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Rovanpera leads Neuville, double puncture costs Evans


Toyota’s Rovanpera was among the fortunate to enjoy a clean run through a gruelling and incident-filled Saturday morning loop of stages, to open up a 1m27.9s lead over Hyundai’s Neuville, who leapt from fourth to second.

Neuville took advantage of a chaotic loop for Evans and Katsuta, who were delayed by double punctures. Katsuta ended the morning in third, where he started the day, albeit 2m22.9s adrift of the lead. Evans plummeted from second to fifth [+3m43.8s] after his tyre dramas.

M-Sport’s Adrien Fourmaux climbed to fourth [+2m50.6s] with an ill WRC2 class leader Gus Greensmith in sixth [+11m47.3s] after M-Sport’s Gregoire Munster retired with broken suspension.

Saturday kicked off with a drama-laden run through the Soysambu [29.32km] test. Overnight rain threatened to provide damp conditions, although the first stage of the day was largely dry.

The action began before crews reached the test as Ott Tanak, returning after his crash in stage six on Friday, encountered problems with his Hyundai i20 N on the road section. The Estonian failed to properly fasten a bonnet pin during his roadside repairs, which forced a stoppage mid-stage to address a flapping bonnet, costing him more than a minute.

«We had a very busy road section with loads of work and the bonnet pin was our mistake, just realised it didn’t click correctly,” said Tanak.

Tanak wasn’t the only driver to hit trouble though, as second-placed Evans suffered a left-rear puncture that cost him a place in the podium positions. The wheel change, completed 12.7km into the stage, cost the Welshman 1m50s, dropping him from second to fifth overall.     

Munster joined the list of those to suffer issues when the M-Sport driver suffered a broken rear suspension on his Ford Puma that reduced him to a crawl. Munster and co-driver Louis Louka attempted a repair after reaching the stage end, but they were forced to retire from the day.

Rovanpera’s streak of six consecutive stage wins came to an end on the stage as the rally leader opted for a careful approach to preserve his lead. The Finn, who was hampered by dust from the delayed Evans, dropped 5.2s.

Kalle Rovanperä, Jonne Halttunen, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Kalle Rovanperä, Jonne Halttunen, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Photo by: McKlein / Motorsport Images

The stage was won by Katsuta despite the Japanese struggling with dust coming into his eyes. Katsuta was 0.2s faster than Lappi, who rejoined the rally after his gearbox failure on Friday.

«I have a bigger problem with my eyes, I really hate this fesh-fesh sand. I can’t open my eyes. Blind rally! It’s not easy,” said Katsuta.

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Lappi’s run through the test was however compromised by a front-left tyre coming off the rim towards the end of the pass.

After inheriting third following Evans’ puncture, Neuville set his sights on reeling in second-placed Katsuta in stage nine [Elmenteita, 15.08km].

The Belgian picked up his second stage win of the event to close to within 4.8s of Katsuta. However, Neuville wasn’t happy to find the road had been changed in places since the recce.

«It was a good run, but we were told that the road wouldn’t be modified after recce. We had a big moment. They put big stones in the middle of the road.»

Neuville took the stage win by 5.2s from Lappi, who also took aim at the rally organisers.

«The organisers are not doing a good job. They promised us that nothing will change, but they changed the cuts after the recce which is really shit,” said Lappi.

Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

Rovanpera maintained his cautious approach clocking the third-fastest time ahead of Katsuta and Fourmaux. Tanak was sixth fastest despite completing the stage without a working intercom. He was 1.2s quicker than Evans, who opted to “play it safe”.

Drivers had been fearing the final stage of the loop [Sleeping Warrior, 36.06km] and their fears were realised. The test featured sections of slippery mud, standing water and tyre-shredding rocks.

The rocky sections took their toll on the field as Katsuta, Evans and Lappi all suffered punctures. Lappi was first to pick up a right-rear failure towards the end of an eventful run that saw him clip a zebra that dashed out into the road at the start.

Katsuta hit a big rock that cost him 1m24.6s after suffering a front-right and rear puncture, but somehow he managed to maintain third position overall. 

His team-mate Evans was hit by his second puncture of the loop, right-rear, that resulted in him losing 51.9s. 

