TRANSLATION

Sunday, 29 July 2012

WTCC 2013 Calendar - 41300 kilometres and counting....

A list of possible race tracks that the WTCC could be visiting next year means some forward planning for the Truckies. I have just added up the distance, and even travelling from circuit to circuit, it comes to approximately 41300 kilometres.
Obviously all the teams will have to drive to the 1st race in Monza and then the teams will return to their factories. This process will be repeated for all of the European rounds of the WTCC. Maybe some teams will not bother going back home between some events but I think you can see that we will do alot of travelling next year.

Provisional Calendar for 2013 WTCC Season
10th March - Monza, Italy
24th March - To Be Confirmed, Spain
7th April - Marrakech, Morocco
28th April - Slovakiaring, Slovak Republic
5th May - Hungaroring, Hungary
19th May - Salzburgring, Austria
9th June - Moscow Raceway, Russia
30th June - Porto, Portugal
28th July - Curitiba, Brazil
22nd September - Sonoma Raceway, USA
20th October - Suzuka, Japan
3rd November - Shanghai, China
17th November - Macau, China

From a personal point of view, I hope that the KSO (WTCC organisers) can find another venue in Spain, other than Valencia.
As for Morocco, I know that all the Truckies will be very upset when they see that we have to visit here again. I have already voiced my opinions, in my previous blog posts, about Morocco. If it was possible, I would like to see everything put in containers and sent there. Unfortunately, this is logistically and financially impossible. Maybe I could email the King of Morocco, get him to read my blog and make our lives easier.
After the Porto race, I expect we will load up the containers in Portugal to be sent by ship to Brazil. I think this will be a very tight schedule to keep as it is 8200 kilometres between the two circuits. If a container ship moves at 20-25 knots, that is 177 hours at sea or just over a week. I know that they travel even slower through busy shipping lanes. Add that to loading and unloading times, customs clearance and road travel. I will have to talk with DHL to get a clearer picture of this matter as my calculations could be wrong.
One of the better roads in Russia on the way to the circuit. M9 Riga Mototorway



Inside view of Moscow Raceway garage
Driving to Moscow could be interesting as I am certain that the Russian roads are going to destroy tyres and suspension units if the Truckies are not careful. At least the weather should be warmer in June when we go to Russia. Some fellow Truckies were in Russia this year for the Renault World Series so I will be getting as much useful information from them as I can. You can access the circuit from two directions(see pictures)
Sign from Volokololamsk Motorway direction
I highlighted in an earlier post about the distance we travel, using trucks, boats and planes and I can feel another massive carbon footprint happening in 2013. Can motorsport EVER be enviromentally friendly??


Friday, 27 July 2012

Sonoma paddock area. Good or bad??

I arrived back home with jet lag after a long, uncomfortable flight from Brazil. I would just like to thank Renate, who works for DHL, for being a superb travelling companion and making the flight time a little more enjoyable.
Cars under tents, Puebla
I have been trying to get some information on the USA race at Sonoma as I am having flashback memories of the races which were held at Puebla, Mexico, a few years ago. Due to the circuit layout, the garages were no where near the pit lane area. The cars, tyres, toolboxes, air bottles and everything else needed by the teams, had to be taken approximately 200-300 metres to the tents in the pit lane. The whole team was forced to carry something to the pit area, secretaries and team managers included. If a car came into the pits and needed a spare part during practice, qualifying or even the race, if you did not have it with you, the fastest runner from the team was sent back to the garages to collect it and get back as soon as possible. To try to bring enough spares for every eventuality was impossible and could potentially prevent the car from getting quickly, back on the track. And for the poor guy who has to do the running, a sweaty pair of work clothes was his reward !!!!

View from the garage area towards the tents in the pit lane, Puebla


Garages in Puebla.

Due to the American tracks normally having a NASCAR style pit lane, I think we will find ourselves in this same situation again. When the teams are so used to working out of garages, except in Macau, it can be a major challenge for everyone to adapt to this new situation. Macau is not so bad as it is only a short distance back through the paddock area to the team garages. And we also have access to some power supply for the tyre warmers. In Puebla, we had been provided with large generators and we also had the generators which are mounted on the tyre trollies to supply electricity. Will we encounter the same at Sonoma?
Hopefully, I will get this information back from the circuit when they reply to my email.

