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The 2016 Exeter Trial exploits of the Candidi Provocatores

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We had poor visibility most of the way After the wettest December on record, the going was going to be muddy for the 2016 Exeter Trial and as I headed east from Kernowfornia I could see great swathes of earth had been carved out by the water from the newly ploughed fields and dumped in ditches and roads and other vestiges of human infrastructure. This year starters from Popham were the first off and, running as No.109, your brave boys found themselves only 6 cars away from the front of the pack. Having been at the tail end of classic trials for a few years we were interested to see what the conditions would be like, especially on Simms, which seemed to get polished and sweaty as the day draws on. Although not cold with our cast iron cabin heater ahead of us, we got very wet even on the drive from Popham. I had given some thought to having a zip sewn into my trousers and jackets but I hadn't actually done anything about it. I was quickly reminded how my Hein Gericke jacket w...

Christmas means it's nearly the Exeter Trial

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It probably won't be as sunny as it was on the 2015 LET I am just getting into the Christmas spirit. It's a time of year when you can connect with perfect strangers by simply wishing them a Merry Christmas. And then it'll be Happy New Year, which has always struck me as an odd cause for celebration as there's nothing to stop you celebrating the time at any point in the year (old or new). It's still a good excuse for a party. But then there's the Exeter Trial. I SAID AND THEN THERE'S THE EXETER TRIAL! Sorry - I'm getting  a bit shouty becasue the Candidi Provocatores are in the 2016 Exeter Trial and starters from Popham Airfield are not bringing up the rear this year - we're running towards the front of the pack for cars at Number 109 so your brave boys Binky and Ginger will be pretending we're flying a Messerschmidt. It'll be interesting to see if the sections are easier or more difficult than they were running as tail-end-Charlie...

Vintage Thing No 139.1 - Raven 4WD

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The Raven 4WD in action I was strolling nonchalantly round the paddock at Wiscombe the other day... No that's not right. Let's start again. I was running round the paddock at Wiscombe in an over-stimulated state of febrile excitement caused by all the amazing rolling sculpture when something stopped me dead in my tracks. It was a Hillman Imp gearbox. Not only that, it was upside down and attached to some wheels. This could mean only one thing - it must be in some sort of mid-engine device. As my senses struggled to take in what they were seeing, I realised it was connected to no Hillman Imp engine This was no Vixen ! Instead, there was a crossflow Ford running twin 40s. Then things started to get really weird. There was an extra alloy case on the back of the imp box that ran to the nearside and sprouted a shaft that ran forward. My mate Pete Low was quicker on the uptake than I was. "It's got four wheel drive," he said. "Look, it says so on...

Wonderful Wiscombe (again)

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Our nighbour in the camping area this year was the supercharged Rawson Riley As usual I went to the VSCC hillclimb at Wiscome Park this year. I met up with my old mate Pete Low (he who constructed the Super Vee ) and we made a weekend of it. The weather was wet but still better than last year when there were rumours of the meeting being cancelled - although nobody really took these seriously. Besides the cool, dense air enhances power and the track soon dried out. In fact I even manged to get surnburnt on the Saturday. Slippy slider in the wetty gripper as Mr Stanley Unwin might say As usual, the paddock was bursting with interesting stuff on 2,3 and 4 wheels. The sun shines on Miss Bacfire I could stand and stare at the constructional details of Formula 3 500s all day, it seems. It's always good to see RIP An old favourite is RIP or the RIP special. Described nowadays as a four wheeled Morgan, it's going better than ever and Charlie Martin's derrin...

My stance as Bob Blackman MP

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Vote for me! Thanks everyone for your messages of congratulation on my re-election as MP for Harrow East. I will admit to being a little surprised but am encouraged to think that I’ve been doing something right recently – although, on reflection perhaps I should say, instead of "right", the ethically proper thing to do. However, I am saddened to see my views so mis-represented in the press, the TV and other anti-social media. My views on gay marriage have been completely mis-represented . Let’s be quite clear – I am in favour of it. As a heterosexual man, I see marriage in the cultural and historically British sense as being a field of open and underhand conflict in which one spouse stops the other from doing the things they like. See how marriage is depicted in the media, the language on the street and moaned about in the workplace. Let’s face it – marriage needs reforming. Two people, who genuinely harbour affection for each other, should enable and support t...

Mad Max Fury Road

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People are complaining about it already but it's a cracking film. I saw it Plymuff on Thursday nite and although there wasn't much a sense of occasion (nobody dressed up for instance) it was a very impressive film. Too many people will pick holes in it.  I could mention the the seven foot bloke pulling a supercharger off an engine with his bare hands but I won't.  The whole point is to revel in stuff and enjoy it, so I do. Mad Max Fury Road makes it easy. Great cars, great bikes, great stunts, a good story and action all the way. Mad Max has had its imitators before but this latest incarnation (see what I did there?) will surely spawn a who lot more. Got see it! It's got the last of the V8 Interceptors in it.

Vintage Thing No.141 - Supercharged 2CV6

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Looks quite innocent don't it? Many people remember the turbocharged 2CV that Car magazine featured back in the eighties. It famously caught fire but showed what could be achieved in squeezing out more power from these little engines. This supercharged 2CV6 belongs to Alan Mills and although he didn't build it, he's still developing it. The exhaust note was a bit of a give away. It had a much harder edge to it and the ends of the pipes looked like blow-off valves. Behind the standard headlamp bar is the cover for the belt drive to the supercharger. You can just see the little blower under the carb. Those are tool boxes either side of the wheel to maximise traction and that front bumper is a roll of lead. The supercharger fits on top of the engine and is driven by a belt behind the standard cooling fan. It's a shortened Roots blower and sits under a down draught carb. Not a great shot but we were about to climb Crackington on the 2015 LET The clever ...