While his team-mates hit trouble, Rovanpera managed to escape all of the chaos to win the stage by 24.8s from Neuville, who was without hybrid power at the start of the stage. Neuville, who jumped to second overall, also revealed that he bent something on his car at the stage end.

«It’s situations like that where you can do time by just driving clean. Incredibly tricky stage. I felt I took care of the tyres and [was] not pushing hard when I could,” said Rovanpera.

A second pass of the stages await the crews this afternoon.

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Commanding WRC Safari lead «not even close to being enough»


The reigning world champion delivered a dominant display to reel off the fastest times in all six of Friday’s stages to open up a commanding 56.9s lead over Toyota team-mate Elfyn Evans.

Rovanpera’s most impressive drive arrived in stage four where he was 11.1s faster than nearest rival Hyundai’s Ott Tanak, who retired from the day two stages later. Tanak had managed to stay within 18.6s of the Toyota driver before crashing out on stage six.

Reflecting on his lead, Rovanpera admitted that he cannot afford to relax given the gruelling nature of the Safari Rally, and how quickly the event can turn on its head, especially if rain showers arrive.

«It has not been so easy, but it has been a good day for sure,» said Rovanpera, making the second start of a partial WRC campaign this week.

«The plan was to use our starting place well and push when it is clear and still have a bit of margin to take care in the rough places in the afternoon, and still do good times, so I am happy.

«I wouldn’t say it [the lead] is enough and not even close to being enough. If there are some big rain showers tomorrow or something comes, we have seen before the gaps can be huge.

«If you get any small issues then they [my rivals] can make big gaps so I’m not thinking about the time difference too much. For sure, it is good, but we need to work the same way tomorrow and then after tomorrow we can see where we are.

Kalle Rovanperä, Jonne Halttunen, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Kalle Rovanperä, Jonne Halttunen, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Photo by: Toyota Racing

«When it rains here it rains a lot so you can have a lot of standing water and basically all the clay and stuff on the ground turns to really slippy mud and it is like going on ice. The grip is zero and you need to fight even on the straights to keep the car on the road.»

Rovanpera’s performance aside, Toyota enjoyed a strong Friday occupying the top three positions, with Evans second and Takamoto Katsuta third. Although, Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville will begin Saturday’s stages, 10.4s behind Evans. 

«We have to be very happy with our cars being reliable and our drivers being patient and having a 1-2-3 at the end of the day is fantastic,» said Toyota team principal Jari-Matti Latvala. «But Thierry is close so for sure he is pushing and will put pressure on us.

«Kalle has almost a one-minute lead so he has some flexibility but with Elfyn and Taka the gap back to Thierry is quite small so they can’t really back off. The most important thing tomorrow is to be patient because if the rain comes it will be about survival.»

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Gearbox explosion caused Lappi’s Safari Rally exit


The Rally Sweden winner was forced to surrender second position when his i20 N ground to a halt in stage five with a transmission issue.

The Finn cut a frustrated figure, admitting there was no warning of the imminent failure. His exit comes after suffering four propshaft failures during last year’s visit to Kenya which triggered the team to fit a stronger version of the component ahead of the 2024 edition.

«The gearbox exploded,» said Lappi. «At first it started to go to front wheel drive and after one acceleration there was no impact or a really big noise coming from it, it just went to front wheel drive. A couple of hundred metres later there was no pull from the car at all it didn’t matter if I was in first or fifth gear.

«At that moment there wasn’t any impact but for sure during the stages there has been impacts. Everyone has had the same conditions so there is nothing that should cause this problem. It is really frustrating.

«We can change the gearbox and go [again] but I don’t know what the point is to try tomorrow.

«I have some idea of what I would like to do [tomorrow] and I have already presented those to the team and let’s see if they agree or not. I would like to do only the morning.»

Hyundai technical director Francois-Xavier Demaison says the gearbox is one of the i20 N’s known weaknesses and is difficult to find a long-term fix.

«The gearbox is broken and we know that it is a weak point of the car but we have to live with this,» said Demaison.