Due to the short duration of the WTCC races, the importance of speed when the cars are in the pit lane cannot be be emphasised enough. The Truckies will have to ensure that all of the necessary equipment is available. Also, the Truckies are the ones in the teams who act as store men. They should have a good knowledge of where everything is kept in the garages. So when the runner is sent back to the garage, he can be told exactly where to locate a nut, bolt or body panel.
The containers are now on their way from Brazil to the USA and August is a time for a longer break in the WTCC calendar. Although I have just heard that one team is already testing a car this week. I hope it all goes well guys! For everyone else, it is a chance to take some time off work, go on holiday or spend time with the family.

Changing into overalls, Puebla.







UPDATE..........................
Well, it looks like the team garages are a distance away frome the pit lane area so we will be forced to move everything like we did in Puebla. Apparently generators are available for electricity but I am sure that they will be 110-120v. This may cause us problems as the teams are used to running on european voltage which is 220-240v. It is possible to rewire a 110v, split phase generator to give 220v. We have done this in Japan.  But his will only work if the 110v live wires are out of phase.
This sort of problem is one that the Truckies encounter and once again, a good Truckie will be the one who can find a way to work round this.

Saturday, 21 July 2012

WTCC Containers and Electronic Tracking Devices


When the cars and equipment are loaded in the race trucks, the teams can rely on the Truckies, to transport everything safely. ITS WHAT WE ARE VERY GOOD AT !!

Tracking device fitted to a container door.
But after we have loaded the containers in Antwerp and ensured that everything is safe and secured with ratchet straps, how do we know what happens next? The answer is the Electronic Tracking Device.
DHL have fitted these to the containers and everything is monitored in real time.
Maybe the truck driver, taking the container to the port, is driving like a maniac and does not realise that his hard braking and fast cornering can damage this expensive cargo. Or the crane driver, lifting and lowering the containers, is giving them a rather hard landing. Even the boat could hit a storm at sea, causing the containers to move violently.

This week, in Brazil, we have all opened the doors to our containers and hoped that nothing has moved or been damaged. DHL and Weitracon are there to help us assess and advise the teams if anything has happened.

When I started this blog, my first story was titled, "Stick it in a box, and open after Christmas"
This may have given you, the reader, the impression that we just load up and forget about what happens.

But all the Truckies ARE worried. When the
A damaged castor is repaired
containers are opened, something catastrophic may greet us. The tracking devices can be used as evidence if any insurance claims are necessary and have to be made.

Castor wheels, which are fitted to tyre trolleys, Lista cases and tool boxes, can be particularly vulnerable to collapsing. In an ideal world, you should put blocks of wood under everything so that the wheels are not touching the floor of the containers. But a limited space in the container means that this is not always physically possible.

The Truckies put a lot of love into loading containers and we would like all of that love back when we open them !!!!!!!



You can see from the screen shots, the sort of information that is recorded whilst the containers are being moved. After this weekends racing, the containers will be loaded again, travel by road to Paranagua,Brazil, put on to a ship and slowly make their way to San Francisco, via the Panama Canal.
And when the containers arrive in the USA, the Truckies will repeat this weeks process and get everything ready again.
 


The containers can take up to 3 hours to be loaded after the race. Most teams make a plan of how everything fits neatly inside and this is a chance for a Truckie to take charge and supervise the team members whilst the containers are loaded. It is no good if the Truckies are inside the containers. They should be outside, deciding which boxes go in first, where they are positioned and how they should be secured. I have seen the mayhem caused when this rule is not observed. Nobody knows which box to bring, where it goes and you just end up with a big, big mess.


To move the WTCC around the world, takes approximately 30 containers with over 200 tons of cars and equipment inside. WEITRACON and DHL are vital to the teams and highly respected by the Truckies. They advise the Truckies with regard to customs paperwork, dangerous goods and how they should be labelled and packaged, safe loading practices, and seem to be able to answer all of our questions, no matter how big or small.
They are also the ones who ensure that forklifts, car ramps, and additional loading personnel are always available at each race track. The Truckies know that their job would be much more time consuming, chaotic and extremely difficult without this help.

