Racing a Lancia Delta HF Integrale 16v

Racing a Lancia Delta HF Integrale 16v

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Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Thursday 2nd November 2017
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_Superleggera_ said:
I was at Silverstone on Saturday and the Integrale looked great on the track. Loved it.

I was with the Team BRIT guys. smile
cool, you should have come and say hello.

Team Brit was an interesting team for me. I love what they are doing and why they are doing it. Much respect there and it is great to see motorsport being used in such a positive way. thumbup

I must get me one of those VIP passes biglaugh

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Thursday 21st December 2017
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Boxing Day Tuesday December 26th @ Mallory Park in Leicestershire, UK.

The 43rd annual Plum Pudding race meeting returns on Boxing Day, Tuesday 26th December 2017. The Plum Pudding is the only race meeting on the circuit calendar to feature two, three and four wheels and is the ideal excuse for the whole family to get up off the sofa and away from those mince pies, because with fresh air and racing engines… it doesn’t get much better!

An event that’s become something of a tradition for those local to the Leicestershire circuit, it gives competitors who love to race on two, three or four wheels a chance to work off the Christmas turkey in a slightly more unique way than normal! Whilst those who love to race bikes and sidecars will have races to cater to their tastes, a pair of races each will be run for sports cars and also saloons respectively.

The way this works, however, is a little different to any other race meeting. This is because although competitors will still have a regular practice session, there is no qualifying on the day to determine the grid, nor is it chosen by a random draw. Instead, our grid position is set by the order of entries received. The grid for the second will then be a reverse of the result from Race 1, so if one wins they start at the back and so on.

For this event we shall be trailing a live broadcast of the practice and both races. We have no idea if there is the signal, bandwidth or if the camera will pick up any sound. If it works we will be looking to do it as a regular feature next year. Keep a watch out on the YouTube channel at approximately 9:45, 12:40 and 15:05.

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=richa...

Full timetable download: https://tinyurl.com/ycg4w9l9

Stay up to date with live timing here: http://livetiming.tsl-timing.com/BRSCC


Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Friday 22nd December 2017
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Hi Dave.

Thank you so much for putting yourself out on Boxing day, we all really appreciate it.

Please come and say hello if you get chance.

Looks like a good race with a Escort Cossie and a Scoopy plus a Audi TT.

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
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Dave Brand said:
I'll be marshalling at the Plum Pudding - I'll look out for you!.
Good to meet you Dave and thanks for your time on Boxing day. Hopefully we put on a good show!

Race One

We “qualified”, or got our entry in ninth place right in the middle of the twenty car grid. The second bit of bad news is that ninth was on the right hand side of the circuit next to the pit lane.



The start was taken very tentative given the grip advantage that 4wd has and there was no space to drive in to. Once the race got underway the slower cars dropped back and we were in a battle with similarly passed cars. After overdriving the car for a number of laps, the car came off the circuit on the exit of Gerard’s Bend and splashed through the puddles losing two places. Then followed a recovery drive where the lovely sounding Rover Vitesse was caught and passed after a better exit out of Devils Elbow corner. We finished fifth overall but 3rd was definitely possible without the off track antics. We had opted for the Nankang NS2-R tyres which are full wet “list” tyres but this was probably the wrong call as there was a definite dry line and the extra rubber given by the Nankang AR-1 would have been better.



Race Two

The Clark of the Course decided to change the starting order and instead of reverse grid the whole field, reversed the top six. This was great news for us as it meant we were starting in second position on the front row.



As there was plenty of space in front of the Delta we made a good start but the flying Audi TT Spaceframe yellow rocket came flying past and quickly disappeared in to the distance. We had opted for dry tyres this time with the Nankang AR-1 and once warm after the two warm up laps the tyres were giving lots of confidence inspiring grip even in the damp patches. Sitting pretty in second we were on course for finishing well but an Impreza had other ideas. After a few close laps swapping places and beginning to overdrive the car again, the exit of Gerard’s Bend caught us out again and we followed almost the same path through the grass and puddles. This time we had lot lost any places but the Clio Cup car had caught up a whole bunch of time. Sadly the Impreza retired from the race and the Clio Cup car, driven by an instructor from Mallory Park caught and overtook the delta towards the end of the race. We did have a brief fight back but off line there was much less grip so a lunge down the inside would not have finished well.



Still, third is a good result, second was on the table without the error at Gerard’s Bend but even without this error, the Clio would have probably caught and passed us for the second step.