«We had a big hope we could solve this, but it seems to be complicated for the future. Esapekka’s retirement is a reliability issue and we are not happy with that but we can’t do much about that within the current [homologation joker] rules, it is difficult to fix it. We will do what we can.»

Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Photo by: Austral / Hyundai Motorsport

Lappi’s exit did hand team-mate Ott Tanak second position but this was short-lived as the Estonian crashed out on stage six. The 2019 world champion struck a rock in the middle of the road which sent the car into a bank causing terminal damage to the i20 N’s steering.

«It is something that happens quite often at the Safari Rally. It [the rock] was in a place where it was quite hidden and I couldn’t really react to anything and the road was narrow with the banks on the side,» said Tanak.

«I had nowhere to go really so I had to take the rock and it was far too big and it put us off the road. I don’t think the rock did too much damage, but I hit the bank so hard and we got all the damage from there.»

Tanak’s exit left Thierry Neuville as the sole remaining Hyundai, the Belgian managed to survive a puncture to end Friday in fourth 1m07.3s behind rally leader Toyota’s Kalle Rovanpera.

After hearing about Lappi’s gearbox failure Neuville admitted he was concerned by the nature of the Finn’s transmission issue.

«We are going to keep fighting. Obviously, it is not nice to see two of my team-mates retire and it is another bad day here in Kenya for Hyundai,» said Neuville.

«It is difficult for me when I hear about Lappi’s problems, to be 100% confident to attack 100% in places where it is really rough. I don’t want to face the same issues.»



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Tanak, Lappi retirements hands Rovanpera huge lead


Rovanpera set a blistering pace across the day’s six stages aboard his factory Toyota to lead team-mate Elfyn Evans by 56.9s heading into Saturday.

Takamoto Katsuta ended the day in third [+1m00.8s] to set up a provisional Toyota 1-2-3 after a nightmare day for Hyundai.

Lappi had trailed Rovanpera by 15.5s heading into the afternoon before a transmission issue ended the Rally Sweden winner’s day prematurely. That handed Tanak second spot before the Estonian crashed out on the following stage.

Championship leader Thierry Neuville, piloting the remaining Hyundai, survived a puncture on stage three to complete Friday in fourth [+1m07.3s], in front of the M-Sport-Ford duo Adrien Fourmaux [1m46.6s] and Gregoire Munster [+3m34.2s].

Conditions remained hot into Friday afternoon, but the clear skies were replaced by ominous grey clouds.

Rovanpera continued his impressive pace from the morning loop by claiming his fourth consecutive stage win in the second pass through the Loldia [19.17km] test.

The Finn was still not overly happy with his effort but was able to pip Toyota team-mates Evans and Katsuta, who posted identical times, to win the stage by 0.6s. Both Evans and Katsuta were much happier with the handling of their GR Yaris entries.

This meant Rovanpera was able to extend his overall rally lead, although the identity of his nearest rival had changed.

Lappi started stage five trailing Rovanpera by 15.5s but his hopes of victory were quickly extinguished. The Finn suffered a small impact nine kilometres into the rough gravel stage which damaged his transmission, forcing him onto the sidelines.

Lappi’s Hyundai team-mate Tanak jumped into second overall, 18.6s behind leader Rovanpera. Tanak was 1.8s slower than Rovanpera in the test but revealed that his team had been unable to work on his car in service due to the extent of the damage on team-mate Neuville’s i20 N, following his puncture this morning.  

 «[Lappi out,] that is a shame, big shame. For us, a difficult stage once again,” said Tanak. “Thierry’s car took so much work that they couldn’t work on our car. Let’s see if we can work on it ourselves.»

Thankful his team was able to repair his car, Neuville was fifth fastest on the stage behind Fourmaux, who showed the first flashes of strong pace in his M-Sport Ford Puma.

However, Hyundai’s Safari Rally hoodoo struck again in stage six [Geothermal, 13.12km], this time it was Tanak to hit terminal trouble.

The 2019 world champion hit a rock sitting in the middle of the road which launched the front of his i20N into the air, before coming to blows with an earth bank. While Tanak and co-driver Martin Jarveoja were unhurt, the impact damaged the steering of their Hyundai that had been occupying second position.

