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Drivers prepare for biggest challenge of the year

Thursday 10 January 2008, 1:09PM

By Toyota Racing

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Sponsors of TRS
Sponsors of TRS Credit: TRS

PALMERSTON NORTH

Toyota Racing Series heads for New Zealand Grand Prix at Manfeild running Biofuel Grand Prix a world first.


Defending New Zealand Grand Prix winner and Toyota Racing Series champion Daniel Gaunt will be hoping for an uneventful weekend as he prepares to defend his Grand Prix title this weekend.



At Ruapuna near Christchurch last weekend, his Lady Wigram Trophy defence went profoundly wrong.



Gaunt, 22, was left wondering what went wrong at the Lady Wigram. He crashed at high speed during testing on the Thursday and then had his fastest times erased from qualifying after his car was found to be under weight.



That put him off the back of the grid for the Lady Wigram last Sunday and forced him into a stunning drive which saw him carve through half the field in the 25-lap race distance, finishing seventh.



This weekend the Auckland driver is once more defending a 2007 title, this time the most prestigious trophy in New Zealand motorsport: the Grand Prix. He is unconcerned at his overall series points total, maintaining his focus solely on defending the individual race titles he won in 2007 and on the international rounds that make a “series within a series” in New Zealand’s summer of motorsport.



Leading entries ranged against him are the winner of the 2008 Lady Wigram Trophy, Earl Bamber; along with series leader Andy Knight and the leader of the three-race international “series within a series”, Ben Harford.



Bamber is well motivated by his Lady Wigram victory and keen to close the series points gap between himself and the front-runners, Knight and Harford.



On a comeback after a spectacular crash in the second TRS race last weekend are Mitch Cunningham and Michael Burdett.



The pair tangled at high speed on the back of the circuit and Cunningham’s car was substantially damaged, preventing the Aucklander from making good on his early-series speed.



Burdett’s car was less damaged and he recovered well from the crash, taking fourth overall in the Lady Wigram Trophy race behind Matt Halliday.



Series leader Andy Knight also had a challenging weekend and will be hoping for a clear run at Manfeild to extend his points total. Knight was unable to repeat his dominance of the first round at Pukekohe in late 2007.



He took a third overall and a win in the two races that preceded the Lady Wigram itself but a misfire that developed during the Lady Wigram Trophy dropped him down through the field even as Daniel Gaunt was headed in the other direction.



Five new drivers arrived in the series for the start of the international series. A further addition for this round is Daynom Templeman from Auckland’s North Shore. He was third overall at the New Zealand Grand Prix last year, and will be aiming for the podium again in 2008.



Home-grown innovation is to the fore in the Toyota Racing Series. The 2008 New Zealand Grand Prix is the first in the world to run on biofuel. From the start of the 2008 season all Toyota Racing Series cars use an E85 ethanol-petrol blend that reduces emissions, significantly reduces use of fossil fuels and has been shown to give slight improvements in power and torque.



New Zealand is one of only two countries in the world to have the right to call its premier race a Grand Prix. In its 57 year history, the Grand Prix has been held at nine different venues in the past, and only moved off road and airfield circuits onto permanent circuits in 1963.



The first New Zealand Grand Prix in 1950 was won by John McMillan in a Jackson Special, and the title has been contested and won by most of the famous names of the formative years of grand prix racing:



Held in recent years at Teretonga near Invercargill, the Grand Prix has moved north this year to Manfeild near Palmerston North. Manfeild has undergone a makeover to host the race, including construction of a new three storey race control tower and upgrades to many of its facilities.



The 2008 New Zealand Grand Prix, 35 laps of the 3.03 km Manfeild Autocourse, will get under way at 4.20 pm on Sunday afternoon.



Among other features of the weekend are a street party in feilding itself, autograph signing sessions with the stars of the Toyota Racing Series, classic grand prix car demonstration laps, an outing for the New Zealand A1GP car, and a new on-track innovation to be announced during race weekend by Toyota.



-Ends-



Toyota Racing Series

New Zealand Grand Prix weekend programme

Friday 11 January 2008

12.10pm Toyota Racing Series Testing Session One

2.45pm Toyota Racing Series Testing Session Two

7.00pm Grand Prix Gala evening at Toyota New Zealand



Saturday 12 January

11.45 am Toyota Racing Series Qualifying Session One

12.05 pm Toyota Racing Series Qualifying Session Two

12.25 pm Toyota Racing Series Qualifying Session Three

4.32 pm Toyota Racing Series – Race One (16 Laps)

5.00 pm Toyota Racing Series Press Conference

5.00 pm – 10.00 pm Feilding Street Party from 5pm to 10pm at Manchester

Square Feilding, drivers present, family event



Sunday 13 January

12.00 pm Toyota Racing Series – Race Two (16 Laps)

