I was relishing the trek up to Knockhill. It’s a mammoth journey, but
some of the scenery is lovely – even from the various motorways you
have to trudge for hours. My particular favourite part is between
Carlisle and Glasgow. The motorway weaves its way through rolling,
deserted hills, with wind turbines aplenty, mist and rain adding to the
drama.
But enough of the romance of the road trip. This year, I was
accompanied by a young motorsport student, Jason Chidwick who is
studying at Canterbury College but desperate to get to as many race
events as possible to marshal, if possible. So having hooked up with him
back at Lydden, we’d laid plans for me to pick him up.
Just before the trek up to Scotland, it had occurred to me that the
windscreen washer really wasn’t up to scratch. Driving with one hand on
the wheel and pulling on a windscreen wiper stalk is not very easy. So
I’d decided to take Pete’s advice and get a much larger washer bottle.
Nothing like last minute, I found myself wiring and plumbing the
salvaged part into Maud late on Friday evening. By the time I went to
bed, it was working – but not fixed into the car. I was becoming a bit
more comfortable with last-minute changes and remaining calm about it.
We set off early on the Saturday, opting for the 520 mile route to
Dunfermline. Between 10 and 11 hours later, Maud was de-trailered after
her exhausting journey. We caught up with Guy Pettit, who raced at
Lydden and was PR’ing the event for the Swifts, and headed out to walk
of the track. This confirmed that the previous few days of rain had made
the loose section up the hill particularly rutted, but figured it would
get smoothed out pretty quick during race day.
At the top of the gravel section, it was clear that the top of the
hill had been carved away and the marshals’ post moved to the inside of
the track. This meant that there was no menacing drop-off the hill back
onto the circuit which hurt us last year, and reckoned it was all good.
It was certainly going to make some difference to the speed you could
carry over the top of the hill and beyond.
We headed back to the paddock, and Pete took charge of fitting the
Peugeot 406 washer bottle in the passenger footwell. I just hoped the
scrutineers would uphold an improvised fitters job, and they did. Well
done Pete!
Now desperate to get to the hotel for a beer and burger that I’d been
looking forward to all day, we hooked up with Pete, Sarah and Guy to
make an evening of it, but we also had the company of Matt Bristow and
Trev Coulson which made an interesting evening of banter and story
telling. We missed the call for last orders, and I took that as a sign
to head back to the hotel and get my head down.
Race day dawned, good and fresh as ever up in Scotland. The forecast
threatened rain later in the day, but as it transpired it never really
materialised, with Knockhill only catching a few showers.
My mistake in practice was, for once, not pushing hard enough. I was
so pre-occupied with trying to get the measure of the first corner that I
didn’t really push up the hill on my practice laps, and didn’t identify
what was to be a major issue for my weekend.
The first corner is a fast, downhill, off-camber right hander, after
which is a very tight right hand hairpin onto the start of the loose.
After my skilful (or as Johny Bean might say, “completely out of
control”) reverse undertake in 2013 on Kris Fruru, I gave those corners
my focus. Carrying good speed through, getting the car settled and hard
on the brakes into the hairpin was my priority. And that went well; at
least I didn’t spin there all weekend…