 

Tanak’s demise handed Rovanpera a healthy 46.4s lead after the Finn’s 100% Friday stage-winning streak continued. Rovanpera was 4.5s quicker than team-mate Katsuta through the rocky stage, while Evans was a further three seconds slower.

Munster made the most of cleaner road to post the fourth best time ahead of Fourmaux and Neuville. The latter was lucky to survive a big moment that could easily have sent the Hyundai into a ditch. 

Rain fell before the start of the final stage, but conditions were reasonably dry by the time the crews tackled the 31.50km Kedong test.

Rovanpera once again proved to be the class of the field, posting a time 4.4s faster than road opener Neuville to complete a clean sweep of the day’s stages. 

Evans managed to leapfrog Katsuta into second overall after the latter missed a junction that contributed to him ceding 8.7s to his rival.

In WRC2, Toksport Skoda driver Gus Greensmith battled a stomach bug to end the day in seventh overall [+6m51.3s]. The British driver held a 3m23.0s lead over nearest WRC2 rival Kejetan Kajetanowicz.

The Safari Rally continues on Saturday with the field set to tackle the longest leg of the event, comprising 160.96 kilometres of timed stages. 

Watch: Safari Rally Kenya Friday Morning Highlights

 

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Neuville reveals “MacGyver” style WRC Safari Rally car repair



The WRC points leader suffered a right-rear puncture towards the end  of stage three after clipping some loose rocks at the side of the road.

Neuville pressed on in the hope not to drop too much time, before his tyre exploded in sight of the finish. The Belgian reached the stage end losing 19.9s but the remains of the rubber had ripped a hole in the right-rear corner of his i20 N Rally1.

Prior to the final stage of the loop, Neuville and co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe pulled over on a road section to enact a repair that included fashioning a device to clean dust from inside the car using a tree branch and a cloth.  

The pair were then forced to wear goggles to battle any dust that managed to creep inside the car while navigating through the final stage. The duo, without hybrid power, reached the finish sitting in sixth overall, 48.0s behind rally leader Kalle Rovanpera.

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“Three or four kilometres into the second stage of the morning loop we got hit by a puncture and then we tried to carry on as fast as we could,” said Neuville.

“Unfortunately, the tyre exploded 150 metres before the finish and destroyed the whole bodywork, so for the last stage we had do some MacGyver stuff to try and survive in the dust but in the end it wasn’t as bad as expected, and in the end we got through with no problem.

There was a lot of [road] cleaning this morning so there should be a little bit less disadvantage on that side but again there are lots of stones, so the risk of puncture is very high. I cross my fingers that we get through without problem,” he added when asked about this afternoon’s stages.

 

Neuville ended the morning loop only 4.9s behind title rival Toyota’s Elfyn Evans, who also endured a tough start to the rally. Evans battled understeer in his GR Yaris in addition to a slow puncture that occurred in the first stage of the day.

“It was not the rhythm or the feeling we hoped to have, let’s say,” said Evans, who intends to make tweaks to the set-up in midday service. “It was a tricky morning.

“It is mostly the feeling behind the wheel and the set-up, getting confidence to turn it is the big thing. But I think everyone has been saying the same thing, but it seems like I’m not dealing with as well as the others. We can be better I think.”

“We probably have to make reasonably small steps to hopefully improve it [the car] a bit. We are not going to revolutionise it over lunch time.”

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Rovanpera stuns rivals to lead as Neuville suffers puncture


Two-time world champion Rovanpera, making the second start of a partial WRC campaign, managed to tame an at times ill-handling GR Yaris to open up a 15.5s lead over Hyundai’s Esapekka Lappi.

Ott Tanak headed to midday service in third [+16.8s] ahead of Toyota pair Takamoto Katsuta [+41.3s] and Elfyn Evans [+43.1s], with Neuville sixth [+48.0s] after a tyre drama. The top eight was completed by M-Sport Ford’s Adrien Fourmaux [+1m14.6s] and Gregoire Munster [+2m23.8s.].

Hot and dry conditions kicked off Friday’s leg and while the weather was stable the majority of Rally1 drivers struggled to find the balance in their cars on the rough gravel in stage two [Loldia, 191.7km].

