An Explanation of What Rally Racing Is
[ April 13th, 2008 ] By: Charles Smith Posted in » Ramblings

Mark and I took for granted that you probably knew what Rally Racing was if you were here, and we’re sorry about that. So here is an explanation of what Rally Racing is.

The Basics of Rally Racing

Rally Racing is a motorsport that takes place on public type roads (ie not race tracks) while using street-legal cars. The race is not done in a head-to-head manner, but in stages that are timed. There are three types of stages in Rally: the transit stage, the special stage and the super-special stage.

The Transit Stage

In order to get to a special stage, the Rally prepared cars have to travel there under their own power on roads that are open to the public (yes, you can drive next to a real race car). They have a time limit to get there and are limited by the speed limits and the laws in that area. If they fail to make it to the special stage on-time the competitor car will incur a time penalty for their overall time or possibly a disqualification.

The Special Stage

A special stage is where the actual racing happens. The competitor car starts the special stage and must make its way to the end of the special stage as fast as it can. The time it takes to get to the end of the special stage is recorded and added to the total rally time. After the completion of the special stage the competitor moves on to the next special stage. Special stages are normal roads closed off from public car traffic, and are often lined with spectators watching the stage.

The Super Special Stage

I know I said there were no closed racetracks and no head to head racing in Rally, but I was lying a bit. Special stages are the majority of a Rally, while Super Special stages are often the final timed portion of a rally. In a Super Special, two competitors race head to head, but on separate tracks (much like a drag race but more twisty and dirty). The race takes place in a closed loop that has a crossover section so the two competitors that are racing race the same distance. The time it takes them to complete this stage is recorded and added to the total rally time.

How a Rally is Won

The winner of the Rally is determined by the least total time. This is calculated by adding up all the special stage times (including super special stages) and the time penalties incurred. That’s it? What makes it interesting? You just see one car race around all alone and then times are compared and a winner is declared?

Good questions, but what makes it interesting was already written down: it is raced on normal roads and not racetracks. So what is a normal road? Normal roads are not always smooth tarmac like we normally drive on, but they included single lane gravel roads, dirt paths we can legally call a road, snow covered tarmac and even what you would consider a normal road. This may not seem to be an interesting race at first, but when you see what a ‘normal’ road turns into when going 60-100mph you will understand. Common dips and crests will turn into jumps that send cars 6 feet off the ground. Nasty pot holes will rip car’s wheels off. Snowy roads will have cars traveling sideways at speeds that would scare you, and that’s the expected way of travel!

I am not a fan of racing for its accidents, in fact I cringe when I see the cars break, but if I were to watch a motorsport for accidents it would always be Rally. Drivers misjudging the grip they have going into a corner may slide right off the road (off a cliff even), or into a river, or if they suddenly have too much grip maybe they’ll roll their car many times. The point is that Rally has it all, and they do it on roads we can drive on our way to work.

Here’s the kicker: Rallies happen in cars that are just like ours. While they are modified heavily, they share our frames, sometimes our drivetrains and in some classes they are almost exactly like our cars with added safety features. So do a quick search for Rally Racing on youtube and check it out, I know you wont be disappointed.

Tags: , , April 13th, 2008 Posted in Ramblings

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3 Responses to “An Explanation of What Rally Racing Is”

  1. d$ Says:

    I see no 1991 f150s on youtube rallying. :(



  2. Charles Smith Says:

    Trucks tend to get raced in the Baja 1000 and Dakar rallies. I’m pretty sure Ford runs a Baja truck, which may or may not be based on the F150. You should start rallying your f150 deemoney.



  3. Mark Ozimek Says:

    There aren’t? I came up with one :(

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJc848R9xAA



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