Personally, I think it is such a shame that we cannot bring the race trucks to all the races. The sight of a paddock, with all of the trucks lined up, is all part of the motor sport show. In Formula 1, Bernie Ecclestone knows the amazing effect that the trucks can make in a paddock. Most of the times, the hospitality areas look directly at the trucks, and that is where the "money men" and the "beautiful people" spend their time. But the logistics and costs to take race trucks to races around the world exceeds even the huge amounts of money which is available and is spent in Formula 1. And the WTCC, definitely........ doesn,t have the money. Some of the countries that the WTCC visits are denied this part of the "show" and it is such a great shame for motor sport fans, and the circuit owners. I would love to drive on Brazilian roads or even have to slow down to negotiate some of the huge potholes that exist on China,s road system. But it will never happen. All the Truckies can do, is try to imagine that the containers are like our race trucks and make sure everything inside, stays undamaged, while they are moved around the globe.
Checking the steel cables that will support the weight of each container when it is lifted
A crane in the Curitiba paddock, ready to remove the containers







Friday, 20 July 2012

Alles Gute zum Geburtstag..Happy Birthday

                                                                                                                                                                       Photo courtesy of Photo 4
Everyone has birthdays, but I just have to give a quick mention to my good friend Hansi, the hardworking Truckie from Wiechers Sport. He always talks non stop to me in German and I really do try my hardest to listen and undeerstand. I wish you all the best.

Thursday, 19 July 2012

Curitiba weather and Truckies who get it wrong.

A twelve hour flight to Sao Paulo and a delayed flight from Sao Paulo to Curitiba. Yet another case of air pollution helping bring the WTCC to the motorsport fans around the world.
Container unloading in Curitiba
 It is winter time in Brazil and cold weather and rain seems to have taken even the Brazilians by surprise. Some of the Truckies have been here for a few days already, but at least they can prepare their garages at a less hurried pace. It is always good to see old faces again and talk motor racing. Some of the Truckies have been testing at Snetterton, Pembrey and Mira in the UK. While others have been at racetracks in Italy and Spain. Some of the guys have even had to move their whole workshop to another building. A major task in itself. A lucky few, and it is only a few, have just been enjoying the time off between Antwerp container loading and the race in Brazil. The prospect of warmer weather by the weekend has put a bit of a smile on some faces. Dry weather means slick tyres and a slightly easier workload for those Truckies who also look after the car,s tyres.


Proteam cars


Tyre testing in progress
Something happened today which highlights the importance off having skilled and knowledgeable Truckies in a team. One team needed petrol for the grid trolley generators and bottle compressors. As they did not have a hire car, they used a car from another team and offered to get petrol for them as well. A simple task......or is it?
In Brazil, many car engines are adapted to run on ALCOOL. Brazil is considered to have the world's first sustainable fuel economy and the biofuel industry leader, a policy model for other countries; and its sugarcane ethanol is cheap and widely available. Now the Truckie on this petrol buying mission does not know this and returns to the circuit with several litres of ALCOOL.

OH DEAR !!!! BIG MISTAKE.

What would you choose, A or G?????
The job of a Truckie can not be learnt from a book. Trial and error, or a good teacher, or even my blog are the only real options. A Truckie might be asked to go to a supermarket to buy sugar for the team in Hungary. Do you know the Hungarian word for sugar? They might have to buy nuts or bolts in China. Can you do this?
And they might have to buy petrol in Brazil...........
What happens when the team are working late at night in the garages and you need to feed them? In your own language, it is easy to telephone for pizza and have it delivered. But can you do this in Spain when you do not speak spanish? It is the Truckie who is normally sent out to drive on unknown roads, in an unknown country, and buy food for the team. A Truckie who can do this sort of job is an integral part of a race team team abroad. It is a simple job that can be very, very challenging and many people would not even want to attempt it.
The Truckie who has bought ALCOOL instead of petrol, has just learnt another lesson and was sent away again to buy the right stuff.
Truckies are renowned in the paddock for talking to many people in other teams. It is a good way to share information and constantly learn. A Truckie who does not talk to other people is a Truckie who knows nothing.
Garage set up in Curitiba

Some teams have completed their garages early.

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Sunday, 15 July 2012

Airports, Security and Planes

I thought that I would use some of my time to have a moan before I head off to Brazil.