Rovanpera was among those particularly unhappy with his car, but the Finn was able to win the stage despite a left-rear tyre coming off the rim at the stage end. The world champion emerged from the dust 0.9s faster than Hyundai’s Lappi.

“I don’t want to say any really bad words, but it was horrible,” said Rovanpera, who moved into a 1.4s overall lead over Tanak. “The car is understeering so much, I don’t understand how we can do any time on this stage. We need to improve.”   

Lappi also suffered from understeer in his i20 N and was joined by team-mates Tanak and Neuville, who were also not best pleased with the handling of their cars.

“Genuinely low grip, somehow really struggling. It is very hard at the moment, the car is not working at all,” said Tanak, who was third fastest.

Overnight leader Neuville said the stage was a “reminder of how hard” the event will be, as he dropped 2.6s.      

His title rival Evans found the going to be much worse as the Welshman, struggling for balance, clocked a time 11.8s adrift of the pace. The Toyota driver did however suffer a slow puncture.

Fourmaux was seventh fastest in the first of the M-Sport Ford Pumas ahead of team-mate Gregoire Munster.  

Thierry Neuville, Martijn Wydaeghe, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Thierry Neuville, Martijn Wydaeghe, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Photo by: Austral / Hyundai Motorsport

The brutal nature of the Safari Rally was felt in stage three [Geothermal, 13.12km]. Championship leader Neuville clipped some loose rocks on the side of the road which resulted in a right-rear puncture.

Neuville dropped 19.9s and slipped to fifth overall, but he fared much better than WRC2 runner Oliver Solberg who was forced to change a wheel a kilometres into the test and lost 3m32s.  

The stage was topped by Rovanpera despite the Finn claiming that his car’s set up remained sub-optimal. He was 1.4s faster than Lappi, extending his overall rally lead over his countryman to 3.0s.

Tanak was third fastest ahead of Katsuta and Evans, the latter still struggling with the balance of his GR Yaris.

The mighty Kedong [31.50km] stage, run in a reverse direction this year, completed the morning and it was here where Rovanpera delivered a drive that stunned his rivals.

Rovanpera produced a blistering effort through the high-speed undulating test to clock a time 11.1s faster than nearest rival Tanak. The time pushed his lead out to 15.5s over Lappi. 

«This stage has been really nice every year. For sure I want to commit and even with the new notes,” said Rovanpera.

Lappi was 1.4s slower than Hyundai team-mate Tanak but there was more drama for the i20 N, driven by Neuville. The effects of the impact and resulting puncture in the previous test disabled his hybrid unit. The flailing rubber also ripped a chunk of bodywork from the right rear meaning dust was creeping into the car, enough for Neuville and co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe to don goggles.

Neuville ceded 26.3s slipping to sixth overall, 4.9s behind Evans, while Fourmaux and Munster completed the top eight having opted for cautious drives to avoid the many hazards to sit in seventh.

An under the weather Gus Greensmith emerged from the loop with a sizeable 2m20.1s WRC2 lead after main rival Solberg suffered a second puncture of the morning in stage four. 

«What the hell can you do? Crazy high pressures. You take it easy in the rocky section and you still get a slow puncture. Without WRC tyres it’s no fun. From now on it’s flat out,” said a frustrated Solberg, who dropped to sixth in class.

The crews will tackle a second pass through the loop of stages this afternoon.

Watch: Safari Rally Kenya Thursday highlights

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Kenya president pushing for longer WRC Safari Rally


The Safari Rally is renowned as the most gruelling event on the WRC schedule testing drivers and teams to the absolute limit.

The event returned to the WRC calendar in 2021 after a 19-year hiatus but in a much shorter format. This year’s edition, operated by a new Kenyan organiser, will be contested over four days with crews covering 367.76 kilometres of timed stages.

In the past, the event was regarded as a marathon rally and when it adopted a special stage format from 1996-2002, it featured 1000km of competitive tests.

Speaking at Thursday’s ceremonial start for the 2024 edition, President Ruto outlined his wishes for the event to be extended in the future. 

“The Safari Rally runs for four days but we would like to revert to the old tradition when it featured longer distances. I direct our Sports Cabinet Secretary Ababu Namwamba to start engaging the FIA and the Promoter on possibilities of a much longer version of Safari,” said President Ruto.

