Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

It's not run under cams is it? is't the gtst covered by being 1989?

EDIT: just got round to looking at the web page, says it's run under cams on the front page

Edited by sav man

so is that cams tarmac rally regs or octagon tarmac rally regs ? big difference

Octagon's, thanks fark.

SA awarded opening round of newest CAMS championship

South Australia will host the opening round of this year’s CAMS Australian Targa Championship with the

Supaloc Classic Targa Adelaide kicking off the four round series on September 14.

It is the first time the Targa series, organised by Octagon Australia, will be run under the auspices of the

Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS).

Classic cars, built before 1986, will contest four events, with Targa High Country at Mt Buller in Victoria

from November 4 to 6, Targa Wrest Point in Hobart from January 28 and 29, and Targa Tasmania from

April 17 to 22, joining the South Australian round. Modern cars will only contest the final three events.

In a further boost, Classic Targa Adelaide has secured the support of local steel building systems

manufacturer, Supaloc, which becomes the naming rights sponsor, adding its backing to an event

supported by the State Government through Events South Australia.

Course details have also been revealed with the Supaloc Classic Targa Adelaide being based out of the

Goyder Pavilion at the Adelaide Event and Exhibition Centre in Wayville. The Prologue will be held on

Wednesday, September 14 with cars then tackling 25 stages across 225 kilometres, finishing on Saturday

afternoon (September 17).

Octagon’s Managing Director of Australia and New Zealand, Sean Nicholls, believes the backing of CAMS

will bring added stature to the series.

“The Targa format of tarmac rallying has been going from strength to strength over the past three years,

growing out of Targa Tasmania to now include four events in three states, and I think even more

competitors will be attracted to it now that it has the backing of the premier national motor sport body in

CAMS,” Nicholls said.

“We believe the move to CAMS is a win‐win situation. CAMS endorsement brings with it a broader

recognition of its national championship status, while we obviously bring the biggest national series in any

form of motor sport in this country under its wing.”

With over 300 entrants scoring points in the inaugural series, that concluded in April with the 20th running

of Targa Tasmania, CAMS President, Andrew Papadopoulos, says the championship has earned the right to

be considered among the most significant titles on offer in Australian motor sport.

“Tarmac rallying is a real growth area of Australian motor sport,” Papadopoulos said.

“CAMS is delighted to be adding its weight to further develop the sport. The Targa events have wide

appeal, representing a range of marques and eras that attracts many competitors and has wide media and

spectator appeal.

News Release

“It is particularly good that we see Adelaide hosting the opening round of the championship. It is a city that

really understands motor sport and I’m sure everyone will get behind this event and the series as a whole.”

SA Tourism Minister, John Rau, sees plenty of upside in the event.

“The Supaloc Classic Targa Adelaide is a fantastic opportunity to showcase Adelaide and regional South

Australia,” Rau said.

“It will be great to see classic cars return to the streets of South Australia and it will allow interstate and

overseas visitors the chance to experience the excitement of the event while discovering different parts of

the State, along the race route.

“The rally will showcase regional towns including Tanunda in the Barossa, Gumeracha in the Adelaide Hills

and Victor Harbor on the Fleurieu Peninsula. The State has a great history of hosting world‐class events

and we look forward to the addition of the Supaloc Classic Targa Adelaide to that list.”

Event Director Mark Perry’s Adelaide‐based team is working hard to stamp its identity on the event.

“The introduction of this event is sincerely a dream come true for me personally. I used to come and watch

Classic Adelaide each year, and to be able to head up the team that will bring this iconic event back to

South Australia is all a little surreal,” Perry said.

“We are certainly planning to make it bigger and better with the use of the fantastic headquarters at the

Adelaide Event and Exhibition Centre. Having all cars under cover in one place works brilliantly for Targa

Tasmania in Launceston, and I’m sure it will here as well.

“The inclusion of the event as the opening round of the Australian Targa Championship is just the start of

some major upgrades planned in the coming years.”

Supaloc owner, Kevin Weeks, a long‐time Targa competitor, won last year’s Targa High Country in a

Lamborghini. “The Targa format really works,” Weeks said. “This new event will work for us, it will work

for the competitors and it will work for Adelaide and the surrounding towns along the course.

“It is fantastic that we have been able to help to bring the opening event of this Championship to my home

town.”

