Robin Liddell – In Conversation With Paul Collins
At Mosport A Fascinating Insight Into Racing A Porsche
(Discussion During Qualifying Day At Mosport)
Robin, Peter Baron said in the Orbit interview with TWK
(which John Hindhaugh read over the PA system while you were out
qualifying today) about your driving around Trois Rivieres: “To do
the times he is doing, at this track, Robin is absolutely
heroic.”
It’s nice to get
recognition – for the simple reason that, and it’s not an ego thing,
you know in your heart that you’re doing as good a job as some of
the other drivers, but in the situation we have, you don’t get any
recognition for what you’re doing.
I got more
recognition for my qualifying at Trois Rivieres than I’ll get
probably for the whole season. That’s very frustrating for an
individual, so when you have that opportunity to shine, you have to
grab that with both hands.
I
also know how tough it is for Mike (Pickup) right now, financially
but also in other ways, because he’s finding his feet in the
series.

So, Robin,
tell us how things have been going this season.
It’s been really
up and down. When we went to Le Mans, we tested and qualified with a
2001 spec engine in our car. We did pretty well – I went the fastest
I’d ever done around there, and that put us, I think, fourth on the
grid. Last year I never got a clear lap, and was never in the right
place at the right time, but this year we were down 12 or 15 Ks on
last year and yet we did a better time.
So, the first time we had an engine from Porsche it was
for the race, and when I drove the car on Thursday, in second
qualifying – Mike likes to use second qualifying to work exclusively
on race setup, and not use the morning warmup – we were all pretty
excited, and I went out and drove it, and when I came back Mike
asked “What was it like?” and honestly I couldn’t feel any
improvement. The experience I had had a couple of years ago when I
drove for Freisinger with Ortelli, when we put the race engine in it
was like night and day – you could feel the difference right away.
We didn’t have that at Le Mans.
Then we went to
Road Atlanta, and we didn’t have a factory engine from Porsche NA,
so we went back to the 2001 engine, so that was a bit of a washout.
The team wasn’t really ready for that weekend, so afterwards we had
to sit down and regroup, get our heads around the series. No
excuses; all the other teams had to do the relocation, too. We had
to raise our game.