There is a possibility that Ruto’s wishes could come to fruition, with the FIA and the WRC Promoter keen to explore the possibility of more flexible event schedules in the future. Introducing a variety of endurance and sprint rallies to the championship featured as part of the FIA’s vision for the future of top-level rallying, which was released last month.

Former WRC team boss David Richards, a member of the FIA’s working group, which is behind a raft of proposals to improve the WRC, told media that the world motorsport governing body is “open-minded” when it comes to the format of future events.

Takamoto Katsuta, Aaron Johnston, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Takamoto Katsuta, Aaron Johnston, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Photo by: Toyota Racing

“We are trying to give organisers more scope and freedom to develop the rally that works for them,” he told media including Motorsport.com earlier this month.

“With the meeting in Kenya, they wanted to go outside Nairobi and have a second base in Mombasa, for instance, and do something of that nature.

“Let’s look at what they are proposing and see if it fits in. We’re not saying yes, we’re not saying no, but we are certainly saying let’s look at these ideas and see if it works for the World Rally Championship.

“At the moment I think we have been too prescriptive. We’ve created a formula which everyone’s had to work hard towards, and I think it is not necessarily in the best interest of the championship going forward.”



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How WRC Rally1 teams embraced the return of the snorkel


A change in FIA regulations that coincides with the Safari Rally moving to a more traditional March date in Kenya’s rainy season has allowed Rally1 teams to fit these devices to cars for the first time.

Snorkels have long been a feature in the WRC and have been particularly associated with the Safari Rallys of the past. Perhaps the most iconic illustration of these in action is the now famous vision of a Toyota Celica submarining through one of Kenya’s notorious mud holes in the mid-1990s.

The protruding intakes that rise into the air from the bonnets of rally cars have proven to be a necessary piece of kit for tackling the most gruelling event on the WRC calendar.

Once again they could prove to be valuable this weekend with Toyota, Hyundai and M-Sport-Ford adding these systems to their Safari Rally survival kits.

A snorkel is a device designed to protect the engine from ingesting water or dust, which may affect combustion and can even severely damage the engine. It is particularly effective at the Safari Rally, which features thick fesh-fesh sand and deep water splashes.

Carlos Sainz, Luis Moya, Toyota Corolla WRC

Carlos Sainz, Luis Moya, Toyota Corolla WRC

Photo by: Sutton Images

The frequency of the latter is anticipated to be much higher for this year’s edition due to the threat of heavy rain showers given the event is now held in the rainy season.

It only takes one split-second moment in these conditions for an engine to flood, ending victory hopes in a heartbeat, ensuring that snorkels could potentially be crucial bits of kit.

How do the snorkels work?

The snorkel essentially enables the engine an unobstructed route to suck in clean air. Operating the device falls into the hands of the co-driver, who in M-Sport’s case touches a button in the cockpit to activate the system if conditions become treacherous.

These systems can be activated throughout an entire stage, but this will come at the cost of a performance advantage, so drivers will only use them when necessary.

«Basically, the aim of the snorkel is to have an auxiliary air intake and we know in Kenya you can get a lot of soft sand called fesh-fesh and often it comes up over the car.

«Equally, we know with the event being earlier in the season than normal, the chance of it being wet, as the guys found on the recce, can be pretty high,» M-Sport’s lead development engineer Tim Jackson explained to Motorsport.com.

«The main task of it is to have an auxiliary air intake to make sure that the air coming into the engine is as clean as possible so that you are not affecting performance.

«Ours is operated by the co-driver pretty much in a similar way to water splash valves that we have had in the past. In normal circumstances, you are using the standard air intake which all of the teams design to get the maximum performance out of the engine.

«In the instance where the crew feel there is a risk to that intake, whether it is going through a river crossing or a large water splash or deep sand, then the co-driver is able to operate that air intake to divert the air into the engine from the snorkel.

Grégoire Munster, Louis Louka, M-Sport Ford World Rally Team Ford Puma Rally1

Grégoire Munster, Louis Louka, M-Sport Ford World Rally Team Ford Puma Rally1

Photo by: M-Sport

«There is a small servo motor and it is electronically controlled and there is a button that they press and that operates the motor which moves a valve, which then allows the air to enter from the intake.