Summary

The Plum Pudding was a surprise entry to the seasons racing and was a nice way to cap off a great first year with the Lancia. Please check out the season review videos on our YouTube channel and please subscribe, comment below and give the video a thumbs up.



Facebook: www.facebook.com/LanciaDeltaRacing/

Video: http://youtu.be/eFvfkLnjrnw

Extended Version: http://youtu.be/A7IBaU1FTtk

Additional Footage: Colin Taft http://youtu.be/2bkYypguyAQ

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
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2017 was Lancia Delta Racing’s first year of competition.

Watch our season review programe split in to four parts by John and Richard about their highs and lows with competing in a new car.

Part 1: http://youtu.be/7JqrA2tOGds
Part 2: http://youtu.be/TRC7L_aRlb8
Part 3: http://youtu.be/wxZCdJlJ7as
Part 4: http://youtu.be/bCZqcIXSxPM

A playlist for the seasons videos can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmsJCCDm9ELZ...

John Shields runs www.jjperformance.co.uk and was instrumental in the cars design, build and engineering.

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Tuesday 13th February 2018
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Our 2018 calendar has been finalised and we can confirm the season’s calendar as follows:

7th April @ Snetterton 200
6th May @ Silverstone International
2nd June @ Oulton Park
22nd to 24th June @ Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium
14th July @ Brands Hatch Indy
18th August @ Thruxton
19th August @ Brands Hatch Indy Festival Italia
16th September @ Donington Park National
6th October @ Mallory Park
19th to 21st October @ Magny-Cours, France
27th October @ Silverstone Historic Grand Prix (Provisional)
26th December @ Mallory Park Plum Pudding (Provisional)

Last year we took part in two series of the Classic Sports Car Club, namely the Future and Modern Classics series. For this year we have decided to compete only in the Modern Classics series designed for cars produced in the 1990’s. We took this decision for a number reasons including;

- Logistically, JJ Performance are running an awesome sounding Holden GTS in the New Millennium series and the Modern Classics is on the same day
- The competitiveness within Modern Classics is better
- But most importantly, the cars competing are not one-off specials but normal production cars which one can compete realistically against in the dry

We will also be competing in one off events with other clubs such as Motor Sports Vision, the 750 Motor Club and the British Racing & Sports Car Club.

This year’s calendar visits some great circuits throughout the UK featuring the super fast Thruxton, a double visit to both Silverstone and Brands Hatch as well as the location of our second ever win at Donington Park. The season opens at Snetterton in just a few weeks time using the traditional “200” layout suited for fast high-powered cars. The visit to Oulton Park in Cheshire will be our first and we were gutted to miss the event last year due to a clash of diaries. Even more so when it ended up being a very wet race…

The highlights have to be our continental visits to Belgium where we hope to start at least one race as well as our first ever visit to Magny-Cours in central France.

As always, everyone is welcome to come and watch with prices varying from free (at Spa) to at the most £13 for an adult. We are always happy to talk to visitors in the paddock and show the car off in all of its glorious detail.

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Thursday 15th March 2018
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The New Season Awaits


For us the winter period provides time for engineers and mechanics to do those all-important jobs which you never seem to get a chance to do through the season. As usual we have left everything until the last-minute and with only 4 weeks to go (at time of writing) the list of jobs is still long and complex. Here are some of the highlights!

Dry Weather Setup – we had some help from Rob Wheldon from Raw motorsport late in the 2017 season to help improve the car’s setup and managed to improve 3 seconds over our previous best at Donington. Doing the same in the dry won’t gain us as much time as this but will definitely move us forward on the grid (more on this in a later article).

Flatten Floor & Sump Guard – to decrease drag and improve top speed. This year’s calendar has some high speed circuits and the Delta was not the most aerodynamic of cars out of the factory.

Engine & Gearbox – as per February’s article, race engines need lots of tender loving care to deliver 500fwhp lap after lap after lap. Engine and gearbox out, stripped, checked and renewed where needed. To re-install without a leaking as the engine to gearbox seal is metal to metal and it is really hard not to have this seal weep small quantities of oil when running.

Air box – make and install a custom aluminium air box to separate air entering from the light cluster from the engine bay, hopefully reducing intake temps and adding power.

Re-fit doors – a pig of a job which will take a couple of days. Those who have seen the car up close would have noticed some “less than factory quality” shut lines with the fibre glass doors.

Investigate & Fix Knock – there is currently a knock coming from the front suspension or steering which happens on load. We need to find and fix this vital part, so we don’t end up driving straight in to a wall at any movement.