By the time
Sears came along, the team was operating a lot better – but we
couldn’t get the car working, and that was the truth. Now, I went
off in qualifying, and shunted quite heavily; I was lucky I hadn’t
damaged the chassis, and the guys did a great job getting the car
done and out there for the warmup and the race – and the car was
basically no different in the race from how it had been in
qualifying. So it wasn’t like we struggled because of the shunt – we
never had the pace in the first place.
We struggled fundamentally with rear-end grip, and never
had the balance right on the car. In the first session, we were
fourth quickest, and thought “hmm, that’s not bad;” the problem was,
we’d found the limit of the car that first session, while everyone
else stepped forward. I was just hustling the car in qualifying,
which is kind of against my principles as a driver. When a car is
good, I’m happy to do that – like I did at Trois Rivieres, where I
did one of the best qualifying laps I’d done in my life. I felt a
lot of elation when I did that, because I knew I’d done a fantastic
job and it was as good as I could have done.
The difference
between that and Sears Point was that at Sears I was hanging on to
the car, and I never really like to push the car that much. Your
balls are in your mouth, and I don’t care who you are, there’s no
one who can drive a car consistently that way for any length of time
before they make a mistake. And I was just pushing it too hard, and
got outside, and that’s how my shunt happened.
All that was
by-the-by, as Alex got pushed off in the race, and I think that was
a combination of bad luck and perhaps a bit of rookie inexperience.
It was clear that the Panoz did something to Alex, but Alex might
have avoided being in a position where he was vulnerable. I’ve raced
in series where I’m in the lead class, lapping everyone, and I’ve
raced where I’ve been in the slower class, getting lapped all the
time, and this is actually harder. A lot of prototype guys don’t
appreciate this until they’ve driven in the lower classes, like JJ
Lehto in the BMW, or Brabs and Mags now. I don’t care what anybody
says, it’s easier to drive a car that has grip than it is to drive
one with less grip. You can see that the experienced guys, that they
can read the traffic. Alex just needs time, but he’s learning it
quickly, and you can see that – he’s very talented, and a quick
driver.
So how’s the
car now?
Well, the truth
of it is that the car is what it is – we have the package, we take
it to the circuit, all of them being new to us, put it on the track
and work from there. It just so happened that at Trois Rivieres it
was working pretty well, but at Sears it wasn’t, and neither was it
at Road Atlanta. Here at Mosport, it’s working not too badly, but
it’s unfortunate that we lost the entire morning session, and we’re
not going to set the world alight.
Where do you
see the biggest gains coming from?
The biggest
thing that’s lacking right now is the damper technology on that car.
There’s so much development that can be done, these days. Porsches
have a tendency to porpoise, and the wheels move about so much that
you really need to work very hard on the car to get the suspension
right. Basically that’s where we could improve our package the
most.
We’re very happy
with our Pirelli tires, and we’ve got the factory motor now, which
is good. Our chassis is a Ricardo chassis with the stiffened shell,
same as J3 have, so it’s good, but we’re not working the tires
correctly – so we either have a grip problem or an imbalance in the
car. When we change the springs, though, we then get out of the
range of the dampers, so then we’ve only got springs. Then what you
have is a car that’s doing this – waggles hand back and forth – and
that’s what we have, that’s how it feels. What I think we need to
do, whilst I think the car needs to be stiffer overall in some way,
is to soften the spring so that the dampers are having an effect,
and then run bump rubbers and packers to control the movement of the
car. I’ve run bump rubbers and packers before with some success, but
they’re a bit of a black art. But then what you could have is a car
that uses the springs in slow corners, but in high speed corners the
rubbers would just stop the movement and hold the car stiff. There’s
a mechanic on the other car, Dennis, a good guy with some
engineering knowledge, who seems to be thinking along the same
lines. I’ve brought it up with Mike, so we’ll see whether that goes
anywhere…
The reality is,
though, that I’m not an engineer. I’ve pretty much engineered that
car for the last two years in the sense that the team relies purely
on driver feedback to set up the car – we don’t have data on
suspension, so they have driver feedback and tire temperatures to go
on. We need an engineer who can bring engineering knowledge and
experience, to be able to try different things and get a good
testing program going.

Have you
considered approaching Multimatic?
There was some
hope that with John Graham involved in our #61 car, that we’d be
able to work out a bit of development of the cars with Multimatic.
We’re still hoping we can work something out, because there’s no use
in ignoring opportunity when it presents itself.
So what sort
of testing do you foresee?
Testing
unfortunately doesn’t look possible in the immediate future – the
truth of it is there isn’t any testing available at any of the major
tracks. Eppi, the Pirelli tire guy who’s based in Rome, Georgia is
saying to me that they’ve got no testing available. They can get
three hours of evening time at Road Atlanta.

We didn’t attend
the test earlier this week (at Mosport) because, to be honest, I
didn’t see any point in coming here without some development bits to
put on the car, maybe a defined test program. There’s no point in
coming to drive the car around for two or three days if all you’re
going to do is change the roll bar and go up a few clicks on the
damper. We need a damper technician and engineer to come for a test
for two days, with a van and dyno. and the ability to rebuild the
dampers and work through a program.
You look at Job
Racing, and they’re two seconds up the road. It’s not rocket
science. They’ve just got a car that’s going around the track
faster, and there’s only a number of reasons why that can be.
How do you
know that it’s the car, not the driver?
Alex (Davison)
comes from the same Supercup and Porsche Cup background as guys like
Marc Lieb, Sascha Maassen, Timo, and last year he won races there,
winning in Carerra Cup, and was the top points-getter in the second
half of the season, so he’s capable of being as fast as the Job
guys. He and I are close together, too, never being more than one or
two tenths apart on either side in testing and racing.
We’re all in
what should be the same cars, and if you can drive a Porsche, you
can drive any Porsche. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea, because
they’re a funny thing to drive – which Johnny Mowlem went on about
for years, and no one ever gave him credit for it – the 911 is a
hard car to drive because you physically have to pick it up by the
scruff of the neck and be pretty aggressive with the car; but by the
same token, if you overdrive the car slightly, it will punish you
very hard in your lap times. That balance is very fine – it’s a
challenging car to drive on that edge. There are a lot of good
drivers who jumped into a 911 and never were able to do
anything.
Thanks
Robin.
|