Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi everyone,

Round 3 of the Winton Motor Raceway BP Midland/Pedders No Bull Sprint Series will be held on July 1st. This is the 3rd round of the 5 round series. For anyone who has never competed in one of these events before it is basically an entry level into motorsport. There are very basic requirements for your vehicles and the whilst you will be competing for trophies it is aimed at having a bit of fun. If you have tried the Fun Day and enjoyed it, then this is the next step. The cost is $90 if you pre-enter or $100 on the day, which is extremely CHEAP!! You will need a AASA Club Licence or higher which is $50 for 12 months if you dont already have one. The entry forms and regulations can be downloaded from HERE

The Classes are more than reasonable and are as follows:

1A Road Registerable Under 2 Litre

1B Road Registerable Over 2 Litre

2 Improved Production (eg. WRX, XR6, Skylines)

3A Modified Under 2 Litre

3B Modified Over 2 Litre

Racing - Racing Cars (any car with slick tyres)

Ladies - All Ladies

Juniors - Between 16-18 years of age

Also if you want to get your setup right for the Sprints there is a special Test & Tune day on Saturday 30th June. So you can come up on Saturday, test your car get the setup right and be ready for Sunday.

I hope to see you all there, I will be competing in the Purple and Yellow EA Falcon, number 60. Come and say hello if you are about.

Cheers

Adam

Edited by BigDaddy
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/172541-winton-sprint-series-round-3/
Share on other sites

These days are awesome fun, and well organised! Timing is via RF transponders which work well. The day just flows nicely from the open practice session to the timed sprints. Recommended if anyone wants to sneak in some practice at Winton for the next SAU championship round.

  • 2 weeks later...
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Well, in 2007 he must have been charging about $1800 an hour. He only looked at the car for 5 minutes. And another 4 to write the report wrong, and another minute to correct it. Mind you, this was for a car that was: Stock engine, fmic (hole in drivers guard), all alloy intake and custom air box, 3 inch turbo back exhaust, lowered, and a set of 17" Advans (255/40/17 rear and 235/45/17 front). It was nothing crazy. The blue slipper wanted the "hole in the guard" engineered. But that was because he got the shits that I wouldn't "relocate the battery from the boot, back to the factory position in the engine bay"... In an R33 GTST...     Also for emissions, E85, and don't go wild on timing. It's amazing how the closer you get ignition timing towards max torque, the last couple of degrees really throw NOx counts right up. And for the huge increase in emissions, it's only a small increase in torque.
    • He'll be looking down and swearing about "the damn apprentice" for trying to convince Duncan to use percussive maintenance... 😛  
    • I swear at my GKTech ones every time I have to take them apart and replace a spherical. But I wouldn't swap them for anything else. They absolutely slay every other option, at least in terms of how they actually work. You sure you don't want to live with bearings? I mean, they don't have "ball bearings". They are rod ends and sphericals throughout. Tough as nuts, even though I have found more than one way to wear them out.
    • From when I was looking at getting the 86 engineered for the turbo, the joint said to put in a few euro 5 or 6 cats, then tune the car on a nice clean E85 tune When I was looking at a turbo for the MX5, it was basically the same thing, a couple of cats and a nice clean tune Although, it will depend on the year of the Jeep IRT emmisions standards required, and what mods are done, especially if it has a newer engine installed that requires a higher Euro
    • Yeah - but it's not actually that easy. There are limits for HC, CO, NOx and particulates. Particulates shouldn't be a concern in any petrol engine unless trying to comply to the very latest Euro standard. But getting a tune right so that all the others stay within limits AT THE SAME TIME is not a trivial exercise. You couldn't possibly get it right by just guessing at the tuner's dyno, unless he had a 4 gas analyser up the pipe, which is not often the case these days. It used to be. Every decent shop that did "tune ups" (as opposed to tuning) would have a 4 gas analsyer. Perhaps there's still quite a few of them around these days. But most "tuners" are only watching O2 and power readings.
×
×
  • Create New...