100’s of Small Jobs – including securing the LED headlights, tidying up wiring loom, securing the coil packs with a cover, fixing the rear light cluster seal, sealing up the 100’s of holes in the floor, installing the driver’s cooling fan plus much more.



Once we have done all this work is done we then need to take the car to a circuit or rolling road to perform a shakedown. After any major surgery it is wise to make sure everything has been put back in it’s right place and there are not going to be any dramas over the next race weekend. Finally testing needs to be booked prior to the first event to get me up to speed, back on the pace and ready to hammer in some good laps during qualifying.

Race Retro


It was great to chat to everyone at the Race Retro event at Stoneleigh in February. We were honoured to welcome Miki Biasion to the stand and we had a great chat about the car, what we achieved last year and our plans for 2018. A real down to earth guy who clearly has a passion for all things Lancia.









Drive Available!



Back in early 2017 we borrowed a Mitsubishi Evo 4 when the Lancia wasn’t quite ready to race. For 2018 it is available to arrive & drive from JJ Performance, our engineering partners and builder of the Lancia. Also joining us on the grid is a Subaru Impreza STI and Toyota Celica GT4! Give John Sheilds a call ( http://www.jjperformance.co.uk/) and compete head to head with ourselves and other 90’s rallying icons out on the track!

Mitsubishi Lancer Evo 4 Track Day at Snetterton




Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Thursday 15th March 2018
quotequote all
B'stard Child said:
Excellent - I'll come and hopefully see you at Snetterton - Last time you were in an EVO when I was looking for a Lancia biggrin
Sorry about last time, it was all very last minute! We are definately (well as much as you can be with a race car) going to be there on the 7th of April. Also planning on testing on the 29th of March and 6th of April but these are less certain depending on readiness!

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Friday 30th March 2018
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Snetterton Shakedown

The team is still burning the midnight oil finishing off those last-minute jobs and making sure everything will be ok throughout the weekend.

A spring day in England can start off with snow, go through rain, wind and end up a lovely summers evening with clear blue skies. It is therefore hard to know what kind of conditions we can expect on the day, so we will be making judicious use of the weather radar apps on our phones when making the critical call as to what tyres to put on the car for each session. Nankang have confirmed their support for us throughout this year and again we will be running their semi-slick tyres during testing and the race. For dry and slippery conditions, we run the Nankang AR1 tyre which is on the MSA’s C list of competition tyres and provides excellent grip and stability from new and through hour long stints. For predicted wet and monsoon conditions we will be opting for Nankang’s MSA ‘B’ list competition tyre the Nankang NS-2R which is also legal for road use and the tyre which has seen us to two overall victories in the pouring rain.

Snetterton is situated in Norfolk, England and is the most easterly circuit in the UK we use for 2018. After its use as a USAF base, Snetterton was first used for motorcycle racing in 1953, organised by the Snetterton Combine, an association of clubs in Norfolk and Suffolk. The track was used by both Team Lotus (Formula One) and Norfolk Racing Co (Le Mans) to test their racing cars. Snetterton has 3 configurations which can be used for competition. Snetterton has undergone somewhat of a renaissance during the recent years following a multi-million pound redevelopment project at the start of 2011, which was met with rave reviews from both spectators and competitors alike. The 100 infield circuit is mostly used for sprinting with the 200 and 300 used for door to door competition. The Snetterton 300 circuit hosts the British Touring Car Championship, British Superbike Championship and British F3 and GT Championships. Snetterton is a typical post war airfield affair set in the mids of the Norfolk fens. The circuit is mostly flat with big skies above alerting you of what the weather will be 30 minutes hence.



This year the club has opted for the shorter 200 circuit and will be a good benchmark for how the car will perform over the year. A lap of the 200 circuit starts with a gentle climb up the start finish straight, hugging the put wall for added slip streaming. Richies corner is an unsighted fast right hander where only the slightest of lifts and a dab of left foot braking helps the car turn in and carry as much momentum through the apex as possible. A good exit here can bring you along side a competitor ready for a big stop in to the right hand hairpin of Montreal (what was called Wilson) sliding down the inside and ahead of your foe. The exit of Montreal is all important as instead of heading infield on the 300 configuration, the car needs to immediately turns left and head down the Bentley straight for a big drag towards the circuit’s infield bridge. The Delta should have the advantage through this tight section with good on power traction through the exit phase. After what seems like an age it gets exciting into Brundle where the car needs to brake from fifth gear down to the second gear right hand corner of Nelson all whilst going through a left hand tightening bend. Smoothness is the key here whilst not dropping too much speed on the entry. Minding the curbs on the inside of Nelson the car rockets out of the corner and soon is tipped in to the Bomb Hole. Taken much like Richies only slightly slower, the car is put in to the corner using only the smallest of lifts with a touch of left foot braking the right hander catapults you in to the never-ending corner of Coram. This right handed constant radius curve tests the balance of your car and again being smooth on the throttle and carrying as much speed around the large apex can set you up for another overtaking opportunity in to Murrays. As Murrays’ is a left hander you can be more aggressive on turn taking a wide line to the apex and get on the power early for another long drag up the start finish straight’s slight hill.