«For the normal driving, we want to maintain performance, so the idea is the guys just use the snorkel in case when it is really needed.

«It is a reasonable amount of work [to create] bearing in mind that it is one event, and we are hoping we don’t need to use it for all the other events. It only takes one moment to catch you out.»

While snorkels are only likely to be required for one WRC round this year, Toyota, Hyundai and M-Sport have spent a considerable amount of time designing and perfecting their systems for Kenya.

M-Sport has opted for a traditional snorkel mounted on the right-hand side of the Ford Puma’s bonnet, which then climbs up the A-pillar. Hyundai is yet to show off its final design, but rival Toyota has revealed a radical approach to its snorkel.

Toyota’s snorkel is mounted to the right side of the GR Yaris’s bonnet. Interestingly its device runs up the A-pillar before then crossing the roof of the car. The system transforms into a carefully sculpted shape to avoid affecting the car’s aerodynamics.

When asked about Toyota’s design, Jackson added: «I think the main aims will still be the same for all teams which are for the device to not have a detrimental effect on the driver’s visibility while trying to do that design in the most aerodynamic way as possible, and not have a detrimental effect on the aerodynamics of the car.

Elfyn Evans, Scott Martin, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Elfyn Evans, Scott Martin, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

Photo by: Toyota Racing

«If you can do the design and hit all of those targets and you can do a design and perhaps get some additional gain from it, then you try and implement that.»

The unpredictable nature of Kenya’s weather and the speed at which hot dry gravel can transform into thick mud means that it’s difficult to know whether snorkels will be required or not.

However, these devices that hark back to the past could well be crucial in deciding the outcome of this year’s Safari Rally Kenya.

«It is one of those things where nobody has forced us to do it,» said Jackson. «The opportunity exists in the regulations and if you decide not to do something you could look pretty foolish.

«You have to have that contingency. It could be that it is not needed at all over the weekend, but you can’t afford not to take that risk. It only takes one moment for it to be worth its weight in gold.»

Watch: Safari Rally Kenya Shakedown highlights



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Kenya launches motorsport academy to nurture future WRC stars


The Talanta Motorsport Academy is the latest addition to the Kenya Academy of Sports (KAS), based near the site of the rally’s opening stage at Kasarani in Kenya’s capital city Nairobi.

The academy was launched by Kenya’s deputy president Rigathi Gachagua, who described the project as a major milestone in Kenyan sporting history. Kenya has a rich motorsport history through Safari Rally Kenya, which celebrated its 70th anniversary last year.

The new initiative will be supported by the Kenyan government and corporate partners.

World Rally champions Ott Tanak and Petter Solberg and WRC2 star Oliver Solberg attended the inauguration of academy on the eve of the African nation’s biggest global sporting event.

The trio met some of Kenya’s emerging talent at the launch offering advice to country’s next wave of aspiring drivers. Local rally legends Karan Patel, Patrick Njiru, Abdul Sidi and Azar Anwar were among those in attendance.

Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Photo by: Austral / Hyundai Motorsport

«I finished the Safari fifth, twice in 1999 and 2000 and retired in the 2001 and 2002 editions. My advice to aspiring Kenyan drivers is that they should never give up as nothing is impossible,” said Petter Solberg.

Tanak told a group of young hopefuls that “you must continue to aim higher and live your dream as a thousand-mile journey begins with one step.»

The launch of new motorsport academy is part of a push to invest in developing Kenya as a motorsport hub.

«Motorsport is special to Kenyans and with the rich history of these successful events like the Safari — which celebrated its 70th anniversary last year s- Kenya is laying the foundation of soil, growing and grooming its talent,» said Gachagua.

«We’re rebuilding and positioning Kenya as a motorsport hub and factoring in talent and investment on a global scale.»

Sports cabinet secretary Ababu Namwamba, added: “We have now opened the door of the Motorsport Academy to children from this neighbourhood of Kasarani and other parts of the country. Those children will be fully funded to enable them realise their potential in motorsports.”

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