3.50 pm onward Grand Prix build-up. TRS2 race car leads the field

behind safety car, TRS Cars on to grid, engines

switched off

Kapa Haka

National Anthem

Drivers to cars

4.20 pm Toyota Racing Series New Zealand Grand Prix (35

laps)

5.05 pm NZGP podium presentations



Toyota Racing Series

Points after two rounds

1.
Andy Knight
380

2.
Ben Harford
353

3.
Nic Jordan
300

4.
Earl Bamber
250

5.
Dominic Storey
232

6.
Ben Crighton
213

7.
Christina Orr
208

8.
Ken Smith
194

9.
Michael Burdett
190

10.
Mitch Cunningham
188

11.
Nelson Hartley
187

12.
Hamish Cross
183

13.
Matt Halliday
169

14.
Sam MacNeill
148

15.
Matthew Hamilton
127

16.
Nathan Antunes
120

17.
Daniel Gaunt
96

18.
Michael Pickens
76

19.
Kristján Einar
72






Media release



Bio-fuel Grand Prix a world first

Innovation puts Toyota on pole



The 2008 New Zealand Grand Prix is a world first. It is the first time any motor racing Grand Prix has been run on biofuel, and in particular on an E85 ethanol fuel blend using ethanol derived from whey, a by-product of the dairy industry.



Toyota’s locally developed racing series took a world first step into environmentally ethical fuel production and use with the adoption this year of an E85 ethanol fuel blend from the first round at Pukekohe.



The fuel is 85 per cent ethanol and 15 per cent 95 octane petrol.



Toyota’s pioneering move follows months of laboratory and dynamometer testing and engine performance tuning and a comprehensive re-development of the Toyota Racing Series cars with new fuel system components to manage the new fuel.



The biofuel initiative is specific to motorsport, and the series offers a perfect test environment for high percentage biofuel use under the most extreme conditions.



Ethanol based biofuels have not been used in New Zealand motorsport until now, and their adoption for the Toyota Racing Series has only been possible through Motorsport New Zealand’s willingness to modify regulations governing permissible rules in its championships. In extensive testing by TRS the fuel has consistently burned cooler than petrol and can deliver significantly reduced emissions. In the process of re-tuning the engines for the new fuel, power and torque gains were also noted.



The Toyota Racing Series is New Zealand’s premier open-wheel “wings and slicks” race category and uses Italian built carbon-composite race chassis fitted with production Toyota four cylinder engines that have been developed for motorsport purposes.



Other race series worldwide are examining the potential of biofuels, but all use purpose-built competition engines and none have indicated they can or will commit to an E85 fuel blend until at least 2009. Few will commit to more than a 30 per cent blend and they use fuels derived from food crops.



“Toyota has a global responsibility to conduct its business in an ethical and environmentally responsible manner which minimises the impact of our operations on the environment. We take this responsibility very seriously and see the Toyota Racing Series’ commitment to the E85 ethanol fuel blend as a unique opportunity to develop and refine innovative biofuel technology in the toughest possible environment,” said Toyota spokesperson John Fowke.



Toyota Racing Series Manager Barrie Thomlinson says the off season period has been used to comprehensively test and prove the fuel’s suitability for competition.



“We are very confident about the fuel’s compatibility with racing uses, and we are looking forward to the data that we can provide about the use of high percentage fuel blends. This is a perfect example of motorsport helping the automotive world to produce cleaner, smarter road cars and giving global brands like Toyota tools that help to actively manage their carbon profile.”



Toyota’s commitment to biofuel in the Toyota Racing Series will also help to educate car owners, Toyota staff, its commercial partners, Kiwi race fans and the community at large about the growing fight against climate change.



The switch to E85 for the race series also points the way to development of true carbon-neutral and ethical fuels.



Environmental activists and political parties have for some time been voicing concern about the trend toward diversion of arable land from food crops to growing new fuel crops. The ethanol used in the TRS E85 blend is derived not from grain or root vegetables as is the case with much of the developing biofuel industry in other countries, but as a by-product of the dairy industry.



“Potentially, if production volumes are commercially viable, distilling ethanol from dairy industry waste could help relieve some of the pressure on food cropping. Developing this kind of capability in our dairy industry now could give New Zealand an edge over the rest of the world.”



Internationally, Toyota is the acknowledged leader in the development and production of innovative low-emission, fuel efficient hybrid-powered vehicles. The company has a comprehensive environmental and social strategy which is embodied by all parts of its global operations including motorsport.



The Toyota Racing Series forms part of Toyota NZ’s CarbonZero programme which aims to reduce and manage its resource use, adopt environmentally responsible technologies and offset carbon emissions from its operations. The programme extends to all Toyota’s own vehicles and to all Toyota operated sites including the TRS base at Mount Wellington in Auckland, aligning the Toyota Racing Series programme with Toyota’s position as the leading manufacturer of sustainable and environmentally-friendly motor vehicles.



