I have to confess, its been a few years since I have spectated at a SOT. Mrs B and I used to go every year back in the early to mid 90's. But after that, houses were bought, storks delivered bundles of joy, and basicly there was always something better to do. After I bought the Monster, someone asked me if I was doing the SOT. Honestly, I hadn't given it any thought. "Might do, I 'spose" was my response.
Eventually I got off my bum and put in my entry, and once the entry was in, I started to remember some of the things I'd seen there. Things like seeing a 1906ish Harley Davidson racing alongside other pre WWI bikes. The incredible sound of highly tuned pre Hinkley Triumph Tridents- I once heard the phrase "god rides a Harley", after hearing these things it seemed only fitting that the devil must ride a Trident. And then of course there were the Brittens. I remember vividly standing at Pot Hole/ The kink and actually feeling the ground beneath my feet vibrate as the V1100 belowed through. Later they wheelied in pairs the full length of the straight.
There's a bit of history involved with this event, and it always used to draw big crowds, and gradually it dawned on me that I was actually going to be on the other side of the fence this time. Strange things started happening- I felt the hairs on the back of my neck stand up every time I thought about it, or typed the words "Sound of Thunder". Stupid I know![]()
I had booked half a day off on the Friday so I could get in some much needed practice- I start at 6:30am, so by 10:30 I would be ready to go. The day dawned wet- the thick drenching drizzle Canterbury seems to specialise in. I was keen to make sure i practiced in the wet, just incase the forcast was wrong. I didn't exactly power through the work that morning, feeling pretty bloody amped and distracted. Doing my timesheet I realised I could leave at 10, so I bolted out the door to find VERY thick drizzle. Oh well.
Realising that it was likely to bucket down all day, I decided it wouldn't hurt to take my time and only get a couple of sessions in. I quickly whipped into Pit Lane and bought some new grips off don, as the old ones were prettly slippery. My dodgy old van wasn't exactly helping me to convince myself that there would be plenty of grip at the track- she was spinning up and hanging the tail out at the slightest provocation... then there was a good 30 metres of compression lock up as I changed down for the tunnel road roundabout... 4 wheels can be awesome fun sometimes....![]()
Got home, fitted the grips and lockwired them. Tried to piss about without success before qucikly succumbing to my desire to get out on the track as soon as possible.
OFFICIAL PRACTICE
The van was far better behaved with 200kg of Ducati in the back
Pulled up at the track to find about 30 odd bikes there, but only one actually circulating, in light rain. I pissed about for a bit, and the rain stopped, so I put on the battle gear and tiptoed out. A couple of tentative laps convinced me that there was more grip from the Super Corsa Pro's than I had been led to believe, so I gradually upped the pace. I noticed a bit of rain on the visor, but it didn't seem like much. Funnily enough I ended up using bloody near the same brake markers as I had in hot dry weather the Sunday before. I came in after maybe 15-20 mins feeling pretty good. It was only when I took the helmet off that I noticed it was raining heavily (by Canty stds), apparently it had been the whole time I was out. Sweet! Bring on the rain.
I pottered about yacking to all and sundry, looking at bikes and generally pissing about. After a while the rain stopped, so "Might as well have another crack at it" thought I. Gotta say, I love free practice! Go out when you want, for as long as you want. No rush to get ready, no pulling in just when your going well! It started drizzling as the gloves went on, and on the track there were now a couple of patches of standing water, as well as water streaming across the track at the apex of the kink at the end of the front straight. I kept going round and round for a while, and then noticed Don was about 500m behind me. Was thinking about coming in when I noticed Don was further back. Hmmm.... "Naaaaah, he's just warming up". A couple more laps and the gap increases. A couple more- still increasing... "maybe I DO want it to rain?" I saw Don in the pits later:
"Hey Don, were you pushing at all before?"
"Yeah, I saw you out there.... sorry mate, I was just tooling around", finished off with a sympathetic pat on the shoulderOh well...
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