Moss’s Mechanics

Ian Moss had a conclusive home win on the Stroud & DMC Mechanics Trial

Ian and Josh had a near flawless run in their 1200 Imp, putting up the best performance on all the hills except Greenway Lane 3 where they failed the restart. Tony Underhill was second overall, with Jade Bray in the passenger seat, in their Triumph special. Competing in Class Eight they did have a couple of extra restarts, including a real horror on Greenway Lane 3. Special well done to Steve Potter for winning Class 2 in his Trojan.

Ian and Josh Moss clearing the final bank on Mini Hoskins (Picture by Dave Cook)
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Organisers Carl Talbot and Tim Smith had an entry of 43 assembled in the spacious surroundings of the SKF car park for the start of Stroud’s Mechanics Trial. There was one non-starter. John White had a call from his passenger at 5 am saying his injured foot had swollen during the night and couldn’t come on the event.

The First Special Test

The route headed west from the start to the first section, a special test in a very muddy field. It was an a stop astride line B, back all four wheels over, round a bollard and back to stop astride C affair. C was the same line as B so this area got a fair amount of use and it became stickier and stickier as the morning went on. There was a six mark penalty for a failure and three or four competitors found them on their score sheets.

Tyre pressures had been free on the Special Test but there were high limits for the rest of the trial. Clerk of the Course Carl Talbot was worried about getting a result and had imposed the high tyre pressures and quite a few restarts. The early sections were old roads, mostly with restarts and there were some fantastic views on offer. The first observed section, Tin Pan Alley, an old Falcon Guy Fawkes section, was a nice gentle start, with a restart for everyone apart from Class 2. Everyone went clear here but that was to change at the next section, Alf’s delight, where the majority of the entry failed to get away from the restart.

It’s All About the Restarts

Crossing a golf course, and passing the exit tracks from Crooked Mustard and Axe, Boxwell was approached via a remote track, winding down through a wood, where the section started beside a lake. It almost made you want to start painting! Once again the hill was all about the restart, situated on a 90 left at Tee. More clean sheets disappeared on this slippery rocky surface, including Beetle drivers Giles Greenslade in class four and eventual Class six winner Gary Browning.

Wood Lane was approached via Nailsworth town centre. Everyone went clear here, despite the restart but like a few sections things would have been different had it not been so dry.

Delays at Mackhouse

Later numbers were waited more than three quarters of an hour at Mackhouse. There have been many variations over the years here and competitors were relieved the section more or less straight up the exit track, rather than use the versions where you risked understeering into the trees or drove along a ditch filled with dinosaur eggs. Even so there was a twist, the route deviating off the rocky track where there was one of those restarts that were very much a feature of this years Mechanics Trial. The main track is pretty rough and very long. When there were problems they took a long time to sort. Reg Salway had the misfortune to retire his BMW here. A reversal of fortunes after his class win on the March Hare the previous week. Dave Haizelden was a notable failure here, putting James Shallcross into the lead in Class 

If You Go Down to the Woods One Day….

Up until now all the sections had been on public tracks, but the character of the event changed with the five sections in Catswood. The first three were situated at the bottom of the wood and were all very similar, starting on the track and deviating up amongst the trees onto the mud. They were all sub-divided and it was here the results of the trial were pretty much decided.

The first, called Infinity and Beyond, was a real stopper and only Ian and Josh Moss (Imp) and Tony Underhill/Jade Bray (Triumph Special) got as far as the one marker.

Angela’s was cleanable and several did. However, there was a horrible tree at the bottom, just in the right place to hit if you understeered at the bottom. Several did, or backed off before they did, including James Shallcross putting Dave Haizelden back in the lead in Class One. Sapsed’s Surprise was another stopper, the leading contenders all spinning to a stop at the 4 marker.

James Gets a 12

Mini Hoskins was a long section up a forestry track, with a deviation and a restart at the top where Dave Cook was taking photographs. There were quite a few cleans here, but also some 12’s where drivers couldn’t get grip off the start. Unfortunately these included James Shallcross and Dave Haizelden went on to another win in the Astra borrowed from passenger Nick Farmer.

