Fear factor: PH Blog
Why rally drivers really are loons
I should qualify that. I don't scare easily in a car in a setting where the risk is entirely my own. Whatever you're driving if you're going quickly enough to frighten yourself on the road you've got bigger issues regarding your social responsibilities.
That important distinction made I'm talking about the ability to compartmentalise fear. Anyone who's participated in a gravity sport will relate to this; with experience you can rationalise and/or deny the sense of peril and simply savour the rush of conquering it. Likewise there's the appreciation of how fear can be self perpetuating, tension increasing the likelihood of it going horribly wrong.
Obviously there's a balance to strike. Complete, gung-ho denial can be admirable, likewise the 'beginner's pluck' of those who don't know yet know any better. Luck is a finite resource though.
With the honourable exception of that snappy, malevolent 991 GT3 that tried, repeatedly, to kill me on its Cup tyres and a sodden Silverstone Grand Prix circuit, wet track days are a good example. I'll share the collective dread in the briefing if there are puddles in the pitlane. But out on track I've often found myself having more fun than on dry days, the extra focus required enhancing the buzz. In the cold light of day I don't want to think what losing a fifth-gear drift in a Caterham and hitting the Armco would feel like. But it's only by setting that thought aside you stand a chance of dealing with it and preventing the nightmare becoming a reality.
I'll be honest though. Rallying that Defender scared the crap out of me. And for prolonged periods I felt a most unnatural sensation of simply backing off out of fear of what might happen. I just couldn't take my eyes off the trees, rocks, drops and other perils beside the track. I choked.
I think this is the difference between rallying and circuit driving. On a track there are, relatively speaking, periods of mental 'down time' between the bits that demand your full attention. It's a bit like an electric car's regenerative charging, just for your brain instead. What I learned in that Defender is that on a rally stage you have no such luxury. You have to be on it 150 per cent all the time. Only then will you be able to look beyond what's waiting for you if you get it wrong. This in a Land Rover with a 170hp diesel engine too. What must it be like in a proper rally car capable of covering the same terrain at twice the speed?
I already knew rally drivers were mentalists and a complete lack of imagination is a prerequisite. And I can watch onboards with known 'if in doubt, flat out' lunatics like McRae, Kubica and that Kiwi chap in his old Escort on endless repeat and never get bored. I love the ruthless, combative aspect of circuit racing. But get properly transfixed purely by the driving in rally cars. The motor skills required to do it I can just about comprehend. But the mental strength to carry it off? That's something else entirely. Respect! And as for the co-drivers...
Dan
I've only done limited track time and no rallying, but any time I have been in that fortunate position it hasn't scared me (even in a Monaro VXR8 at a teeming wet Rockingham, courtesy of PH 2009). I think it's either that I have been in control of everything going on, or that anyone else around me was engaged in a similar pursuit with a similar mindset.
What worries me is the actions of others in everyday motoring, particularly in wet / snow conditions where I can be doing nothing wrong and still end up in a mess. That or those more concerned by what's on the radio / phone than on the road.
But I agree, probably immense fun!
Can't say I've felt fear whilst driving, and have only been marginally concerned on the odd occasion while co-driving, though trust in the nut behind the wheel must be entire. In contrast I've felt bloody terrified at 20mph as a passenger, with certain less than able drivers on the road who seem oblivious to the unfolding situation(s) around them.
Ari Vatanan - a legend in the true meaning of the word, and Terry Harryman a complete nut-job for sitting alongside him!
In F1 drivers analyse to gain tenths, whilst preventing the car from sliding past a neutral state. Conserving tyres, fuel, tactics, team orders, blah, blah, blah.
Rallying is almost the opposite.
Rallying is about having the confidence in your ability to overcome the fear of hitting solid objects at high speeds whilst sideways. I know often they crash at the speed of light and walk away with bruises, but you need guts.
Riding shotgun in a WRC spec rally car on a stage will beat any rollercoaster ride you will go on, ever.. it can be made even more interesting by trying to hold onto a laptop and alter the fuelling and ignition
I love circuit racing but rally driving takes something extra imo, even bigger balls!
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