Monday, March 12, 2007

Rally Mexico!



I didn't manage to get internet access while we were in Mexico, so I've been saving this up for almost a week:

Rally Mexico has been terrific; the fans here are astounding. I think I've had more photos taken of me this weekend than in my whole life before.

We finished 18th in Group N and 33rd overall.

Recce

We spent all day Tuesday and Wednesday doing recce. I found out quickly that things work... well... different in Mexico. For example, here "non-rally traffic" looks like this:



We took things easy and safely on the recce. One team didn't, though:


All in all, recce was a couple of long hard days. It almost took as much out of us as the actual rally.

Opening Ceremony

The Opening Ceremonies were amazing. We started off in the town of Silao, just down the road from the Rally Headquarters in Leon. The plan was to drive from there in convoy to the actual opening ceremonies in Leon... all the route book said about Silao was that it was a "holding area". As we turned the last corner before the holding area, we were met by a canyon of screaming fans. As it turned out, the holding area was a display of cars in the town square, and it seemed like every person in all the surrounding towns had come to see the cars and meet the crews. We spent our hour wait there autographing posters, notebooks, rally shirts and hats, and on occasion, babies.


From Silao, we left in a big convoy to Guanajuato. The town was beautiful... the opening ceremonies were in the heart of the old part of the city. It reminded me of Old Quebec City, but with a Spanish feel instead of a French one, and the narrow streets felt even narrower with people lined three and four deep as we snaked our way to the Guanajuato square for the official opening ceremony. Ceremonies, actually: they had three separate ceremonial starts so that they could fit all the people.


After the ceremonial start, we headed back onto the highway to Leon... and took our first damage of the rally.

I had seen an interesting practice being used in highway construction in Mexico: here, when a road or a highway lane is closed, the road owners and contractors make sure it stays closed by placing lines of large rocks across the road. As we were driving along the main highway back to Leon, we were following a truck. Suddenly, we saw a cabbage-sized rock in our path that the large truck had managed to drive over without touching. With a car on our left and a ditch on our right, Craig decided that the best course of action was to go straight and get the rock between our wheels. We felt a big "bang" as the car hit the rock, then the shudder as the car passed over it. Luckily, since we were in a rally car with a good skidplate, we got off reasonably unscathed: the only damage was to our rear bumper cover that the rock tore off as it left us, which our crew promptly reattached when we got back to the service area.


Leg 1 - Friday

Friday went well on the whole, but we had stalling problems a few times during the day... the combination of high temperature and thin air did not make the rally car's motor happy. A late call from me on stage 2 meant we missed a hairpin turn... as Craig tried to turn the car around to get pointed back in the right direction, the car stalled... and wouldn't restart. Luckily, there was a tow truck at the corner, and we got pulled back out of the way. After the engine cooled a bit, Craig managed to get it fired again, and we were back on our way.

The super special stage on Friday night gave us problems as well. The previous cars had made the tarmac sections of the course slippery, wet and muddy, and on our first time through one sharp right corner, the car slid off and stalled. Again, it took several minutes to get the car cooled off and fired up; we lost a few minutes, but we were able to continue.

Leg 2 - Saturday

Saturday went without much trouble. Our only "moment" of the day was when we slid into the ditch and stopped against a cliff face. Craig managed to power out of the ditch and we were back on our way, with only a bit of cosmetic damage on the driver's side of the car.
We were happy with our run that day, but when we got back we got disappointing news: our teammates had been excluded over a procedural mix-up.

Leg 3 - Sunday

Sunday was the short day, but as I told Craig, it was "shorter", not "easier" than the other days.
On stage 17, we went a bit wide on another turn and put two wheels into the ditch. After the stage, we checked the car out and saw that a good amount of dirt and gravel had been pushed into the tire bead. Unfortunately, because of our stalling problems on the transit, we lost time and didn't have time to change the tire before the next stage. Luckily, it held air all the way through stage 18, but we decided to not push our luck and replaced it on the next transit.

Stage 19, the last "real" stage of the rally, was another interesting one. As we came up the steep incline leading to the start control, the car stalled. We opened the hood to pour water over the intake manifold and the intercooler to cool the air that had been heating up in the engine bay... as we tried to get the engine started, our time came up. I ran up with the timecard and waved Craig into the control zone. Unfortunately, I was one second late. I jumped in the car, belted in and got ready for the stage.

What I didn't realize at the time was that it was a fan who had closed the hood, but he hadn't fastened the hood pins. About halfway through the stage as we landed from a big jump, the lip of the hood caught the air and the whole thing flipped up. Thankfully, the windshield was okay, but we pulled off to get the hood resecured and zipped off again. All in all, we probably lost about a minute.

The last stage of the day was the Super Special again, but unlike the previous runs, we did two laps continuously. On our first lap, we landed on our nose on a jump and bent the car slightly... but the car kept going and we finished the stage in respectable time and well ahead of the two-wheel-drive Peugeot 206 that we had been paired up with.

Looking Back



All in all, the rally was an amazing experience. The roads were spectacular, even if the constant turns were tiring for Craig... but the best part was the fans. Its removal from the schedule for 2008 (to be replaced by Rally Australia) means that its future is slightly uncertain, but even without Rally Mexico being a WRC round, it's definitely an event for any rally fan to experience.

Wow. Just... wow.