Don’t Blink, familiar from the Cotswold Clouds, was the final section in Catswood. This is a real horror, tight, muddy and deeply rutted, with a restart for class eight which stopped them all. Pete Hart got to the three, Ian Moss to the five and amazingly James Shallcross a zero. However, most everyone else floundered at the nine.

The track out of Catswood (the one you use to get to Merves Swerve on the Clouds) was rough and wet, it was a shame we didn’t go up it as a section! King Charles Lane was just across the way, with John Blakeley on the restart flag and being a nice man didn’t fail anyone!

Greenway Lane

Greenway Lane is a rough track which had been made into three sections. The first one was on the track, deviating off onto a grassy area which would have been a problem had it been wet. The second was a pure PCT affair in an adjacent field. It was back on the track for the final one with a wicked deviation, especially for the class eights who had a special one through a very deep hole. 

The first section had a restart for classes 6 to 8. It was achievable but tricky and when Tony Underhill failed it more or less meant Ian and Josh Moss had won overall unless they made a silly mistake, which they didn’t.

Ian Fails a Restart

The third section had difficult restarts with Colin Perryman on the flag. It was difficult for classes 1 to 7. Most of the class leaders negotiated it successfully, except Ian Moss and Pete Hart. Both failed but their lead was such it didn’t affect the final result. Class eights had to negotiate a horrific hole but amazingly Dave Wall (Dellow) was the only one to pick up a penalty.

John Bell’s nice MG TD was suffering by now, earlier he had carburation problems, had a collapsed wheel in Catswood and now the exhaust was broken. Fortunately it was after the silencer so he removed the broken bit and carried on.

Bulls Bank – Inspired by Longville?

The Second Special test was at the familiar Bulls Bank. This was very much like Longville on the Clee. It was important to concentrate on getting a clean first and a time second. The trial finished with Viaduct, a blast across a rutty, muddy field and it was a shame it was so dry and competitors who stayed on to watch saw only a couple of failures.

Well done to Ian and Josh Moss for a great drive, especially in Catswood, and a deserved victory. This years Mechanics was very much a trial of three parts. Public Tracks followed by Catswood and a finale at Greenway Lane. It was a shame it was so dry, perhaps next year Stroud will arrange for a few more localised rain showers!

Best OverallIan Moss (Imp)16
Class Winners
1David Haizelden (Vauxhall Astra)31
2Steve Potter (Trojan 32
3Stuart Deacon (Ford Escort)33
4Giles Greenslade (VW Beetle)36
5Stuart Roach (HRG)34
6Gary Browning (VW Beetle)35
7Pete Hart (Marlin)27
8Tony Underhill (Triumph Special)24

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Cotswold Clouds 2006

Ian’s Imperious Imp

Local man Ian Moss won a closely fought Cotswold Clouds on special test times, tying on three with Andrew Martin and Bill Bennet Behind came Dave Haizelden, Simon Groves and Bryan Phipps all on four. The class 8’s were well out of things with their tough start line on Highwood 2. To many the moral victor was Kelly Thomas who cleaned all the hills but failed to complete the second special test properly.

Stroud’s long running Cotswold Clouds rejoined the ACTC championship this year and was well and truly over-subscribed. Some of the reserves came to the start but were turned away, notably Harvey Waters who spent the day spectating after his long journey up from Cornwall. 

The route followed a well-trodden path, via a nice easy Crawley Wood, through Dursley to Crooked Mustard, or Breakhart as it was once appropriately known. The dry conditions meant there was plenty of grip and it wasn’t until Roland Panes came along at number 10 that the usual big crowd of spectators saw their first failure. 

As Andrew Brown said last year the hill is more a triumph of engineering over driving for the nimbler class eights with their high power to weight ratios and ability to chop and change direction at will. For the rest it was very important to get the line right as there is a big step on the inside off the final right-hander. For any except the class eights going that way meant certain failure. Even if you did avoid the step Crooked Mustard still demands a good power to weight ratio and Giles Greenslade was the only Beetle to go clean. In class four both Ian Moss and Bill Rosten mastered the conditions. The question was would the fragile Imps hang together? In class one the amazing Dave Haizelden humbled many “more suitable” cars as he flew up in his VW Golf. 

