ian huntly
Ian TTFan Huntly
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TT-More variation in classes needed ?
Elsewhere on the internet there are already polls to see what can be done to make the TT "different"......Do we need more variation in the classes ?
I think it was Jo who said that the present set up was like having only 3 classes made into 5 by splitting them up into part one/part two. But what can be done ??
Yet in the olden days we only had 250, 350, and 500 to which was added 125, 350 and for a while even 50. Then 1000 became the top capacity to which was added 1100
The present set up is 600, 1000, plus 600, 1000 with slightly different requirements. Are these enough for such a racing festival ? One group suggest MotoGP2 machines and four-stroke 125 as classes at the TT !!
Er5s and Fazers were also mentioned !
I would like feed back on this matter.
The polls also suggest a twins class and a 450cc limit class. Or this !! see http://www.sportrider.com/features/146_0...index.html
I realise the racing must reflect the machines available to the general public and also be representative of a homologated series.......
So what do you think ??
In 2015 I celebrate 68 years as a devoted TTFan
Bookingfor 2016 !!
(This post was last modified: 19-06-2010, 07:19 PM by ian huntly.)
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19-06-2010, 12:37 PM |
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ian huntly
Ian TTFan Huntly
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RE: TT-More variation in classes needed ?
Good man Nick, I was hoping you would respond and hope that more people will throw their thoughts into this string. No one could love the TT as much as us fans of long standing yet we are bewildered by this apparent heat 1 heat 2 set up. At this rate we will have someone else doing and winning 5 next year having the best machine and being on top form. (not necessarily in that order !)
I agree with you about our excitement at seeing one or more exotic machines contesting the races but the regs seemed to have levelled things down and other than the tickles performed by the teams with money all bikes look the same under their brightly coloured fairings. I think we should have a class where we could have machines like the Britten, and other specials made for the TT.
I also bring up the question yet again of course changes to favour the machines. I cannot believe that these rises in lap records are solely down to faster machines.......Correct me if I am on the wrong road Nick, but I and many people now think that lap speeds could actually be stable, if not dropping, if the course was left as it was.
Finally, after all these years, I still find the whole TT event something I cannot miss, not just from the races angle but meeting the people, the friends I have made over all these years, the other events we can attend, and the super Island on which the TT fortnight is held.
In 2015 I celebrate 68 years as a devoted TTFan
Bookingfor 2016 !!
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19-06-2010, 06:50 PM |
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Splashdown
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RE: TT-More variation in classes needed ?
Hi Ian
Firstly, no person on earth has more enthusiasm than you for the TT. You have FAR more than me! I am a little burned out by all the effort I gave it, but keen none the less.
You are wrong about the course speeds. If the course was "as it was", say the 1995 course, they would still be getting round now in 17m 35 seconds, or there abouts. It's the bikes that have come on. We had 128bhp on an RC30, today they all have 180 plus. Brakes, suspension, tyres, quick shift etc, I reckon Hizzy could have lapped in 18m exactly in 1991 on a 750, albeit the best 750 EVER made! So in real terms the modern bikes are going round about 25 seconds faster than the best rider at the time, with the technology available at the time. That seems fair to me. I also think that the increase in prize money has made it more competitive. Because these riders have little opportunity to earn money anywhere else, the TT stands head and shoulders above anything they can earn elsewhere. Hizzy, and Foggy, could earn money on the short circuits, and Joey had a fair contract with Honda that gave him security. I really DO think that the current crop are having a real go, which is very exciting, but, I admit, I am scared for them all!
Finally, the TT really needs more variety, I reckon it can stand two or three more years in this guise before it needs rebranding, and then it will need doing urgently. I think everyone will have been thrilled by the racing, this year, but I came back thinking it offered a familiar mix of triumph and tragedy. My heart goes out to those families who's lives are changed by the TT for ever.
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19-06-2010, 07:08 PM |
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Jo Rowe
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RE: TT-More variation in classes needed ?
I think it's a travesty that you can basically come to the island with two engines and compete in every class - even the sidecars!!!
Now I know there is no way one 600 engine would do Supersport 1, Supersport 2 and two sidecar races, but you know what I'm saying!
What gets me is the lack of something different. Now of course I am FAR too young to remember the days of being excited by "the sight of an overseas multi cylinder bike being on the TT course" to quote Nick, but they all look and sound the same. It's fairly boring!!! I was glad to get my hands on the BMW's this year, just for something new to look at. In fact, I've got to the stage where I am scrutineering bikes and will be down on my knees thinking that if it wasn't for the position of the oil filter, these bikes would all look the same!
Thanks heavens for sidecars where we can at least appreciate some real racing machinery.
However, back to the original question, yes, more variation is definitely needed. Exactly what though, I'm not too sure. I struggle as I miss two-stroke racing so much (to the point of deliberately sitting by a bush in my garden that attracts hundreds of wasps and wishing the noise was the buzz of two-strokes again! Can't believe I've just admitted that on a public forum, mind!) but there's little point to me wishing we had two-strokes back when they aren't being made any more.
I agree with Nick that the bikes are too fast to learn the course properly. I don't have his vast experience of riding bikes of course, but I have always found less powerful bikes and cars far more fun because you can have a proper play with them, rather than just getting a corner before a long straight right and using the point and squirt technique.
Nick, I too had that familiar feeling of the mix of triumph and tragedy again this year. And while I would utterly defend the right of anyone to have the opportunity to race on the TT course, it is getting harder and harder (personally) to come in on a race day morning to be called together and receive the latest tragic news.
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19-06-2010, 09:57 PM |
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chris
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RE: TT-More variation in classes needed ?
(27-06-2010, 09:17 PM)Jo Rowe Wrote: Ian, you say "people are not sure which race they are watching these days". How true!!! Even the titles of the races all sound the same (as do the bikes), Supersport, Superstock, Superbike. The only thing that is different is the background colour of the number. And speaking of such things, why don't the Senior bikes all have yellow front backgrounds any more? You could keep side numbers as per type of bike, i.e., white or red if you need classification.
Interesting to see that in the 2009 and 2010 TT Race Guide (programme with the race numbers in) The Supersport Race 1, and the Supersport Race 2 are the names of the 600cc races. In the 2008 TT Race Guide the 600cc races are known as the Supersport Junior TT 1, and Supersport Junior TT 2. I think it is a great pity that the name Junior TT seems to have disappeared in 2009, and 2010.
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27-06-2010, 10:38 PM |
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