The point of pointless publicity stunts: PH Blog
From the Isle of Man to Pikes Peak and the 'ring - why there's no harm in shameless glory hunting
A few have moaned that it's a hollow victory, given the only existing rival for the title of fastest car around the Isle of Man is ... a Subaru driven by Mark Higgins. Lighten up! Whatever the context, the sight of a specially prepared WRX STI blasting along what looks like an average British B-road at over 160mph is just fabulous, neck hair prickling stuff. 'Because it's there' has motivated some of humankind's greatest achievements. You can argue how far up the scale ragging a specially built car around a closed road course really ranks. But it sure looks cool.
There's a video clip from Higgins' first lap on Saturday of the car blasting through a kink between two walls absolutely pinned, boxer engine at flat chat and sparks flying as it bottoms out through the compression. It's all of a few seconds of footage but I keep watching it over and over again, gawping in childlike wonder at the sheer spectacle. If I'd been there I'd have been jumping up and down, whooping like an idiot. Stuff like this reminds me why I love fast cars. Does it really need more justification than that?
Maybe I'm just biased because, as a Subaru fanboy and owner, I get to savour a little reflected glory in 'my team' doing something amazing. I know rallying has moved on and it's unlikely we'll see Prodrive-built Scoobies in the WRC again. But, if nothing else, it's nice to know - were the rules to ever change - David Lapworth and his team at Banbury could seemingly return to building world-beating Subarus at the drop of a hat.
Same goes for 'ring lap records. A lot of people get themselves very worked up about the supposed relevance of such things. But this recent run of front-wheel drive Nordschleife glory hunting has undeniably resulted in some fantastic cars, any of which I'd happily own. Moaning about the lack of seats, the price premium or unsuitability of 'ring suspension for the daily commute just seems a depressingly joyless response given there are plenty of cars with a full complement of seats and soft springing if those are your priorities.
For those of us enjoying the spectacle of different engineering cultures tackling the same challenge everyone's a winner, whatever the time on the board. SEAT fans have the satisfaction of being the first to go sub-eight, Renaultsport enthusiasts have the moral high ground of being able to buy a car exactly like the one that set its benchmark time, Type R fanatics can revel in it inspiring one of the maddest hot hatches to ever enter the market while GTI Clubsport S advocates can take satisfaction in the calm, methodical engineering rigour that went into making a Golf go round faster than any of them.
If it makes you feel good about the car you own and brand you feel allegiance to of course it's relevant, whether yours ever goes near the 'ring or not.
So, cynicism parked, what's your favourite 'because it's there' feel good stunt? Loeb at Pikes Peak? Renault building a one-off Twingo from a mid-engined, V6 powered Megane Trophy chassis to do a few demo laps of the Monaco GP course? Lamborghini proving an 'old-fashioned' supercar can keep hybrid hypercars honest with an apparently opportunist 'ring lap? Share yours below!
[Source: Mark Higgins, via Twitter]
Also Red Bull are the current kings of this in my opinion.
On another note, I think the TT attack idea Subaru have done this year should be a separate event. A fee different manufacturers, some big power truly mad cars all going for glory round a one-off challenge of man and machine. Someone organise it and I'll get a ferry booked yesterday!
On another note, I think the TT attack idea Subaru have done this year should be a separate event. A fee different manufacturers, some big power truly mad cars all going for glory round a one-off challenge of man and machine. Someone organise it and I'll get a ferry booked yesterday!
I have to admit, this Subaru, tackling the Isle of Man, has to be one of the most interesting, and downright bonkers, motoring developments I've seen in a long time. It's the closest thing I've seen to a modern day Group B or our very own Pikes Peak. I just hope that someone else has a go, to inspire competition.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7gmbQ8KxM4
and Pikes Peak, like the TT, is a glorious holdover - a competitive event untrammelled by the strictures of modern day competition. both race on public roads, Pikes Peak goes one better than the TT by having an unlimited class where virtually anything goes. long may both live.
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