Having reviewed the video I handily have of said incident, the marshal was NOT on the track. However, when we came around splash and the next right, he was heading TOWARDS the track at quite a clip, and I had thought that he was heading onto the track - like when you think a car is coming though the red light cos they are hell bent on braking late. I was actually touring fairly slowly (100k on my dash which is probably more like 75-80 with the gearing) or half of normal speed through there. I was the first bike on track, but was passed by two just at that point. I was going more than slowly enough to turn into the slip road however people had already gone past and I didn't want to confuse the issue further, not to mention get out of what was now a situation with bikes likely at different speeds.
Jay Lawrence #37
Hmmmm...so no rider was 'hurtling' as such and no marshal was standing in the middle of the track.
Like I said in an earlier post, use of the red flag is ordered by race control, so whatever the marshal/s at any flag point were doing it was under orders anyway. I suspect the idea was that FP4 would get the bikes into the slip lane instead of doing a full lap, which would explain why said marshal was 'heading towards the track at quite a clip'. Wasn't fast enough to stop anyone riding on past tho, was he?
The whole incident of the aborted start and what followed was a misunderstanding on the part of the riders. Well, most of them. The start was abandoned after too many holdups with gridded riders having hands up for whatever reason. Hand signals were given by the start/finish marshals to indicate that riders were to leave their grid positions and proceed on round the track. Red flag/s were deployed, indicating that riders were to either enter the sliplane or, having missed that opportunity, FP8 had their red out showing riders were to leave the track into pitlane. Choppa was the ONLY ONE to do that. Everyone else went back to their start position.
So - officials need to learn something from this. If a start is abandoned again, riders are amped, ready for racing, and can't be expected to understand simple hand signals. Therefore a red flag MUST be deployed at every FP round the track (which is what I thought had happened, but maybe it didn't...)
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
I think you will find now riders will be paying attention to what colour the flags are on the "warm-up" lap and if they are Red they will proceed to the dummy grid...not the starting grid. As has been said already...most of the riders thought we were being waved away for another lap to re-grid...I for one did not pay any attention to the flags that were deployed on this lap as I "knew" we were not racing and I was already heading to the grid to re-form..in my wee pea brain.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
Hang on a minute,
I'm just getting over the flu here so bear with me.
Complete the warm up lap/laps and your met with a red flag at the start line, at HD you get shown one at the last FP on the hill up to the start/ finish line to warn you of the start official standing in the middle of the circuit with the raised red flag.
We dont want riders going past to form up on a dummy grid again.
Jelly man the number of warm up laps are indicated by the number of fingers raised at the dummy grid or as you say on a black board... but of course all riders would know already how many warm up laps there are because it would have been in the entry form/regs they signed![]()
My point was more if there's a need to dispatch the gridded up riders as there was in this case to stop bikes cooking etc, how then do they know whether it's a return to pits situation or say one more lap then regrid, in this case i called it a 'Warm-up' lap.
I now usually watching from too far away to see what the actual signals may have been, just curious that's all
Yep, It was my alter ego "Jase.com" did it..........
I thought I put a www.vicclub.co.nz link on that post, must have got sidetracked, or was waiting in the slip road.................
Dale Kerrigan: If there's anything Dad loved more than serenity, it was a big two stroke engine on full throttle!
My comment was very serious...usually on warm up laps I'm thinking about how I'm going to start, waming my clutch, getting my race brain in place...I know where the flag points are why would I need to look at them. I guess its a bit like the safety speech when you board a plane...if you travel a lot its all much a blurr as you know the drill.
Like I say, I will look at the flag colours on the warm up lap now and if they are RED I will return to the dummy grid. Previously I only thought they were being waved so we could see where the points were...I knew where they were so pretty much ignored them. Not any more :-)
I can kind of see why you'd ignore flagpoints in the aborted start circumstances. However...
Flag points display a stationary yellow first lap only of practice. It is indeed to tell riders where the manned points are. They only wave it if there is a problem on their patch. The yellow flag would not have been used for the event in question. The red should have been out at all points...it seems it wasn't, so that is something for officials to sort out for the future.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
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