The course for Supaloc Classic Targa Adelaide will take competitors on some roads used previously by

Classic Adelaide, but modified to make them more competitive and to increase driver challenge, as well as

some new stages as well.

The Prologue will consist of two stages in and around Tanunda in the Barossa Valley on Wednesday,

September 14.

The opening competitive day consists of seven stages across 66 competitive kilometres north east of

Adelaide. It includes the event’s longest stage, Castanbul, at 17.5 kilometres.

The middle day, Friday September 16, starts at Mt Lofty before heading down to Paris Creek and through

the McLaren Vale wine region, taking in 70 competitive kilometres.

News Release

Saturday is the longest day with 76 competitive kilometres across eight stages through the Adelaide Hills.

Octagon and CAMS Additional Information

The Australian Targa Championship will now be recognised as a National Championship under the

Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS).

CAMS will recognise the below listed Octagon branded Targa events as invitational national Targa rally

events; Classic Targa Adelaide, Targa High Country, Targa Wrest Point and Targa Tasmania.

These events will adhere to the Octagon branded Supplementary Regulations similar to the regulations

used for the 2010/2011 Australian Targa Championship. The technical aspects of the regulations will be

guided by the same technical committee as the previous 2010/2011 championship.

There are no plans to implement any course design or changes to include chicanes.

All participating vehicles and apparel must comply with the current CAMS safety standards;

Roll Over Protection: http://www.camsmanual.com.au/pdf/10_gen_req/GQ11_2012_Schedule_J_Q211‐2.pdf

Fire Extinguishers: http://www.camsmanual.com.au/pdf/10_gen_req/GQ09_Schedule_H_Q211.pdf

Safety Harnesses: http://www.camsmanual.com.au/pdf/10_gen_req/GQ10_Schedule_I_Q211.pdf

Apparel: http://www.camsmanual.com.au/pdf/10_gen_req/GQ05_Schedule_D_Q211.pdf

Licence Requirements – All participants at any Octagon branded Targa event will be required to have a

current CAMS licence, below is the required licence depending on the level of participation in line with

CAMS General Regulations; http://www.camsmanual.com.au/pdf/09_gen_regs/GR03_Licences_Q211.pdf

Tour participants will require a Level Two Speed Licence.

Regularity participants will require a Level Two Speed Licence.

Vintage Rally participants will require a National Rally Licence.

Rookie Rally participants will require a National Rally Licence.

Classic and Modern competition participants will require a National Rally Licence.

CAMS National Rally Licence fee is $211 annually. Current CAMS licence holders that hold other licences

for example a Level Two Speed Licence will need to pay the difference between the Level Two Licence fee

and the National Rally Licence fee, not the entire $211. Licences will need to be obtained through CAMS.

All applicants will need to complete the CAMS appropriate licence application and medical statement,

there is no requirement for a formalised medical examination by a doctor.

Previous Octagon branded Targa event participation will be recognised and past competitors will not need

to complete an Observed Licence Test (OLT) however will need to complete the Online Rally Lecture.

Licence forms can be found with this link; http://www.cams.com.au/en/Forms/Competition_Licence_Forms.aspx

Official’s Licence Requirements – All Official’s will be required to have a current CAMS licence. The process

of transition regarding licences for Senior Officials is currently under review. Daily officials will be required

to sign‐on at the event before commencing their event duties.

There is no licence fee for an officials licence.

Event Information: Helen Coad – Sales Manager [email protected]

Just read the press release.... Seems it is a CAMS event now for all octagon targa events but with the supp regs and rules as per previous octagon events. Main change will be the need to meet CAMS regs re rollover protection etc and also hold a CAMS national rally license as opposed to AASA. Apparently upside for the series is it now gets national recognition as a championship. Can read all about it below...

Hopefully this link works...

http://www.targa.org.au/CampaignProcess.aspx?A=Link&VID=4737124&KID=137560&LID=364595&O=http%3a%2f%2fwww.targa.org.au%2fLiteratureRetrieve.aspx%3fID%3d91409

EDIT: Bah....beaten by the woo yet again.....

Edited by Darkside

Looks like I need to get round to getting my cage certified. I've been renewing my NR from when we were running as CAMS before.

Looks like the best of both worlds. Is this going to push the price up though?

It is p155 funny that Benno's "quite" post is at the top of the page... I reckon that he was drafting that email as the press release was being outed....

And 861, first time I have looked at car stuff this trip - so dont think I am out here sunning myself.