The 300 layout better suits the short wheel base of the Lancia as the 200 tends to be all about straight line speed which in turn suits cars with low drag and lots of power. There are 32 cars entered so far and cars to note in our class or fighting for overall victory includes a Seat Leon Cupra R, TVR Tuscan Challenge, 6 x BMW M3’s and a Z3M, a fellow ex rally car in the form of a Subaru Impreza WRX, Porsches 968 & a 993 911 and the drifters favourite Nissan 200SX. Having raced with most of these competitors over last year the race will prove challenging and we expect the TVR Tuscan Challenge car to drive off in the distance with it’s large V8 and space frame light weight chassis. The BMWs can never be ruled out as their long wheel base, excellent chassis balance sees them carry speed in to and through the apex better than nearly all the cars on the grid. A good result in the dry would see us finish in the top 6 and we are hoping to match or improve on our best dry result at Donnington of forth overall. Clearly in the wet with four-wheel drive, nothing short of a win will do!



On Friday the car is booked in for a full day’s testing with 4 sessions split throughout the day. The hope is to get the driver and car dialled in to the circuit and get as close to an optimum setup as possible in the time allowed.

This time last year we were still battling with getting the car ready for the start of the season and unfortunately one we lost. To try and still get a race we opted to rent a Mitsubishi Lancer Evo 4 and ended up having a frustrating weekend full of mechanical issues and dramas. You can read all about it here: http://lanciadeltaracing.com/2017/04/20/plan-b-c-d... and watch the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHryJZU0saQ

We had some success at Snetterton in a Renault Clio 182 a few seasons ago and managed a second in class through the pouring rain, watch the video here: http://youtu.be/Y9KcRf1zcL8 and other races here: http://youtu.be/71075NEXpNA and here: http://youtu.be/0txHElMR66k

Stay up to date with live timing here: http://www.tsl-timing.com/event/181464 We will also be trying out broadcasting live during qualifying and the race. Stay up to date on Facebook and YouTube for the latest announcements.

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Friday 30th March 2018
quotequote all
Here is the video from the shakedown we did yesterday. Things didn't go brilliantly and we may have done a crank frown.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpFBsTR7oZY

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Friday 30th March 2018
quotequote all
Lol. John runs the business which builds and looks after the car. He ran the Alfa Romeo touring car team in the 2000's with the 147 and has built and run numerous others in historic, club and professional racing teams. www.jjperformance.co.uk

Thurbs

Original Poster:

2,780 posts

223 months

Sunday 17th June 2018
quotequote all
Thanks guys.

It has been a frustrating few months with the engine in the Lancia.

For those of you not following YouTube or Facebook, here is the short story.

- After the low oil pressure from the Snetterton test, the main barings were found to be scored plus marks on the piston & 2 cam lobes rounded.
- Couldn't get ready in time for race 1 so borrowed a Mitzubishi Evo 4. Qualified 7th, on the start got up to 4th, after pit stops droped back to 6th. 5th was on the cards except for no brakes or clutch. Then ran out of fuel on the last lap and DNF'd.
- New top end and bottom end later, tested again at Snetterton and all was ok.
- Silverstone qualifying the oil pressure dropped again, withdrew from event.
- Upon investigation main barings had failed. After weeks of investigation, found the block had twisted causing the repeated failures.
- New block, piston rings and barings are now in, engine has been run in on the dyno and tested with some power runs.
- Ready for a test at Donington tomrrow before putting it on to the trailer to go to Spa next week for the Summer Classic.

Some videos with the long story!

Evo Race - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VV93UyGtH5g
Evo Race Full - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-m0U2gbnkE
Silverstone Qualifying Full - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8wtQWOcGQ_A
Engine Story - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ORJVNzKz_k
Engine Story Full - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YATS8NZOq7Y
New Engine Startup - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRsbASSKB7E

On Friday we ran the car with YouTuber Petrol Ped having some fun laps. Good news is we have stable oil pressure ready for next weeks trip to Spa.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNdCDHjJNgE