Sunday, August 30, 2009

F1? Pah, this is much more exciting




I'VE just missed F1's most exciting race in ages.

Ferrari clutching its first win all season, Brit favourites Button and Hamilton both out in the early stages, Brawn's dream-come-true turning slightly more sour; I saw none of it, and I don't care.

While all of you were cheering Jenson on from the living room, I was stood in a mucky field just outside Carnforth, being rained on. My palms were plastered in the rubbery filth you only ever find on the tyre treads of decades-old HGVs, and my eardrums were knackered, destroyed from hours of sonic bombardment. Yet I was missing F1 for something much more exciting; banger racing!

Warton Stock Car Club is like some Arctic Monkeys ripposte to the stadium-rock smoothness of the F1 world tour, and about as noisy. You stand by some terminally rusty steel fencing - forget anything so sophisticated as seats - scoff chips, and listen to what used to be Ford Capris blow your ears to pieces.

And that's just the warm-up act.



Sure, sitting down to watch Brawn win is a nice afternoon, but if you want a great one you want to see fifteen caravans get torn to pieces in a matter of seconds. Actually, you need to, because no televised motorsport is this much fun. It's not big and it's not clever, but I haven't laughed so much in ages.

A friend our little group had gone along to support had spent hours decorating a dying Volvo V70 and stupidly-named caravan - Rapier Sprite or something - in the sort of dazzingly bright colours that haven't been seen in F1 in years. Both were ruined beyond recognition within a minute, and the crowds loved it.



Forget watching F1 from the sofa. Get out there, watch the Sierras and Granadas go out in style, and laugh yourself silly.

Or tape the Grand Prix, and do both...

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Gearing up


EARLIER this week I was given the Holy Grail of aspiring car scribes.

It's hardly got the most exciting title but The UK Motor Industry Press and PR Guide 2009 has got something any upcoming Jeremy Clarkson desperately wants - the names and numbers of every motor maker's press person.

While it's hardly Lord of the Rings it does it excite me in my own slightly sad, media-orientated way, because it means arranging test drives is no longer akin to picking up molten lead with bare hands. It's also - at £85 a pop for non-journos - pretty exclusive stuff.

It's amazing how hard test drives, which I arranged a lot of when I worked at the Daily Post in North Wales were, simply because I dealt with dealers rather than press offices.

One Volkswagen review I did was shot down in flames by an over-eager salesman, who said I couldn't possibly point out that the Scirocco's rear visibility isn't as good as the Golf's. Another, working for a BMW dealership, insisted a test drive of a Z4 could be done entirely from the passenger seat. I did eventually get behind the wheel, but only after a lot of persuasion.

Yet many others - Toyota and Ford in particular - were more than happy to throw the keys my way and let me come to my own conclusions. Incidentally, I told their salesmen that while Toyota's IQ is a fantastic car, the bigger Urban Cruiser isn't, and they accepted my thoughts.

Hopefully my latest little book will let me into a world where I'll be able to tell you more about new cars without being pestered by car dealers more worried about image than honesty.

I also got sent a second book, called simply So you want to be a motoring writer.

That could come in handy, I feel.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Hope and glory

AN ATTEMPT this week to break the land speed record for steam machines isn't quite as irrelevant as you'd think.

Sure, steam stopped being in vogue for cars sometime in the '20s but there's something ever so British about a plucky bunch of blokes heading out to the desert, determined to break a record with what's essentially the world's fastest kettle.

You can just imagine these chaps tinkering away in the sheds, James May style, to create the contraption, and despite the last steam record being set an awfully long time ago - 1906, in fact - you just can't help but love them for trying. The fact that one of them is Donald Campbell's nephew only adds to it.

It's people like these chaps who go on to create hovercrafts and Concorde and penicillin, so they need all the encouragement they can get.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Chinese takeaways




WORD this week that Volvo is on the verge of becoming a Chinese takeaway has got to be a worrying way forward for the Swedish company.

I've always had a fondness for the Gothenburg firm; after all, the first vehicle I ever travelled in was a Volvo 340. Stylish it wasn't, but it was safe and dependable in a stodgy sort of way, which is exactly what you'd want if you were a newborn baby.

Everything from the turbo-nutter craziness of the '90s V70R to the C30's annoyingly cool darkened glass bootlid has left me with a liking for Volvo's products, even if some of them look a bit strange. Yet that's the problem; people only like them.

I can't think of any Volvo, past or present, which I'd buy over its immediate - and better - rivals. Even my mechanically minded flatmate, who usually buys anything if it's cheap enough, turned down the chance to buy an S40 for a paltry £100, because better cars were on offer.