There was plenty of entertainment for the spectators. Harry Butcher was definitely the star of the show, getting near to vertical as he “wall of deathed” around the left hander, losing speed and nearly toppling over as he tried to repeat the performance on the following right hander, oh so nearly stopping before getting it all back together and clearing the section. 

Some of the Escorts were spectacular, throwing themselves at the section but with very little control, getting a bad line and failing in the process. Well done to Richard Hayward, Kelly Thomas, Tristan White and Simon Groves for using their brains, driving fast but smoothly, taking a good line and going clean. 

A rather dry Axe didn’t present any problems but Nailsworth Ladder certainly did. The lower classes were allowed to blast straight through so the step didn’t present any problems, apart from Stuart Deacon who broke a half-shaft, couldn’t get the end out and ended up having to change the diff, missing a couple of sections in the process.

The yellows and reds had a restart right on the step. Giles was the only big Beetle to get away and two thirds of the sevens and eights failed. Amongst the Falcon contingent Ian Davis was the only one to succeed as neither Geoff Hodge, Keith Oakes or Peter Mountain succeeded. Talking of Peter it was nice to see Mike Young, the builder of Martin Allen’s Racecorp, in the passengers seat. 

At Ham Mill the deviation was used again, with a cunningly positioned restart, right on a sharp corner where the ruts dragged the inside wheel up against a bank. This caught out even the experienced Simon Woodhall and Adrian Dommett amongst others. 

After a dry wicked Juniper came Freds Folly with another restart to catch the unwary yellows and reds. 

Merves Swerve attracted the usual hoard of spectators and with differential start lines and restarts presented a real challenge. Just getting to the restarts was a problem. As ever the start lines were such cars couldn’t really get a run at the hill. If they got away from the start OK non restarters could throw their machinery at the steep bank, leaping in the air and hoping to regain some sort of control on landing. It was all very hairy. Passengers had to hang on for dear life and Sara hit her head very hard in the back Simon Groves Escort. 

It was here some of the class 8 challengers fell by the wayside. They had a very tough re-start, positioned right on the bank and Paul Bartleman and Ian Davis lost their clean sheet. Eric Wall may have failed Nailsworth Ladder but here he was master of intelligent positioning. Stopping his Mk1 Dellow well over to the left, minimising the rise up the bank and pulling away without any wheel spin. 

The Highwood complex lay just up the road. There were two sections and two special tests and this is where the trial would be decided. The fearsome Highwood Two was where it all happened. All but one competitor lost their clean sheet. Only Kelly Thomas came out of the top to go into the overall lead of the trial. Simon Woodall was the only car to come close, dropping one in his buggy now repaired after its Clee Hills engine problems., with his Clee Hills enging problems repaired. 

Kellys lead was to be short lived as tragedy befell her on the second special test where she stalled, couldn’t restart and had to be pushed over the line, incurring a penalty of six marks and costing her overall victory. This put Ian Moss, Andrew Martin and Bill Bennet into a joint lead, all on three marks with Dave Haizelden, Simon Groves and Bryan Phipps just behind on four. It ended this way as they all cleaned an easy Climperwell and the tricky Bulls Bank restarts. It all came down to special tests times and victory went to Ian by less than a second. Kelly’s problems pushed her down into 3rd place in class three. Class honours going to Simon Groves, making a hat trick of ACTC wins for the hard charging Ely driver.

Overall WinnerIan Moss (Imp)3
 Best StroudAndrew Martin (Dutton Melos)3
 Class Winners
 1Dave Haizelden (VW Gold GTi)4
 2Bill Bennett (MG J2)3
 3Simon Groves (Escort)4
 4Bill Rosten (Imp)16
 5Stuart Roach (HRG)12
 6Giles Greenslade (VW Beetle)11
 7Bryan Phipps (Marlin)4
 8Adrian Marfell (Buggy)7

We have been publishing stuff about Classic Trials on the Web since 1995 and always appreciate feedback. Comments, Corrections, Criticism & Concerns are all welcome. You can leave a comment to have your say here on this web site or our Social Media

Exmoor 2002

by Mark Rosten-Edwards

My first time in the passenger seat. My father, Bill, had asked me to passenger him on the Exmoor Trial in his Class 4 Imp “Jade”. It needed an early start from Ealing to Camberley and then onwards down the A303 to the start just the other side of Barnstaple. Bill had fitted a couple of new undertrays to the rear of the car in an effort to keep more of the mud out of the engine bay after the trouble this caused after the Clee. These seemed to be making the car run a little hotter when cruising but she ran fine all day. We past Giles Greenslade on the way to the start but as he was starting last for some reason we pressed on to scrutineering as we wanted to leave the suggested 45 minutes for the signing process.

