Sadly its all over for us as we haven't qualified on time - just outside the time tolerance by seconds and our appeal was unsuccessful.
Sunday, 30 August 2009
Sadly its all over for us as we haven't qualified on time - just outside the time tolerance by seconds and our appeal was unsuccessful.
Saturday, 29 August 2009
Thursday, 27 August 2009
Wednesday, 26 August 2009
Tuesday, 25 August 2009
Thursday, 9 July 2009
Monday, 15 June 2009
Jurby South road race report, (24/04/09)


John and Neil had done their usual high standard of prep and the bike was gleaming with improvements in place from my last feedback... (the kind of team you dream of riding for!) and as is the standard practice in team TS//2C racing, John was up with the larks and motivating anyone with a pulse within infectious range..:o) Closed roads races usually get going allot later in the day due the limitations of closures so when we arrived a the paddock at a time that would have been early even for an airfield race it was no surprise that we the first ones to arrive! This gave us plenty of time to unload, cook bacon and sausage and generally shoot the breeze with the next arrivals..
It seemed to take an age to get started, (not unlike this Blog I hear you cry! How very dare you!) but once we did filter out onto the roads and begin our familiarisation laps it all started to come flooding back and the little Benelli felt a comfortable as an old armchair...In the absence of a mid range I'd taken a gamble on the gearing and gone as long as we had sprockets for. On a fast circuit like Jurby you tend to spend most of your time flat out anyway so assuming I could keep up momentum the long gear should have been ok, there was a following wind on the fastest straight so it had to be the way to go...Just for safety's sake we'd jetted the left hand cylinder a bit more rich as we'd noticed it running much hotter than the right and didn't want to risk a seize on the high revving circuit. This of course meant the motor wasn't quite as sprightly as it had been but for safety's sake worth doing...
The classics were allowed to gather at the back of the grid and start a few seconds after the main grid..lucky us..;o) I made a concerted effort to fix my gaze on Chris McGahan on the K4 although he had a good 20bhp on us I was hoping to get a bit of a slipstream on the lighter Benelli. It worked for the climb through the 5 speed gearbox but once we hit top gear the K4 started to pull away, as the Benelli climbed into it's peak power (all 25+bhp of it!) I started to equalize the gap on Chris. Then started gaining on him REALLY quickly! just as I started to think that I might be able to get on terms with Chris he put is hand up with a problem...damn! And here was me thinking me and the Benelli were a flying combination!...:o)
During the practice I lost the end can from my rhs exhaust due to the bumpy, vibey and high revving nature of the circuit and towards the end of the penultimate lap a pretty strong vibration started to emanate through the bike from the engine. I didn't want to be picking up bits of Italian alloy from hedgerow tonight so I knocked 1000 revs or so off for the final lap thinking that it may have been the cranks' way of telling me it was time for a refresh..
We have a spare motor to try for the next Airfield round and John and Neil have been 'playing' with porting and are waiting for my feedback... Hopefully they will have built a nice reliable motor for the Manx GP. This weekend will hopefully be the final signature for the Mountain course licence as I rode a little Motobi (badged version of the Benelli) at Three Sisters last week courtesy of Pat Sproston of Felt Tip Racing to make up for the missed sig that the Pre-TT classic would have provided... I was under strict instruction from all quarters to have a steady run and bring it home for a sig'. It was the Motobi's final race before it's retirement so I really did take it carefully. A 6th place and a lap time slower than my wet practice..:o) but the sig' was achieved and everyone was happy...:o)
Tuesday, 9 June 2009
Titbits...


I managed not to crash the Motobi at a recent try out in wet conditions at the Three Sisters circuit so hopefully I can repeat that performance on Sunday and bring Pat's bike back in one piece to take a signature home. Riding Pat's bike has shown some differences in set-up and engine characteristics which John and Neil are keen to try in our spare engines. John has also been picking up some serious tuning tips up from the Benelli 2C fanatics in New Zealand, some of them are a little extreme for our needs and would see us 'sharing' our cranks with the crowd before we even got to St Ninians! The theory is useful none-the-less.
In other news; The second child to the Fozzy empire is imminently due so I'm on high alert for a quick dash to the local maternity unit, must remember to pick Liz up on the way!...;o) John and Neil as team bosses are keen to put contingency in place should I be forced to miss any of the signatured races so they've entered me in a race across (in England) at Cadwell park as a guest to the VMCC's Historic Racing Club. We should now have enough options to ensure we have enough signatures for the ACU's completely impotent (but sadly essential) Mountain course licence.
I took this weekend's free time, by virtue of it being my wedding anniversary, to go up to Scotland for some training with a fellow mountain biker. (No you cant have my wife she's brilliant and she's all mine!) Unfortunately due to an inability on my part to properly calculate friction coefficients of dry versus wet granite, I took a bit of a tumble on the 'Qualifier' section of the Dalbeatie trail. I managed to dislocate my shoulder and sprain my knee! Fortunately, thanks of the fact that I have a skeleton well seasoned by similar motorcycling injuries I'm already back to full motion in both limbs and will be able to cram myself onto the Motobi without any problems...;o) If not without a 'bit' of bruising and a handful of ibuprofen...
In Joey Dunlop Foundation news; the keys to Bradden house have been handed over by the Manx Government and work can start on the respite care home that the JDF have been working so hard to raise funds for and acquire. We're proud that our supporters are giving so generously!
You could say this is a little teaser for the Jurby Road race report which will follow soon (before this weekend's race at Three Sisters with any luck.) Goodbye for now and thank you very much for all your continued interest and support.
Tuesday, 5 May 2009
Round 2&3.