And you can forget any illusions of throwing wardrobes in the back; since the Citroen Berlingo and its ilk were invented a decade ago, antique dealers no longer need Volvo estates.

Personally, I hope Chinese car giant Geely gets a better deal out of Volvo than Ford did (although a surprise buyout by IKEA would've been hilarious). Even if it's only for the safety innovations and appeasing frustrated police officers, the world still needs Volvo.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Silly but brilliant



DOES anyone have £20,000 I can borrow?

I only ask because I've completely changed my opinion on Aston Martin's forthcoming city car - no, really - codenamed Cygnet. It's not so much as ugly duckling as an utterly brilliant idea.

Behind the blu-tacked DB9 grille and silly bonnet vents is actually an IQ, Toyota's 67bhp solution for anyone who wants to look stylish in a traffic jam. Its boot is laughably tiny and it costs more than its (far roomier) Aygo sister, but it's brilliant.

The IQ, with its full foursome of seats, is so much smarter than a two-seater Smart, and there's something about its silly dimensions that makes it more fun to hoot about in than Ford's Ka or Vauxhall's Agila. In fact, the only thing that would come close to me writing a cheque for ten grand is Fiat's 500, but for very different reasons.

The Cygnet, though, costs twice that, and blending the IQ with Aston's DBS is like putting roast beef and sushi on the same plate. Either that or a very bad hand at Scrabble. The working title's not exactly racy either; DBQ, anyone?

Yet somehow, in a slightly chintzy sort of way, I still want one. It's just a shame then that even if I did have £20,000 I still can't have one, because they're all going to existing Aston owners.

Never mind. I'll just look forward to seeing Bond chasing baddies in Fiat 500s at the helm of his DBQ...

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

RIP John Phillips

I WAS shocked to read a story earlier this week from my former colleagues at the Daily Post in North Wales about John Phillips, who was tragically killed at a rally last weekend after being hit by a competing car.

Judy, John's wife, worked with me from the same office in Llandudno Junction when we were both reporters for The North Wales Weekly News, and I can't even begin to imagine how she and the rest of her family must be feeling at the moment.

I know from her that John was a passionate motorsport man and committed petrolhead - one of his most prized possessions was an Escort Cosworth - and the number of tributes left directly underneath the Daily Post's story show just how much he will be missed by the rallying fraternity.

I've also been told that a full tribute to John is going to be published in this week's North Wales Weekly News, due out on Thursday (August 6, 2009), which serves John's home town of Llandudno.

My deepest condolences go out to Judy and her family, and while it goes without saying that motorsport is always going to be a dangerous sport, he died doing something he loved.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Endings...

DID anyone see the ending of last night’s episode of Top Gear?

Stunning scenery, Aston’s new V12 Vantage and gloriously open roads were always going to make for a great combination but it was sad to see Jeremy Clarkson declare that motoring as we know it is “coming to an ending.”

As a lifelong Top Gear fan I respect his views enormously but I really wish he wouldn’t leave us with a life of gridlock and speed cameras to look forward to.

Brighten up, mate!

Sunday, August 2, 2009

A Rally Good Weekend




SPENT most of this weekend getting sunburnt, eating expensive burgers and watching small planes landing and taking off on a windswept airfield. You might think I've been on a Ryanair break to Benidorm but in fact my destination - 2009's Woodvale Rally - is cheaper and slightly more amusing.

The show, which takes place each August within the confines of RAF Woodvale, near Ainsdale, is something I've managed to gatecrash almost every year since the mid '90s but I've always been determined to get the bottom of what it actually is.

Is it a classic car gathering? A model aircraft show? A chance to eat fast food and immediately regurgitate it on one of the nearby fairground rides? Personally, I think it's a strange mish-mash of all three, but it's still a delightfully entertaining draw for car, bike and plane buffs from right across the region.



Naturally, my own classic was being typically uncooperative, getting so excited about going on show that it decided to shed its exhaust pipe. It missed the Saturday but - after lots of swearing, shouting, and sawing - it did eventually get there on the Sunday.

As as all classics break down all the time, I ended up having nightmarish visions of legions of people across the North West all perched underneath Austin Cambridges and Ford Anglias, wetting themselves because their cars are wetting themselves. It's almost enough to make me give up and buy a Nissan Micra.

Admittedly some of the cars which actually made it here - some of which are shown here - were quite nice, and there's always something stirring about seeing a Vulcan bomber fly past. Yet I still can't imagine pitching up a tent and spending two whole days there.



So the Woodvale Rally's still full of expensive food, cars that don't work, and every spare bit known to man (except the one thing you actually need). And I still love it.