Saturday, 18 December 2010

My Allen Trial

 Its still dark as we fill up on the M5 before the start
Left Bedford just after 4.30 and had an easy run to Doynton via Buckingham and Oxford, joining the M4 at Swindon. Arrived at start not long after 7.30 to join a long queue for scruitineering that streched a long way down the narrow street. Not sure the locals will have enjoyed all those idling engines outside their windows when thet were expecting a Sunday morning lie in! The first few sections still had a bit of ice and we were doing well until we got to Big Uplands where we got round the corner but stopped at the three when we ran out of momentum, or was it ground clearance. It was a long reverse down! Most of the lower classes seemed to flounder here but I understand the Trojans went clear, well done.

We left the line at Guys Hill with the wheels spinning so didn't get very far. We had a bit of a delay on Travers when the Sierra had issues but a clear run through after that. We managed to clear the first two Ubley Woods sections but couldn't get the Beetle over the hump on the third.

Snow on the ground as we tackle the sections at Ubley Woods (picture by Pat Toulmin)
Enjoyed the Lakeside sections, I thought Pete Hart had made a good job of making the best of this venue. John Walker was as magnificent as ever, although the ruts have got a lot deeper since I last went up it 4 years ago. Lets hope it stays usable. Pleased that the Beetle ran well all day.

We made for home as soon as we finished and I was back in Bedford at 19.30.

Click Here for Allen Trial Report

Monday, 13 December 2010

My Competition Year

Trials
24 Jan - Beetle with Mike Hayward - Clee Hills Trial - Finisher
7 Feb - Beetle with Chris Bird -  Holbecks Trial (West Suffolk MC) - Award for 2nd in Class
13 Feb - Beetle with Chris Bird - Northern Trial - Finisher
14 Feb - Beetle with Chris Bird - Falcon Southern Autos - Finisher
7 March - Beetle with Chris Bird - March Hare Trial - Finisher
13 March - Beetle with Mike Hayward  - Stroud & DMC Mechanics Trial - Finisher
21 March - Dellow with Chris Bird  - West Suffolk MC Trial at Wattisfield - Finisher
2 April - Beetle with Mike Hayward - Lands End Trial - Finisher
16 May - Beetle with Chris Bird - Ilkley Classic Trial - 2nd in Class award
2 Oct - Dellow with Mike Hayward - Edinburgh Trial - Finisher
10 Oct - Austin 7 with Chris Bird - Brickhill Trial - Finisher
7 Nov - Austin 7 with Chris Bird - Falcon Guy Fawkes Trial - Finisher
28 Nov - Beetle with Mike Hayward - Bristol MC Allen Trial - Finisher

Other Events
11 Apr - Drive Murrays Golf in CSMA Auto Solo
25 Apr - Passenger Murray Chelmsford MC "Gymkhana"
20 June - Drive Dellow in Falcon Tewin Water Speed Trial
12 Sept - Drive Austin Seven at Falcon Autotest

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Boiler Blues

Chaos Manor is a relatively modern place. Its a bungalow and was built about ten years ago. Lots of good things about that, a few bad, and one of those is the boiler. It's one of those new condenser thingies that you have to have now. Very efficient but not designed to last very long. No cast iron heat exchanger, lots of thin steel to rust through!

Not long after moving in, back in 2006, we decided to sign up to one of those British Gas maintenance contracts. Expensive, but worth every penny as it turns out. Shortly after signing up the boiler goes dead. The man comes, replaces the control board and all is well, for a couple of years.

Then one very cold morning there is no hot water, no heating, nothing. Its a sealed system and I noticed the pressure had dropped a bit. When the gas man comes he announces that the heat exchanger was leaking, they do that apparently, these modern ones are c**p!

He left a fan heater and comes back the next day with a replacement heat exchanger which it takes all day to fit. Apparently if I didn't have this contract it would have been cheaper to have a new boiler!

All is well for about a year, then a month ago we woke up and guess what, no hot water and no heating. The burner lights momentarily then shuts down. We call British Gas and the man comes the next day. Takes it all apart and can find nothing wrong. However, the electrodes look a bit worn so he replaced them, put it all back together and leaves the system working OK.

All is well for two weeks and guess what? We wake up to no hot water, no heating and the burner won't stay on. The gas man, a different one, comes the next day, takes it all apart, finds nothing wrong, puts it back together and it works. He did say however that there was a bit of dampness in the works but it wasn't coming from the heat exchanger and the system wasn't loosing any pressure.

All is well for a week, till this Sunday, when we would have been going trialling at Wattisfield if it hadn't been cancelled. Guess what, we wake up to know hot water, no heating and the burner won't stay alight. I call British Gas at 8.30 and just after 13.00 the Gas  Man arrives, and yes this is Sunday!

Its the same bloke who came and changed the electrodes. I disappear and leave it to him for a couple of hours while he curses, swears and mutters to himself, fortunately at the boiler and not at us. Finally he announces that some plastic reservoir where flue gas goes through condensate water, is blocked up and overflowing all over the control board. He reckoned the muck came from when the heat exchanger was changed. He cleans it out, puts it all back together and leaves with the system working.

