fsquid wrote:so can someone explain how rally racing works as I think I might give it a go this year. I thought it would just be one big long race course, but looking around it is like 19-21 small runs in the span of a weekend?
WRC events typically have 15 to 25 stages spread over three days. Stages vary in length from around 3 to 25 miles. Drivers start two or three minutes apart -- can't remember exact time frame -- and positions are based solely on accumulated time.
Drivers must drive their rally cars on public roads between stages, following all local traffic laws. There are service areas after selected stages in which just four team members have 10, 30 or 45 minutes -- depends on itinerary -- to make repairs and perform other service on each car. You think NASCAR or F1 mechanics are good? You've never seen a WRC crew at work in the service park. They are magicians.
Drivers receive time penalties for leaving service late or arriving late for their start time at the stage. Start times are determined
Rallies take place on gravel, mud, snow or asphalt. Events RARELY feature mixed surfaces. Rally Cyprus last season was the first mixed-surface rally in years.
WRC cars feature 2-liter, four-cylinder turbocharged engines cranking out about 310 horsepower. The cars are four-wheel drive.
There's a driver and a co-driver in each car. The co-driver reads pace notes to the driver, giving him a head's up about the turns, obstacles and other stage information. During a race week, drivers and co-drivers participate in the recce Tuesday and Wednesday and the shakedown Thursday. The recce allows teams a couple of runs through the stages at normal highway speed to learn the stages, finalize and update pace notes with any new obstacles (rocks, ruts) and surface conditions. The shakedown basically is final practice before the rally starts Friday.
Here's a cool video that looks back at the 2009 WRC season:
<embed src="
http://www.youtube.com/v/5oYpyqHuk6k&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="560" height="340"></embed>
Hope this helps. Rally is a superbly entertaining form of motorsport that is sadly overlooked in the U.S. I LOVE it, and I never would have known about it if I didn't see a copy of Colin McRae Rally for the PlayStation on the shelf of my local video game store in 1998 and wonder: "What the hell is this? May as well try it!"

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