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Mazda Targa Tasmania

Fancy a free ride at Targa Tasmania?

Mazda3 MPS

Mazda Australia has just launched a competition offering free entry at the wheel of a 3 MPS at this year’s Targa Tasmania. You’ll need to check out the Mazda Motorsport website for full details, but, the deal is you and a mate get entry into the Targa Tour (Saturday 1 May – Sunday 2 May).

The Tour can be entered by anyone in pretty much any road legal car and allows regular drivers to tackle the demanding Targa Tasmania course with the safety of closed roads and no oncoming traffic. Sounds good, huh.

Mazda’s competition is now open and entries must be lodged by 1 April 2010. The winner will be notified on 6 April.

There’s a press release below from Mazda, but if you can’t be bothered with that then just CLICK HERE!

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Targa Tasmania

TV Alert: Targa Tasmania 2009

Targa Tasmania 2009

This Sunday (14 July) at noon the Seven Network is showing a one hour highlights package of Targa Tasmania 2009. Make sure you catch the action and see just how Tony Quinn beat the field in his Nissan GT-R.

Check your local guides for details.

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Targa Tasmania

Targa Tasmania 2009 – That’ll buff right out

Targa Tasmania 2009 - Ouch!

This year marked my second trip to Targa Tasmania, so it was with some experience that I knew the excitement and anticipation of seeing the entire fleet of competition cars at Launceston prior to the event, would soon end in a twisted wreckage for some. Symbolising the loss of someone’s hopes and dreams. Motorsport is an unforgiving beast, as these images show.

It doesn’t matter how much your car costs, by entering an event like Targa Tasmania you simply have to be prepared for the worst to happen.

The problem with that is being witness to some gorgeous metal being pushed into shapes we hoped never existed. Take the stunning Lotus Cortina, for example. Or the beautiful yellow BMW 2002. Which, incidentally, crashed out in 2008 as well—on the first corner of the Prologue in George Town—poor buggers.

The Ferrari featured below, amazingly, suffered only cosmetic damage, as severe as it may have looked, and the car was seen on the road after the event being driven back to Devonport for the ferry ride home.

The profile of driver, too, was no barrier, with eight-time winner Jim Richards crashing his car in a Targa Tasmania rally for the first time. Suitably, Richards’ candid self-appraisal was refreshing to hear.

“I turned into the corner in second gear, got to the middle of the corner and the car understeered on the gravel and mud that was on the road. But hey, 200 other cars got around the corner without hitting the bank so I was obviously going a fraction too fast,” he said.

Some raw TV news footage from the final day can also been seen below, which includes the sorry sight of Kevin Weeks’ Lambo in the bushes.

Fortunately, for all the twisted metal, no competitors suffered serious injuries during the event.

Eagle eyed AUSmotive readers will notice a MINI Cooper S shown in the images below. You’ll be able to read more on that later when my service crew report for 2009 is posted in the coming days.

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Targa Tasmania

Targa Tasmania 2009 – Mt Black

Targa Tasmania 2009 - Mt Black

Service crew duties meant I wasn’t able to get the camera out during Leg 3, so the next suite of images are from the ‘Mt Black’ stage from Leg 4. This is when the rally heads down the west coast, leaving the Launceston base for an overnight stop in the picturesque village of Strahan.

While there was some early rain about on the previous day, it cleared up pretty early in the morning. Not so on day four, where the rain came and went throughout the day. For an example of this, just check the difference in conditions on the pics below of car #803, the red R32 Nissan GT-R. The two photos were taken a bit over 30 seconds apart.

The photos were captured at the start of the stage and in a few of the shots you can get a real appreciation for the support and volunteers needed to run an event such as Targa Tasmania. It must be a logistical nightmare coordinating all the people involved, and that’s before you even worry about the competitors!

Quickest on the 8.8km ‘Mt Black’ stage was Kevin Weeks in his 2007 Lamborghini Gallardo Superleggera, with a time of 4 minutes 19 seconds. If I was to hazard a guess, I would think a BMW X5, towing an empty car trailer, should be able to cover the stage in a shade over 7 minutes and 40 seconds.

You know the drill, more pics and TV news highlights after the jump. If you have been following this series of posts, the Leg 3 news clip has been included as well.

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Targa Tasmania

Targa Tasmania 2009 – Longford

Targa Tasmania 2009 - Longford

These photos were taken on Leg 2 at the ‘Longford’ town stage. The 2.9km zig-zag street circuit gives spectators a chance to see the cars in action without the need to beat road closures.