Firstly I'll apologise for leaving my update so long. I could cry about there not being enough hours in the day day to; race, train and help my heavily pregnant wife (Liz) with our (nearly) 2 year old son Bobby, but I doubt I'll get nor do I deserve any sympathy..:)

Tuesday, 17 March 2009
1st race in the Andreas Club Champs 15th March 2009
All was not lost though, as the 'little pretty' is very light and speed was ultra-low, the damage was minimal. Had it been a modern, alloy laden machine we may not have been so lucky and after some desolate looks from my team managers and pit-crew we set to a frantic 'straightening session'.
Because I had missed the practice session I had to ask for special permission to join the back of the grid, this was granted once I had been checked over by the doc for injuries, had my riding gear checked and had the bike re-scruted.
The grid was mixed and I shared it with GP bikes, steel framed 600's, SV 650's, pre-'89 400's and another Classic. The beautiful Classic Manx Norton gridded next to me at the rear or the grid (can just be seen behind Emma Shimmin on the 400.) With the exception of the Norton I was giving away roughly 40 to 50 horse power to everyone else on a circuit with a very long back straight!

This was never going to anything other than a 2 horse race for me and the Norton. It seems the Norton rider didn't feel much like a horse today and didn't put up much of a fight. After a fairly tentative start from me and a fairly purposeful one from the Norton, I slowly began to trust the bike again, (starting cold from the back of the grid after bending various bits of the bike straight again is not a method conducive to good lap times!) I passed the Norton and pulled away. My tentative start meant that I was lapped by the main race leader one lap from the end (Ryan Kneen on a GP250) Only 5 laps, my tyres were still cold!
Race 2 was much the same but I made a more purposeful start and was able to complete the full race distance without being lapped, a whole 6 laps!
It's pretty clear that we're not going to be having many battles on our hands on the short circuit this year unless someone on a similar class machine comes out to play. I'm hoping that we get to do some of the higher profile 'real' road races this year where there tend to more classics gathering to race, I'm told there might even be another Benelli coming to play....
It's great to be racing again and it was brilliant seeing all my Manx mates again, Suzanne Tasker from the Joey Dunlop foundation came to support me and see their bike bike in action and we had lots of friends from the classic scene Including Pat and Linda Sproston who are very much into racing classics in England and Europe.
Gary Lark is responsible for the photos and a fine job he's has made of them too, next time I hope to have an intact fairing with sponsors names for him to photograph!
A weekends results of x2 class wins is good in anybody's book, but I would like to have to put up a bit more of a fight for it and a few more laps to do it in!
We have good base settings and a few minor changes to make for the next round, hopefully I can get a bit closer to the lap times turned in on the practice day. The new expansion chambers have improved power but ruined the mid-range. I'll be trying a different front tyre pressure and a leaner mixture at lower revs to improve throttle response...
Roll on the 5th of April!
Friday, 27 February 2009
First test day of the season.
The first session was a bit wobbly and showed I had guessed completely wrongly with the gearing, it turned out to be the same as the original TT bike. John and Neil were a blur of spanners and before I could say, 'I've finished my pasta', they had changed the front sprocket to give an equivalent increase of 2 teeth on the rear. this did the trick and got us on par with some of the novice 600's (not bad for a deficit of 100hp!)

Best 'real time' of the day was a 1.28 which I'm happy with but as yet have nothing to benchmark against with a classic Benelli on Jurby GP circuit..
The photo's might give some indication of how much fun I was having, roll on March 15th first race of the season!...:o)
Thursday, 19 February 2009
So! We're all systems go! I've managed to cram my leathers, gloves and name tags into an unfeasibly small case that just about conforms to Flybe's draconian hand-luggage spec's. This is because that although I'm only heading over to the Isle of Man for an afternoon's testing I intend to leave my gear over there to help with baggage costs and general ease of travel. I wont be racing in England this year. The caveat being that if we are 100% confirmed for the Manx GP I may need to do a few club rounds to top up my signatures for the Mountain course licence (6! needed this year..)
The action begins on Sunday afternoon at Jurby Airfield where hopefully all the keen young things on 600s will have finished throwing their steeds enthusiastically at the Manx scenery and we can start setting a good baseline for the little post classics's season data. The little Benelli 2C is a parallel 2 stroke twin with fairly basic technology so hopefully wont be to much of a challenge for a first seasons racing for the TS//2C racing team. The biggest challenge, as I see it will be keeping abreast of the complex regulations for whatever class the Benelli's manufacture date straddles, with whichever classic club we happen to be riding with.
Fairly loose targets for this year are to get 'reasonable' finishes for the bikes class in the classic championship on the Airfield circuit, attend the two closed road races on the Jurby South circuit. And if things are going well it would be rude not to enter the Pre-TT classic at Billown and the Southern 100 Classic races. The Manx GP would be a really good score but realistically in our first year with me having no signatures for the season start it will be a bit of a stretch...
I'll report back after the testing on Sunday...
Monday, 26 January 2009
It seems things have moved on somewhat since my last application, last time (2006) my Consultant was happy to tick boxes and send the form, this time she wants ECG, bloods the lot....
It's a bloody pain in the arse to be honest, it's just another level of stress to contend with and (in my opinion) wholly unnecessary! Any fule can see I'm as fit as a butchers dog!
I've still got to jump through the hoops tho'. :o( Pitting the two most sluggish bureaucracies in Christendom (NHS and ACU) means I'm going to be cutting it really fine for the test day at Jurby on the 22nd! (Licence holders only!)
This was one of the things I really didn't miss during my 2 years off, bloody jobsworths round every corner, all I want to do is race a motorbike for heavens sake! It's not like it's rocket science!
Testing starts on Jurby Airfield on 22nd Feb. Where the 'little pretty' (Benelli 250 2C) gets her first outing.
Training started this week with some gentle cycling to ease myself back in to the regimen... i'll be ramping it up as the weeks progress..



