Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Yeah, saw this on the news a couple of minutes ago. Not sure what car it was, but it was yellow.

Driver died and the navigator got sent to hospital.

RIP

According to the CAMS website, apparently it was the navigator (and not the driver) that passed away - Article Here

Very sad news - condolences to the family

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/11/03/...Rally-Death.php

Its a V8:

A rally co-driver was killed and his driver injured after their car went over a 20-meter (66-foot) cliff Saturday in northeastern Victoria state.

The V-8 car was competing in the Mt. Buller Sprint tarmac rally, a 16-kilometer (10-mile) uphill leg of a three-day event. The accident occurred about 8 kilometers (5 miles) from the summit of Mt Buller, a ski resort.

Victoria Police said the co-driver died at the scene. The driver, 22, was taken by air ambulance to a nearby hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

very sad news, according to a close mate who is competing up there, cars have been flying off the road all weekend, due to the torrential rain, visability is very low...

Apparently it was a porsche turbo that was involved in the fatal accident.

RIP

I was up there when it happened (GF is navigating in car 5)

The car that was involved in the fatality was an Elfin MS8 Clubman driven by David Reynolds and Co-drven by Paul Flintoft. Unfortunately Paul passed away at the scene. There is talk of there being a ban placed on open/convertible cars from the next event onwards. In all, 10 cars came off in the 1 stage they ran on Saturday and another 10 in the one stage run yesterday. Yesterday on the way down to Mansfield for lunch i saw a 996 911 GT2 with a hole the shape of a tree smack bang in the middle of the bonnet...wish i had my camera with me!!! Even Jim Richards packed it up and went home yesterday arvo! So far 4 stages have been cancelled, but im told it is fine and sunny up there this morning so its game on!

R.I.P.

The scary part is David Reynolds is no hack. I mean he just won this years Carrera Cup championship so the boy can drive.

For anyone wanting to know what the car looked like I'm 99% sure it is the same car that Tony D'Alberto drove in this years Dutton rally (see below). It was a quick car too. In the Dutton Tony did a 1.34.7 at Winton and a 1.20.4 at Sandown. But it is definitely not a car you'd like to crash into a tree in. :ninja:

DSLR_05_resize.jpg

I was there competing and it was an awful thing on Saturday. Paul died instantly when the car hit a tree on his side as it left the road and went down

the hill. David Reynolds is doing well and is not as badly injured as first thought, but as you can imagine is having a very bad time right now.

As dangerous as the sport can be, we all know the risks involved and conditions on Saturday were as bad as they get with wet roads and very poor visibility.

The sport will miss Paul and everyone involved feels deeply for his family and friends loss. It's up to us as a community to see that all are as safe as possible, but fast cars narrow roads and solid trees will always be a risk to life - its a personal choice to compete or not.

All in all it was a very challenging event, but a great one too.

cheers

I certainly agree with everything Allan says, and can confirm the conditions on the first two days were the worst we have ever run in. There were about 20 cars binned in the first two stages. It was a very tough event, in a number of ways.

Without wanting to second guess the outcome of the investigation, I wouldnt put myself or anyone I loved into a car without a roof and full cage in one of these events.

I was there competing and it was an awful thing on Saturday. Paul died instantly when the car hit a tree on his side as it left the road and went down

the hill. David Reynolds is doing well and is not as badly injured as first thought, but as you can imagine is having a very bad time right now.

As dangerous as the sport can be, we all know the risks involved and conditions on Saturday were as bad as they get with wet roads and very poor visibility.

The sport will miss Paul and everyone involved feels deeply for his family and friends loss. It's up to us as a community to see that all are as safe as possible, but fast cars narrow roads and solid trees will always be a risk to life - its a personal choice to compete or not.

All in all it was a very challenging event, but a great one too.

cheers

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Latest Posts

    • Can't you put the pistons to TDC and then do the valve seals? Or will the drop down too far to pull them back up?
    • One thing I can tell you is, do it properly the first time. If you encounter unexpected problems just let the car sit for a week or two if you have to get some other parts or figure stuff out.  I'd have said go and use as many OEM parts as possible but since you want to change the turbo later on a custom kit is probably the better choice. Since I have no experience with RB25 just compare parts diagrams and images before buying a line kit and it should be easy to see if it has everything you need. Amayama has very good parts diagrams and part number lists, that is what I used a bunch to figure out what I might need. And don't forget to plan ahead and possibly renew other stuff that's easy to get to while you're in there doing the turbo lines. Happy wrenching
    • Update 4:   Hi all, good news. Engine is running and all the gaskets and seals seem to be working as intended. No leaks so far, even the JB Weld seems to hold. I flushed out the old coolant a few times and put in fresh coolant, not Nissan stuff, I decided to try the Ravenol Protect FL22, they claim it works for a wide variety of JDM cars and the opinions on it by some people were pretty good. And it has the nice poison green color! And man am I glad I bought a coolant system tester earlier this year, vacuum filling works wonders on this engine. I can definitely recommend this to anyone still doing it the old school way. All you need is compressed air supply. Will have to do a small test drive as soon as I can, I removed the gauge cluster again as the tacho needle was still bouncing around a bit but it was much better than before already.  I also found some cracks on all 4 tires inner and outer sidewalls. Apparently these tires should 't be parked on for extended periods or be kept under 0 degrees during storage, which I did not know. Clearly the previous owner didn't look into those details either, he probably bought them just cause they are cool semi-slicks. I'm just wondering how tf I am supposed to reach 30-80 degree tire temperatures on the public road consistenly, these tires were never going to work for my use case. I'll probably order Continental SportContact7 ones as these are the best allround summer tire available right now and I don't think I'll need anything crazier for now. Do let me know if you have experience with various tires and which ones you recommend.
    • You have no idea how many goddamn boxes I received these past three months haha Most have been put to use by now though, luckily
    • Not going to pretend I didn't do a bit of junky work this time around, but mostly due to the fact that some things I am not willing to spend days fixing right now, like wiring. I try to do most things properly the first time around.
×
×
  • Create New...