In New Zealand, Toyota New Zealand is a foundation member of the Business Council for Sustainable Development, a member of the Sustainable Business Network and long term supporters of the Worldwide Fund for Nature.



-Ends-



Issued by Mark Baker, Veritas Communications Limited, for Toyota Racing Series.



For more information please contact:

Series Manager Barrie Thomlinson Mark Baker

09 279 2759 09 296 8636

Barrie.thomlinson@toyotaracing.co.nz 021 212 0607

mark.baker@ihug.co.nz







New Zealand Grand Prix Winners

1950
John McMillan (NZ)
Jackson Special

1954
Stan Jones (Aust)
Maybach Special

1955
Prince B. Bira (Thailand)
Maserati

1956
Stirling Moss (GB)
250F Maserati

1957
Reg Parnell (GB)
3.5L Ferrari

1958
Jack Brabham (Aust)
Cooper 2L

1959
Stirling Moss (GB)
Cooper 2.5L

1960
Jack Brabham (Aust)
Cooper 2.5L

1961
Jack Brabham (Aust)
Cooper 2.5L

1962
Stirling Moss (GB)
Cooper 2.5L

1963
John Surtees (GB)
Lola 2.7L

1964
Bruce McLaren (NZ)
Cooper 2.5L

1965
Graham Hill (GB)
Brabham 2.5L

1966
Graham Hill (GB)
BRM 2L

1967
Jackie Stewart (GB)
BRM 2.2L

1968
Chris Amon (NZ)
Ferrari 2.4L

1969
Chris Amon (NZ)
Ferrari 2.4L

1970
Frank Matich (Aust)
McLaren M10A 5L

1971
Niel Allen (Aust)
McLaren M10B 5L

1972
Frank Gardner (Aust)
Lola T300 5L

1973
John McCormack (Aust)
Elfin 5L

1974
John McCormack (Aust)
Elfin 5L

1975
Warwick Brown (Aust)
Lola TA332

1976
Ken Smith (NZ)
Lola T332

1977
Keke Rosberg (Finland)
Chevron B34

1978
Keke Rosberg (Finland)
Chevron B34

1979
Teo Fabi (Italy)
March 79

1980
Steve Millen (NZ)
Ralt RT1

1981
Dave McMillan (NZ)
Ralt RT1

1982
Roberto Moreno (Braz)
Ralt RT4

1983
David Oxton (NZ)
Ralt RT4

1984
Davy Jones (USA)
Ralt RT4

1985
Ross Cheever (USA)
Ralt RT4

1986
Ross Cheever (USA)
Ralt RT4

1987
Davy Jones (USA)
Ralt RT4

1988
Paul Radisich (NZ)
Ralt RT4

1989
Dean Hall (USA)
Swift/Cosworth

1990
Ken Smith (NZ)
Swift/Cosworth

1991
Craig Baird (NZ)
Swift/Toyota

1992
Craig Baird (NZ)
Reynard 92H

1993
Craig Baird (NZ)
Reynard 92H

1994
Greg Murphy (NZ)
Reynard 90D

1995
Brady Kennett (NZ)
Reynard 91D

1998
Simon Wills (NZ)
Reynard 94D

1999
Simon Wills (NZ)
Reynard 94D

2000
Andy Booth (NZ)
Reynard 94D

2002
Fabian Coulthard (NZ)
Van Diemen Stealth RF94

2003
Jonny Reid (NZ)
Van Diemen Stealth RF94

2004
Ken Smith (NZ)
Van Diemen Evo2

2005
Simon Gamble (NZ)
Spectrum 010

2006
Hamad Al Fardan (Bahrain)
Toyota Tatuus TT104ZZ

2007
Daniel Gaunt (NZ)
Toyota Tatuus TT104ZZ








Toyota Racing Series 2008 Race Calendar | Round 1 3-4 Nov 07 Pukekohe Park Raceway, Auckland, New Zealand Motorcup | Round 2 5-6 Jan 08 Powerbuilt Tools International Raceway, Ruapuna, Lady Wigram Trophy | Round 3 12-13 Jan 08 Manfeild Park, Feilding, New Zealand Grand Prix | Round 4 18-20 Jan 08 Taupo Motor Racing Circuit, Taupo, Denny Hulme Memorial Trophy | Round 5 16-17 Feb 08 Manfeild Park, Feilding, Dan Higgins Trophy | Round 6 1- 2 Mar 08 Timaru International Raceway, Timaru, Timaru Herald Trophy | Round 7 8-9 Mar 08 Teretonga Park, Invercargill, Spirit of a Nation | Round 8 18-20 Apr 08 Hamilton Street Race, Hamilton



www.toyotaracing.co.nz