The town stages at Targa Tasmania have generous base times. This means the bulk of the field will usually ‘clean’ the stage and incur no time penalties. This was the case for ‘Longford’ as the results show, but a pattern was starting to emerge on the leaderboard with Tony Quinn and Kevin Weeks heading the pack.

As with the previous image galleries, more pics can be seen after the jump. Don’t forget to click on each pic to load the 2000px super image. A brief video clip of the day’s proceedings is also included.

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Targa Tasmania

Targa Tasmania 2009 – Merseylea

Targa Tasmania 2009 - Merseylea

This selection of photos was taken on day one at the ‘Merseylea’ stage, a 9.9km stretch south of Devonport. The fastest through this stage was Jason White in his 2007 Lamborghini Gallardo, but it was the Lambo of Kevin Weeks that stole the show with flames spewing out of the exhaust throughout the corner where these pics were taken.

A full list of results for the ‘Merseylea’ stage can be seen here. For more pictures and television news highlights from Leg 1, see below.

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Targa Tasmania

Targa Tasmania 2009 – George Town

Targa Tasmania 2009 - Prologue

The first hit out for Targa Tasmania competitors is the ‘Temco Prologue’, held on the streets of George Town. The stage itself doesn’t count towards the final placings, but effectively seeds the drivers by determining the starting order for the rest of the event.

In order to help compress the field during the rally, thereby minimising road closure times, the slower competitors—as determined by the Prologue results—begin each day first, with the field gaining pace as the next driver starts. Occassionally re-seeding does take place, as it did this year when Steve Glenney’s RX-8 SP blew a turbo on the George Town leg. The Mazda techs had his car ship shape for Leg 1 the following day and so the organisers moved his starting order up the field reducing the likelihood of Glenney overtaking slower cars all the time.

On arrival of the fleet in George Town the cars gather in a park giving spectators a chance to get up close and personal with all the cars and drivers before they hit the streets in anger.

After the jump you can see plenty of photos (click each image to load a 2000px super image). I’ll be posting up a few image galleries from the event and aim to give a good cross section of the cars taking part, from the old classics to the latest supercars.

Also included below is a YouTube clip from this year’s Prologue filmed inside car #715, a 1970s Porsche 911. This footage not only shows you the streets of George Town, but also gives a good example of the pace note system used by many of the teams. Rounding out the photo gallery is another YouTube clip showing some raw footage of the cars in action. Keep an eye, and ear, out for the fire spitting out of Jason White’s Lamborghini Gallardo Superleggera!

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Mitsubishi Nissan Porsche Targa Tasmania Volvo

Targa Tasmania 2009 – The winners

Targa Tasmania 2009

Tony Quinn (QLD) and Naomi Tillett (SA) in a 2008 Nissan GT-R have won this year’s Targa Tasmania. Quinn was at the pointy end of the field throughout the event, but he faced an eight second deficit to the 2007 Lamborghini Gallardo Superleggera of Kevin Weeks (SA) leading into the final day. And what a drama filled day it proved to be.

The cool and wet conditions which faced the drivers meant it was a case of finding that balance between pushing hard and simply staying on the black stuff.

The first stage of Leg 5, TS35 ‘Strahan’, was a 33.3km long stretch of unforgiving slippery tarmac. And with the start point on the edge of the town itself, drivers were given little chance to work much needed heat into their tyres and brakes.

Quinn fought desperately hard in the heavy GT-R and was 11 seconds faster than Weeks. The ball was now in Weeks’ court and he attempted to wrestle back the lead on the following 6.4km ‘Queenstown’ stage. The stage begins with a tight and twisty climb out of the mining town, before opening up into a frighteningly quick downhill section. It was here that the result of the rally was decided when Weeks lost control and flew off the bitumen into the roadside scrub and bushes.

It was a savage incident and Weeks and navigator Rebecca Crunkhorn were airlifted to Hobart General Hospital. Fortunately, both suffered little more than bruised pride, Crunkhorn was released later that day, but Weeks remained in hospital overnight with suspected rib injuries. The South Australian is expected to make a speedy recovery.

Local competitors Jason and John White, also in a Lamborghini Gallardo were now in second place. For the previous four days they formed part of a very tight leaderboard, but mechanical gremlins suffered by the Lambo on the final few stages meant that Tony Quinn would claim a six minute winning margin. The largest in the event’s 18 year history.

Quinn and Weeks have both come very close to winning Targa Tasmania in the past. Both are likeable characters and either driver would have proved to be a popular winner. Speaking at the post-rally function the following day “Quinny” was gracious in victory and expressed heartfelt thanks to the numerous well wishes and support he and navigator Naomi Tillet had received.

