Tours
It
is great fun to caravan together in a line of
Porsches. Our tours last a few hours and often include a meal. Recent
tours
include a trip to Globe to see miniature animals and have lunch, the
Amerind foundation and lunch in Willcox, and the Arizona-Sonora Desert
Museum. The board of directors welcomes tour
suggestions. Check for
upcoming tours.
Have a look at the scrapbook for photos from
previous tours.
Rallies
(Much of this is from the Golden Gate Region's
website. It will be modified
in future to reflect our region's rally experiences.)
Rallies are usually driven on regular roads,
with both a driver and a navigator. The objective of a rally is to
follow a course to the precise detail specified
in the rules. Competitive rallies dictate a certain schedule for the
checkpoints
along the way. Points are deducted by arriving at the checkpoint either
early
or late. Fun rallies may include a gimmick, such as drawing a playing
card at each checkpoint and the best pokerhand wins the rally.
Part of the challenge with a fun rally may be to discover the intended
route,
which may require other skills such as solving a puzzle or looking for
obscure
reference points.
TSD (Time, Speed, Distance) Rally
Often you are given an average speed to travel
in a TSD rally. If you slow down for a corner or stop for a sign, you
will have to go faster than that average to make up the time you lost.
The checkpoints, or controls as they are also called, will note the
time you arrive at their location. Generally for every 0.01 minute (0.6
seconds) you are early or late, you receive one point. The team (driver
and navigator) who scores the lowest total points for all legs (minimum
error) wins their class. This would be easy if you knew where the
controls were. That is a carefully guarded secret. You are provided
instructions which will take you along a very specific route. This
distance is carefully measured, and since the rate (S) is known, the
perfect arrival time is known. However your team must not only
calculate your perfect arrival time, but you must drive it as well.
The type of route instructions determines
whether you are participating in a tour or course rally. Tour Rally
instructions give you specific and clear instructions as to the rally
route. Course Rally
instructions may include traps that will if taken cause you to travel
either shorter or longer than the intended distance. This will cause
you to enter the control either earlier or later than your perfect
arrival time, thereby affecting your score. Essentially in Tour
Rallies, you only need to concentrate on staying on time. Course
rallies require not only staying on time but on course as well.
Pro Rally
A Pro Rally event is run on public roads,
which are closed to the public while the event is being run. Frequently
these are logging roads, but not always. Cars are sent down these roads
one car at a time, at one minute intervals. The object is to drive as
fast as you can, and faster than your competition. The winner is the
team that has the fastest total time for all stages. SCCA and FIA are
organizations that hold PRO Rally Series which are sometimes televised.
[Zone
8 Rallies]
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