t just dominate – he obliterated.
His final Shootout time of 1:17.444 not only set a new WTAC record but also reinforced why RP968 is the team to beat.
Their Porsche 968-based creation may have looked like last year’s entry, but it’s evolved greatly over the past 12 months. Countless hours spent reworking, replacing, and tweaking have made it sharper and faster than ever.
In the Plazmaman Pro-Am class, Sivonen’s R8 showed that Europe wasn’t here to play. The ‘Professional Amateurs’ team proved unbeatable upon their return to WTAC.
Despite Feras and his freshly rebuilt Corvette giving it their all, Sami’s Finnish precision secured the top spot.
Feras, however, wasn’t far off the pace, achieving a personal best of 1:25.4580 in the Superlap Shootout.
The GCG Open class was a rollercoaster. Rob Nguyen’s Dream Project Nissan Silvia S15 clinched victory in a nail-biting final session.
His 1:25.543 edged out Tim Slade, who, despite a heroic effort in the Xtreme GT-R, had to abort his final lap, leaving his 1:25.9350 best to stand. The crowd was on edge, feeling the tension as the final seconds ticked away.
In the Haltech Clubsprint class, Trent Grubel was a man on a mission. After an overnight engine swap, he didn’t just meet expectations, he shattered them, setting a new record with a 1:32.234 lap.
A new twist this year was the Turbosmart Flying 500.
Previously a single-car v-max speed challenge, this year it evolved into head-to-head street car roll races, which I can only describe as epic.
The ability to roll on the starting line shifted the rules of engagement, opening up the competition to a wide variety of rear and all-wheel drive cars.
As the sun set on the Flying 500, Sydney Motorsport Park’s main straight became a picturesque battleground. The sky was ablaze with golden hues, intermixed with dust, fuel vapour, and tyre smoke – simply unforgettable. I hope this format returns in 2025, perhaps with a tempting prize pot to attract Australia’s fastest street-registered machines.
The Final WordAs a World Time Attack Challenge regular, the 2024 event proved the formula of fun and speed still works. That said, the small changes implemented this year show there’s still potential for it to evolve, refine, and improve.
From intense on-track battles to vibrant displays in the paddock, Sydney Motorsport Park was the ultimate stage for two days of automotive brilliance. Records were shattered, legends were born, and once again WTAC proved why it’s the greatest time attack event in the world.
Matthew Everingham
Instagram: matthew_everingham
matt@mattheweveringham.com
Excellent event coverage. Great photos and a nice write up. I'm somewhat familiar with the RP968 but not at all with Rodin so I looked them up. Having some difficulty finding specs of the Sintura to compare to the Porsche, but I did notice a couple things looking at the results:
-Only 2 cars in the pro class with a gap of 10.44 seconds between them -- this is not what I would call a competitive series, but the top time is very impressive. Were there other entries that didn't participate or was there really only 2 people in the pro class? The spread on most of these classes is 15-20 seconds from 1st to last which isn't great from a competition standpoint.
-For reference (since you guys love karts) in 2015 a 90bhp 250cc kart ran a 1:28.113 at the same circuit with highly restrictive rules (420lbs weight as opposed to 360-380lbs, no aerodynamics beyond a rear trim device, no forced induction, no exotic fuels). This would be good for 5th in the Pro Am class and 1 second off the Rodin.
When you factor in the cost of a 250cc kart at about $25,000 this is a pretty impressive. I wonder what Feras has dumped into that Corvette at this point. A million? The RP968 probably 2-3 million at this point between people's salaries, parts, and labor. At the end of the day as impressive as world time attack has become there is a word for this entire series in wheel to wheel racing: it's called qualifying.
The super kart will also do this for hours where as time attack cars struggle to lap multiple times without overheating. If you took off the rule book on the super kart it would easily trounce the RP968. Alcohol fuels and forced induction could easily push a kart to 200-300bhp. As impressive as time attack is, when you look at the money spent you don't get much! And you're still not racing wheel to wheel.
Thanks for the kind words re article.
The gap that exists between RP968 and the next car isn't ideal, but I guess the RP968 smashing records and pushing the envelope has laid some groundwork and offers a nice challenge to any team who were interested in stepping up.
In regards to the qualifying comment; I mean if qualifying in other events had teams completely alter the car setup to run just a few laps, with no caution or thought for the following day of racing, then maybe.
If it was simply qualifying, wouldn't qualifying lap times from other sports would be in the same ball park as Time Attack?
There were 4 initially entered into PRO. The Lotus for QLD, it had an engine issue on the Thursday Test day which they wouldn't fix, and the S2000 from the USA got caught out by the infamous dodgy LA Shipping Port.
Plus a few cars that didn't double enter PRO & PRO-AM this year like the last couple years.
Quick edit: that kart weight was actually 480lbs. Basically an SUV in that world.
This stuff is awesome. The amount of ingenuity in these cars is what sets them apart from other forms of racing, you could feature half of them and it wouldn't get old.
Definitely a bi product of the series being small by comparison to F1 nascar etc. a lot of Motorsport is simply trying to survive the cult of green Marxist psychos so we see formula 1 basically become a fuel saving competition.
If global business wasn’t being held at gun point by esg and environmental insanity it would be amazing to see what f1 or dtm would do if de restricted. This is why politics in Motorsport suck!!!
Awesome photos and article!
The only thing most people know about the Sintura is that it was a former FIA GT1 racer that looked a lot like a Group C machine, and powered by a Judd V10. Everything sounded promising on paper but it wasn't a huge success on track. The company founder funded the car's development out of his own pocket.
Over the years, the event has become more and more impressive, (nice coverage, reading from my laptop here South Africa), Aussies really built a nice event for themselves.
Having been to many WTAC events, the amount of stuff to see and experience is intense. So many awesome cars, builds, displays and people. Awesome job capturing all these moments of the events!
austrailian women...woof.
I think the interesting part for RP968's time is that it is actually the outright fastest lap the track has, which was set a while back with a A1GP car back when that was a thing. Would a modern F2 car or Prototype go faster? Probably, but this was still a modified street car, on I think relatively restrictive tire rule.
At SMP it is definitely head and shoulders above other cars, but for context I think Feras' Corvette that does 1:25 at SMP ran 1:17.7 at Road Atlanta, which puts it faster than current gen GT3 cars there. Not the fastest categories to compare to but again, for a pretty much home brewed effort with off the shelf tires is pretty impressive, and is still a pretty far zip code off the RP968's time.
Time Attack has much more open rules, can you build a faster car ultimately? Sure, anyone willing to spend the money and time has the potential to do it. But as mentioned for something ultimately is an amateur event for bragging rights with no real return, not many have the incentive to do that. To be able to complete a car to the level they are at doing the lap times they do is still mighty impressive.
Is he scared, or is just not as committed a comment a section as others?
Honestly man, you sound like you have a great wealth of knowledge to share, but coming out swinging at 1100% only erodes any credibility you may other have built up here.
By all means share your opinions and your knowledge. I enjoy reading some of your insights. But keep it civil, online taunts are better served over Minecraft or Fortnite servers where the other children play.
Reality: you are scared to race for money or get in a ring.
Let’s live in reality Nate. You can do it.
Uh oh, somebody used facts lol
lol, you aren’t doing anything and you aren’t the champion of anything. You’ve been making empty threats for months and still don’t have the balls to use your own name. Nobody believes your bs, go get some help