TT861 Service

Let's brew it up then!

Octagon's Crassis Adelaide... who's in?!

Poolheaters - yes?

Yeah, Nah, don't think so? I could run Melinda's GTR , or spend a ship load and get the RX3 finished? After being at Rally Q on the weekend though I think I might go back to the dirt again for a while?

I have set a goal to buy a dirt car for a $5k limit and go and have some fun. Should be able to get the car and run half a dozen events for the rest of the year and still spend less than going to Adelaide..

But our old house settles next Wednesday, and we did get a few more $$$ than expected, so who knows? That and Stu's talk of this RX7 s3 monster might be enough to get me excited. We ran a full group C injected RX7 back in 1999 and I reckon it would still be a very good thing.. That car is still one of the quickest IP cars around today.

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



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Stock ECU (or more accurately stock tune) absolutely refuses to go over 10psi and behaves like you have seen. The Nistune is the same if it is the stock tune. If the Nistune chip has been tuned, the resulting tune could be literally anything for any combination of parts. The Nistune just makes the stock ECU Tunable.
    • So stock ECU does not like anything above 10 psi?  That Nistune one is just for "try" if it will be any different, I know it need to be tune for that. I know but YOU may know about these problem but i/we dont. They few little Skylines here let alone people who know anything about tham so that is why iam asking here  
    • So now we have a radiator with no attachments whatsoever. It lifts up with a particularly tight spot between the drivers side air box mount and the lower radiator outlet, but if you've got this far you will sort that too. This is the lower mounts with the rad out so you can see where the rubber bushes go, it is a straight shot upwards Done! Assembly is the reverse of disassembly, with blood less likely to be shed.
    • Right, onto the second last trick. The Air Con condenser is mounted to the front of the radiator and stays in the car when the radiator is removed. There are 2x 10mm headed self tappers holding the top of the condenser to the radiator, remove those The bottom of the condenser is attached to the radiator with clips. You need to lift the condenser out of those clips and clear (up, then forward). f**ked if  could work out how to do that last bit with the front bumper on. I hope you can, and you share the trick.  Bumper removal probably deserves its own thread one day once I've recovered the will to live, but basically you need to remove the wheels, front inner guard liners (clips and 10mm headed bolts), the self tapper between the guard and the bumper at the rearmost point of the bumper (same as an R32 that bit), any remaining clips at the top/front of the grill, an absolute bastard design with a plate that holds the top of the bumper above the headlight each side (only 1 bolt which is tricky to get to, but the plate catches 2 places on the bumper and must be removed....carefully!) and push clips between the bumper and guard under the headlight. If you've done all that you will be faced with wiring for the fog lights on both sides and in ADM Q50 RS at least, 4 nasty tight plugs on the driver's side for the ADAS stuff. So, the clips at the bottom look like this on drivers side (looking from the front) And on the passenger side (also from the front), you can see this one is already out Clearance on both of these are super tight; the condenser needs to move up but the upper rad support mount prevents that, and the radiator can't move down far because it is (rubber) mounted. Once you achieve the impossible and drop the condenser off those mounts so it does not stop the rad moving, you are good to go
    • OK, next the shroud needs to come off and there are a couple of tricks. Firstly, there is a loom from near the passenger side headlight to the fans, coolant temp sensor etc and there is no plug to undo.  In my case I was OK to leave the shroud on top of the engine so I just undid the passenger side fan plug and about 10 of the clips which gave enough free wire to put it aside. The fan plugs were super tight, the trick I used was a small falt screwdriver to push down on the release tab, then a larger flat screwdriver to lever the plug out of the fan unit....be careful with how much force you apply! If you need to remove the shroud altogether for some reason you will have to deal with all the plugs (tight) and clips (brittle)....good luck. I removed all of the clips and replaced them with cable ties that I will just cut next time. Also, in the Red Sport / 400R at least, the intake heat exchanger reservoir hose is bolted to the shroud in 2 places with 10mm headed bolts; so remove them (the hose stays in the car; no need to undo it at the t fittings down at the radiator lower mount. Once you've dealt with the HX hose and the wiring loom, there are 3x 10mm headed self tappers holding the top of the shroud to the radiator; remove those.   The shroud then lifts out of the bottom mounts where it sits on the radiator, up and onto the engine out of the way. Simples
×
×
  • Create New...