After diff check, general inspection and check of the documents and we were through to signing on. We took on fuel as suggested along with Stuart Cairney, with Jim Scott in the passengers seat in his Imp and went down to Sepcott 1. We had a couple of Escorts in front of us now and we watched them fail to move off the start line. We got some wheelspin and with a few “bounces” we were off line, past the restart for 7&8 to clean the first hill. 

Sepcott 2 next and a small delay for a Class 6 Beetle to change a wheel on the approach to the start line. The hill and the restart presented no problems. A short drive to Snapper 1 & Snapper 2 complete with a restart. Neither caused a problem for Dad and the Imp.

Riverton up next and a hill Dad had not seen before as last year it was the reserve of the Class 8 and the bikes. First queue of the morning heralded the hills intent. I heard Stuart trying hard and cleaning the hill in his Imp. I had a quick chat to a man with an Avenger which was running on Castrol R. That smelt good! Our turn came and the hill was looking ok but turning right and going past the Class 6-8 restart the track became rutted and full of mud leading up to a tight left hand bend. We ploughed through to the left hander and found some grip to take us up and out of the section.

High Bray up next and another queue. The hill was in fair form. Stuart screamed his way over the rock slab and cleared the section. We went a little lower on tyre pressure which resulted in bent wheel, puncture and us sitting in hole around the six marker. We later learned from Giles that he also cleaned the section in the blue Beetle.

Onwards to Beggars Roost. I was particularly looking forward to the Roost as it was the only hill I had done before in my Escort. The Imp found loads of grip off the restart, a failing of the Escort in past years, and continued serenely up the remainder of the hill over a lot of loose rocks.

A route change resulted in Swaincote being used complete with a third special test. All the special tests (there were two earlier in the day) were very well thought out tests. Forwards, backwards and forwards again over various lines but long enough for the lower geared cars to requiring a gear change going forwards to be slightly penalised going backwards.

Unfortunately Stuart’s transmission gave up and we found the Imp abandoned at the top of the hill with no sign of either Stuart or Jim. Very bad news as he was clean so far with the Class win to go for on Floyd’s Bank. Also in trouble here was Tony Young in his VW Special with the front suspension broken.

Floyd’s Bank turned out to be a short section which was completely visible from the road with a very slippery mud surface. The fine rain was keeping it way! A reasonable queue of cars had formed with some earlier competitors spectating on the section. Unfortunately some of the later competitors chose to join them before attempting the section and left their cars more in the lane than off preventing some local traffic from getting past. This caused a delay as the start marshal tried to sort the problem calling several times before the competitors came back down from their perches to move their cars. Probably not what the organisers would have liked!

We got as far as the 8 or 9 board before we got struck in the ruts. We saw some spirited attempts one of which saw John Bell get through the ruts but slid sideways into a gorse bush and had a moment or two on the descent. David Turner got to the 3 marker and took a trim off the BMW against the gorse bush on the way down. Best Class 3 attempt was a purple Mk1 Escort (I can’t remember the car number or name) who made it to the 1 board. An excellent effort as the only other people to get anywhere while I was watching was Peter Fear with the Dingo, which cleared the hill and Tim Whellock who got the Fugitive’s front wheels near the section ends board.

All that was left was to sign off and drive home. I was back at home in London by 8.40pm. The Exmoor was a very enjoyable trial, well organised and finished at a reasonable hour. To be recommended.


We have been publishing stuff about Classic Trials on the Web since 1995 and always appreciate feedback. Comments, Corrections, Criticism & Concerns are all welcome. You can leave a comment to have your say here on this web site or our Social Media