
Adrian Dommett
won a really tough Kyrle Trial on 24th April. Rain the day before had made the
steep sections slippery and they rutted up during the day making things
particularly difficult for the later runners, including the Escorts in Class
Three who spent much of the trial digging furrows with their diff casings. All
credit to Adrian though, a great drive in a superbly prepared car.

Adrian Dommett and Judy Phillips on Lane
End
Report
Results
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Bryan Phipps on the start of Lane End.
Bryan stopped at the six but went on to be third in class 7 and best Marlin. |
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Chris Hellings on Lane End
Sporting body damage like many of the saloons. |
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Chris Symons
Understeering his Porshe into the bank at the foot of Lane End. |
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David Dyer
The only Class 4 to clean Lane End. |
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Dick Bolt
Getting his Esccort niceley crossed up at the foot of Ropers. |
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Harvey Waters attacking Ropers.
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The winning Power Plant
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Keith Sanders
Pictured here on Bluebell Keith only dropped elevan on the event and was sixth overall. |
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Simon Groves
Ouch! |
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Three wise men of class three.
Harvey Waters, Simon Groves and Dave Miller |
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Tristan White
On Castle View |
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Tristan White
I think the marshal is trying to tell Tubby that he's stopped! |
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To quote Simon Woodall “Someone once said that the Camel Classic was ‘a
trial organised by buggy drivers for buggy drivers’. It looks to me like it’s
got to pass that handle to the Kyrle”. Indeed Simon and Ian Davis had a ding
dong battle for the lead but it was spoilt by Adrian Dommett who pipped them
for overall victory in his Wolseley Hornet.
The organising team had chosen a mix of old and new hills in and around The
Forest of Dean for their notoriously tough event. As well as some very steep
hills they were aided by a fair amount of rain for a few days before so a
competitive event was on the cards, without the necessity to impose tyre
pressure restrictions.
The first group of hills was just north of Monmouth and they set the tone
of the event. Steep, long, rutted with near impossible hairpins, and that was
just the approach road! There were three sections close together, with a map
of the forest to ensure the crews found them OK. The first one started in a
sea of mud and led straight up a steep, very rutted track. The ruts were very
deep and defeated all the Escorts whose diff casings dug into ground in
between the grooves. Most of the other classes succeeded, but it still caught
out quite a few, including Keith Oakes in his Dutton Phaeton.
Keith wasn’t any luckier on Widow Maker which came next, as classes 6, 7
and 8 had to restart. Most of the Class 8’s pulled away, but not Tony Young
and the five he lost here cost him an overall win. It was different
proposition for classes 6 and 7 and only Andrew Martin (Dutton Melos) and
Brian Phipps (Marlin) succeeded. The third hill, Howards Way, was a bit easier
and gave some respite, although Simon Groves picked up a puncture, his third
on the day, the other two wee on the way to the start!
Next it was back onto the A40 before turning back into the complex for
Goldsmiths 1 and 2 and a greeting from the genial John Sergeant. They were
both fearsomely steep and rutted, with a hairpin to liven up Goldsmiths 2.
Again most of the class eights were successful, but the others struggled and
even eventual winner Adrian Dommett dropped two on the first one.
Back on the A40 again, in the direction of Ross, it was only a few miles to
the new sections at Goodrich. These were some way off the road across the
fields and down to the River Wye. On arrival at Ropers competitors were
greeted by Simon Harris with the unusual opportunity to go past “section
begins” and view the section. Wow, it was worth seeing. After a few yards on
the level it was into a pool of mud, 90 left and up a straight muddy climb
between the trees that was probably a fire break. It was a tough one but as
Simon Woodall and Paul Bartleman proved it was possible to go clean and this
put them in joint lead of the event. Geddes didn’t present too much of a
problem and neither did Castle View that was only tackled by the lower
classes.
After the first long road run of the day the route wound its way into The
Forest of Dean itself for a complex of four hills and a special test. Jack and
Jill were first and were cleaned only by most of the class eights, Andrew
Martin, Ray Goodnight and of course Adrian Dommett. In class 8 Simon Woodall
dropped two on both of these horrors, putting Paul Bartleman into the sole
lead. Class four lost Ian Moss here, the powerful Imp’s transmission crying
enough for the second trial in succession.
A few yards up the track came Burnbrae. The drop down to the stream is
always the same but afterwards the route depends on the whim of the
organisers. This year it was around the tree for everyone. This is very tough
as it’s hard to regain traction after the corner and very few were successful.
Paul Bartleman and Ian Davis were amongst the unlucky ones, dropping five and
three respectively. Ian and and Simon Woodall were in the joint lead now,
together with Mike Workman, one in front of Adrian Dommett.
The tree was to take its toll. Not just on the section but also for the
failures who dropped back onto the lay-by and were encouraged by the marshals
to have a second go. Numerous saloons sustained body damage, the worst being
Simon Groves who came near to ripping the side off the gold Escort.