That was two days ago. We shall see......

Sunday, 5 December 2010

Draft Allen Trial Report

It was very cold, with a touch of snow on the ground, as competitors joined the queue for scruitineering. It stretched a long way down the narrow street. Not sure the locals will have enjoyed all those idling engines outside their windows when they were expecting a Sunday morning lie in! The first few sections still had a bit of ice and the rather gentle Tog Hill stopped a couple of the Front Wheel Drive cars. Alan Holly was one of these in a rather low Ford Ka, prepared for endurance rallying rather than trials. Despite the front of his car scraping the ground everywhere he carried on to finish the event. Lets hope he enjoyed himself enough to stick with the sport.


Bitton Lane was not Front Engine Rear Wheel Drive Friendly

For classes three to eight Bitton Lane is all about a restart on polished stones, sited on a left hand bend. This was definitely not class five friendly as none of the four competitors could get their cars away. It was clearly a front engine, rear wheel drive issue as 40% of Class three failed as well, including Aaron Haizelden in his Mexico liveried escort which is surely too nice to trial?

Only Trojans Clean Big Uplands

Big Uplands had an experienced team of marshals from Stroud and DMC. Classes 7 and 8 bypassed the section in the morning and would return for their attempt late in the afternoon. There were some big holes mid way up the section and these were a problem for some of the lower slung cars, including many of the Escorts. The big problem came after the ninety left corner, the momentum lost rounding this was sufficient for most to come to a halt, apart from two cars that is, Steve Potter and John Wilton in their Trojans. The ground clearance certainly helped but hats off to the skill of both drivers to coax their wonderful machines to the summit of this difficult section. A mention to the best of the rest who got to the two. Bill Bennett (MG J2), Dick Bolt (Ford Escort), Reg Salway (BMW), Brian Alexander (Suzuki X90) and Matt Facey (1976 Beetle). Also reaching the two were four competitors in Class One, Nick Cleal, Dave Haizelden, James Shallcross and Charles Knifton.

Retirements at Guys Hill

The historic Guys Hill was next. There are no corners but its polished stones and tree roots are more than enough to trap the unwary, especially with a restart for class six and higher. This was another hill that proved problematic for classes three and five although Keith Sanders (Reliant Scimitar SS1) made amends for an eight on Big Uplands to go clean. In Class 4 Michael Leete left the start with wheels spinning and paid the price, stopping at the five. The other Class 4 competitors all went clear although Colin Perryman was to go no further, retiring with unknown problems, as did Matt Facey in Class 6. The restart for the higher classes saw many of their clean sheets disappear as the old hill did its work.

Past Chew Valley Lake and bypassing Burledge the route went onto the A368 and up Cleeve Hill to Travers. The section wasn't too much of a problem if you didn't have to restart, but it was a different matter for those that did. Ian Davis, in his nicely rebuilt VW Buggy, lost his clean sheet here.


Steve Potter leads the Trial in his Trojan before loosing it on Ubley Woods 3

The three Ubley Woods sections were just up the track and these were to determine the result of the trial. The Yellows and Reds had to restart on Ubley Woods 1 and only Tris White (Troll) and Nick Farmer (Cannon Alfa) managed to go clear. Then, like everyone else, Tris failed the Class Eight only restart on Ubley Woods 2. This left Steve Potter in his Trojan the lead of the trial with the only clean sheet. Sadly he was to loose this on Ubley Woods 3 where he dropped three marks. It was possible to get up in a Trojan though, as John Wilton proved when it was his turn.

So, as competitors made their way back to Chew Valley Lake for the rest halt, the leaders were all on two. They were Nick Cleal and James Shallcross in their Peugeot 205's, the omni-present Dave Haizelden in his familiar Golf, Bill Bennett (MG J2) and Dick Bolt (Escort).

Nick Cleal and Bill Bennett tie for the lead. Nick wins on Special Test Times

These five were reduced to three when neither James nor Dick could get away from the slippery restart on Burledge. Then at the first of the two sections in the Lakeside Complex  Dave Haizelden didn't get all the way out of the bomb hole and lost one mark. That left Nick Cleal and Bill Bennett in the lead on two marks and the situation remained that way till the end, victory going to Nick on Special Test Times.

Whilst this was going on the Yellows and Reds went to Big Uplands for their attempt, with Class Eight having a restart. Most of the leading contenders went clear but after Ubley Woods this didn't impact on the final results.

Another successful Allen Trial

The trial had its traditional finish at John Walker, a wonderful blast through the mud in the gathering dusk to conclude another excellent Allen Trial. Pete and Carlie Hart, Mark Tooth and the team are to be congratulated on preserving the traditions of the Allen Trial even though they have lost many "real lanes" over the years. In particular moving the Lakeside sections to their present location has been a great improvement and are a welcome addition.