AIRPORTS, SECURITY AND PLANES.
Having to say goodbye to driving a gorgeous truck and now relying on airplanes just does not give me a thrill. Personally, I think the airplane experience has gone downhill, rapidly.
I don't like the discomfort and tackiness of it. The premise that to get from place to another, you have to sit crammed in a little metal tube staring out of a tiny window. And worse, you have to use airports, and if you're unlucky, possibly two or three.
Is there anywhere in life as bad as an airport? Well, let's not fool ourselves. There are prisons and hospitals and morgues and concentration camps and Blackpool and Kentucky Fried Chicken. But most of those you don't have to experience simply to go to work.
The intended purpose of airport security is to protect us, the fare paying passengers, from them, the psychopaths who want to blow up aeroplanes, or hijack them and fly them to somewhere nice, or hijack them and fly them into buildings. The real purpose of airport security is to make us feel as if something is being done to prevent bad stuff from happening to us. If airport security was actually about security, they would spend more effort on stopping the baggage handlers from stealing from the luggage. I guess there's at least some hope that poorly constructed bombs might detonate prematurely when they're being tossed around by the ground crew.
Typical airport security precautions include:
  • X-raying luggage -- I presume that somebody looks at the X-ray screens, though in my experience the staff are normally too busy chatting to be paying much attention, and in any case, how are they're supposed to distinguish a laptop computer from a bomb built into a laptop computer.
  • frisking anybody attractive or who looks as if they might find the experience embarrassing, 
  • and don't forget that confiscating someone’s toothpaste is going to keep us safe. This is too ridiculous to entertain.

Duty Free Shopping is awful. As a resident of a modern western country, where smoking is banned in so many places, including airports, it is rare to see quite so many cigarettes gathered together in one place. What I really don't understand is why anyone buys consumer electronics in the airport. It's overpriced and you're probably not going to be allowed to use it on the plane, and if it goes wrong, are you really going to take it back to whichever airport hellhole you happened to be flying from when you suddenly felt a deep-seated urge to buy an electric razor or an MP3 player, or a hand-held bloody computer? And the bookshops...it's said that the majority of people in the world, buy only one book a year, at the airport bookshop, just before they catch the aeroplane.

So, eventually, after surviving Duty Free for however long it takes for the airline to find its aeroplane, put the luggage on it, find the crew and figure out how to get people on board the aeroplane in -- let's not kid ourselves -- a not very efficient manner, you find yourself on board.
At this point the airline will make some token effort to reassure you that flying is completely safe. It's crashing that's dangerous, but they try to make out that that's safe too. This is particularly irritating. The operation of a life jacket is explained. Have any significant number of people ever survived an air crash into water? I think not. Perhaps they didn't remember to pull the toggles on their life jackets or forgot that they could top them up by blowing through the little tube. We are told to stow our luggage in the over-head lockers so that in the event of a crash it will fall out and fly about the cabin knocking peoples' heads off. The brace position is explained. The one thing that we are not told -- and which is, apparently, the only piece of advice which will genuinely do you any good in an emergency -- is to count the number of rows of seats between you and the nearest exit. The point is that when the aeroplane catches fire, the cabin will fill with smoke and at that point no amount of expensive cabin-floor strip lighting is going to help you find the exits. At the same time as counting the rows, you should probably try to assess which of the other passengers you should go around and which you will be able to elbow out of the way. Although the chances of needing to use this information in anger (more likely panic) are small, imagining the harm you can do to your fellow passengers may help you while away the time whilst you wait for the aeroplane to take off.

So, anyway, eventually the pilot finds the runway, you accelerate and you take off. Ooh, feel the power! Right, that's the fun bit over.

Now you are subjected to the twin horrors of airline food and `in-flight entertainment'. The food is rarely very exciting and not very edible. And then we have the ever helpful air stewards and hostesses. I dont think they really care about us. The airlines train them to think they are working at an expensive hotel, but they are basically behind the counter at McDonalds serving the ungrateful masses. Not even the alcohol can take the edge off.
(Oh, and a free tip to hijackers-- don't bother with the plastic cutlery. The sharpest things on the aeroplane are probably the edges of those nasty foil containers they put the food in.)

And then we come to `in-flight entertainment'. Or, rather, we don't. The last thing I want to do on a flight is to watch old episodes of Friends or -- for national airlines -- programming about how great their country of origin is. Alternatively they might show you a moving map display of where the aeroplane is, which is depressing to watch. It's sad that 800km/h seems so slow. Alternatively, you can just listen to piped music on the headphones provided (which typically use some completely random connector in an effort to stop you from using a pair of headphones which is actually any good).

Airplane seats are not suitable for tall or overweight people. I suppose if I was smaller and if my legs were a little shorter, I could just curl up in a ball and wait for it all to stop. Perhaps the pilots get a better deal. Well, they get a room to themselves, at least. I do wish I could fall asleep on planes. I envy the people that pass out right away and wake up at their destination.

Goodbye nice comfortable truck and hello airplane.
Brazil........Here I come !