Just across the road lay a special test and the infamous Pludds where
Andrew Brown reported on
http://www.wheelspin.org.uk/blog/index.htm:-
“For those that don't know it, Pludds in an almost straight, very steep,
climb on a stony/rocky track with a very rocky section just over half way up
and that, of course, is where the restart is always placed. Clerk of the
Course, Adrian Marfell, had inspected Pludds immediately before our arrival
and imposed tyre pressure restrictions for just this one section - the rest
of the trial being run unrestricted. 14psi for Class 8, and 12psi for Class
7, was to have a significant effect on the restarters. First up, once again,
was Mike Workman who made it look easy after which car after car failed
although there were notable climbs by Paul Bartleman (Troll) and Tony Young
(VW Special), Tony being particularly pleased as his special does not like
tyre pressure restrictions. Tony came back down, after his climb, to say
"Hello" to Mark and it was interesting to hear that he'd spectated at Pludds
last year and worked out what he thought was the best line on the restart -
the same line that we'd worked out by watching this year. I'm certainly not
telling anyone else the 'secret' except to say that a significant number of
the failures stopped with their nearside front tyre up against a large rock
step and we knew they were going nowhere long before the marshal's flag
dropped. The same decimation continued in Class 7 with the notable exception
of Andrew Martin, who had time to shake Tony's hand as he left the restart,
Derek Tyler (VW Baja) and Ray Goodright. John Ludford (Marlin) certainly
also cleared the section but may have spent too long on the restart - I
haven't seen the full results yet.”
In fact the results show they were all were given a clean. All the class
three’s bar Tom Jones went clean but it wasn’t very class four friendly and
only David Shaylor was clear. Neither Ian Davis nor Simon Woodall got away
from the restart, putting Mike Workman into an overall lead, one ahead of
Adrian Dommett.
There was an hours rest at the Speculation picnic site where a couple of
dead cars were resting. David Wall’s Canhai Special had run its big ends on
the Pludds restart and Andrew Rippons ex–Jason Collins Baja, now with 1935
power, had broken its diff. Saloon competitors were able to compare Burnbrae
body damage and the judges unanimously voted Simon Groves the winner!
After the second special test came Snompers. This was another ground
clearance problem for many, with a restart for class eight. Mick Workman
failed to get away from this passing the overall lead to Adrian Dommett.
Bluebell was a rather strange hill in the same complex which stopped most of
the entry but not Keith Sanders in his Scimitar which was going very well in
class five and was to finish a very credible sixth overall.
There was another longish road run to the final complex where 6, 7 and 8
attempted Dawes Tump. Attempt being the operative word as only Ian Davis,
Simon Woodall, Russ Norman and Paul Bartleman were clean.
Lane End was just up the track. A fearsome challenge. The start line was in
a mud bath, followed by a very sharp hairpin left, then a straight steep bit
with fearsome ruts and so on and so on! The early runners in class eight
stormed up. The class sevens struggled a bit and Keith Oakes grounded out in
the ruts but Andrew Martin got through them for a clean and a class win. The
incredible Keith Sanders stormed up. David Dyer was the only successful class
four and Colin Perryman the only class three after all the Escorts grounded
out in the lower reaches and Nick Farmer failed on the third hairpin.
Running at the end of the field conditions were at the worst for Adrian
Dommett but he had no problems at all, cleaning the section for a well
deserved overall win of a very rough, tough, Kyrle Trial.

Results
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Best Overall
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| Adrian Dommett |
Wolseley Hornet |
5 |
Class 1
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| David Haizelden |
VW Golf |
52 |
| Terry Coventry |
Peugeot 205 GTi |
69 |
Class 2
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| Adrian Dommett |
Wolseley Hornet |
5 |
| Bill Bennett |
MGJ2 |
55 |
Class 3
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| Colin Perryman |
BMW 2002 |
24 |
| Nick Farmer |
BMW 318S |
33 |
| Tristan White |
Ford Escort |
46 |
Class 4
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| David Shaylor |
VW Beetle |
41 |
| David Dyer |
VW Beetle |
50 |
Class 5
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| Keith Sanders |
Reliant Scimitar SS1 |
11 |
| Chris Symons |
Porshe 924 |
53 |
Class 6
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| Jon Robilliard |
VW Beetle |
38 |
| Gary Browning |
VW Beetle |
48 |
Class 7
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| Andrew Martin |
Dutton Melos |
27 |
| Ray Goodright |
Arley-MG Midget |
33 |
| Bryan Phipps |
Marlin |
35 |
Class 8
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| Ian Davis |
VW Buggy |
9 |
| Simon Woodall |
VW Buggy |
9 |
| Tony Young |
VW Special |
10 |
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