Targa Tasmania is a gruelling event, extremely tough on cars and a fierce mental test of driver and navigator, anyone who thinks Quinn won this event simply because he was driving a GT-R is kidding themselves.

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MINI Targa Tasmania

AUSmotive returning to Targa Tasmania

AUSmotive returning to Targa Tasmania

AUSmotive will be making the trek to Tasmania this weekend as preparations for Targa Tasmania get into full swing. I will be returning to work as part of the service crew for two privateer entrants, Andrew Robinson (#923) and Stu Jones (#916).

Here’s to a great rally for the guys, especially after Robbo’s disappointment last year.

Keep an eye on their progress on the Targa website and in the meantime keep your fingers crossed that no big motoring stories break while I am away!

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Lotus Targa Tasmania

Lotus Exige Cup 260 takes on Targa

Lotus Exige Cup 260

Dean Evans will be gladly flogging the bejeezus out of a Lotus Exige Cup 260 in the Targa Tasmania event later this month.

With 192kW at their disposal, and just 890kg of car to move around it’s pretty safe to say Evans and co-driver Simone Bachmann have the ingredients to be at the pointy end of the field. Indeed the Cup 260 is good for a 100km/h sprint time of just 4.1 seconds.

Helping the Colin Chapman mantra of “horsepower makes you fast in a straight line, lightness makes you fast everywhere” to live on, this will be the world wide tarmac rally debut of the Exige Cup 260.

More specs and detail after the jump in the Lotus presser, and a rather tasty YouTube clip that shows what Dean Evans can do in a Lotus (if you haven’t seen this clip, I suggest you take the time to watch it).

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Mazda Targa Tasmania

Mazda turbocharges Targa assault

Mazda turbocharges Targa assault

Mazda Australia is planning one of its biggest and best assaults on Targa Tasmania yet. They have signed 2008 winner, South Australian Steve Glenney, and thrown him the keys to a 205kW turbocharged RX-8 SP.

“I’m excited to be chosen by Mazda Motorsport to play a role in the development of the Mazda RX-8, and to be driving it in its Australian rally debut,” said Glenney.

“The RX-8’s a great-looking car, the rotary engine is synonymous with Mazda’s Motorsport history in Australia, and I’m confident of getting a top result for Mazda.”

Mazda and Glenney are hoping the return of the SP badge to Australian motorsport will bring a top-three finish. The RX-7 SP, the last Mazda to race in Australia with the SP badge, won four Bathurst 12 hour races in a row from 1992–95.

Also forming part of Mazda’s Targa team will be a pair of Mazda 3 MPS vehicles. Australian motorsport perennial Rick Bates returns in Mazda colours for the third year in a row. This year he will be partnered by Anthony McLoughlin. That’s the experience covered then, what about youth? Mazda, has that angle covered as well with the brother and sister team of Brendan Reeves and Rhiannon Smyth also taking the wheel of the MPS hatch.

Targa Tasmania 2009 runs from Tuesday April 28–Sunday May 3 and AUSmotive will again be there at the coalface in support of MINI competitors Andrew Robinson and Stu Jones.

A trio of press statements detailing Mazda’s plans follows after the jump.

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Audi Targa Tasmania Top Gear

AUSmotive – Best Stories 2008

AUSmotive.com

For my last post of the year, a quick reflection on my favourite stories from 2008.

Getting a world exclusive on Top Gear filming in Vietnam was right up there—thanks to Andrew for giving me the scoop on that one, it has provided some nice traffic to the site, that’s for sure, with Jalopnik and autoblog just a few to reference the story.

Sharing my experiences as a Targa Tasmania service crew member for friend and privateer entrant ‘Robbo’ was also a rewarding process to go through. All going well, I should be back on board helping out Robbo in 2009, so stay tuned for that.

Credit goes to Ross and Debra for taking me back to my youth by bringing their Audi RS2 to the Shannons German Autofest. If I made a list of the cars that have shaped my love for most things automotive the RS2 would be in the top five. Putting together that piece and seeing the car up close and personal was a real highlight.

I also enjoyed covering the MINI CHALLENGE during 2008, there were plenty of thrills and spills, and here’s to a bigger and better 2009 for the MINI team.

A special mention to Gabe and his team at MotoringFile/BimmerFile for their support, their willingness to reference both AUSmotive and AUSringers has been a great help in building up traffic.

Finally, thank you to all of the readers out there. Your comments have been great, but, please, post lots more of them! Page loads and unique visitors to the site have really grown in the last few months, a trend I hope will continue well into 2009. If you have any feedback about AUSmotive that you would like to pass on, please share your thoughts below in the comments section. Your feedback can only aid the continual improvement of this site and help me provide the content you want to read.

Thanks
Liam