Cycle News

Cycle News Issue 34 August 28

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOL. 55 ISSUE 34 AUGUST 28, 2018 P65 be seeking compensation from Aggregate Industries. Pringle said that the aborted plan to run the races had been arrived at along with all interested parties, including Dorna, Race Direction and the teams. Consultation with both the official Met Office and a commer- cial-grade weather-radar platform had suggested that running the races early would avoid the worst of the weather, and that there would be a good chance of run- ning a full program of races. "But that weather window didn't happen," Pringle said. "If I had known then what I know now, I would have cancelled the meeting on Saturday night," he continued, apologising to fans who had "sat for six hours in the worst of British weather." There had still been hopes of running some races later in the afternoon, and a meeting was boasts of "unsurpassed techni- cal knowledge," and which has surfaced Silverstone in the past. Aggregate Industries is a major company with an impressive portfolio, including major British motorway work, the Mersey and Channel Tunnels, and work also on The Shard, London's tallest structure. However, Silverstone's resur- face showed major shortcomings. Stuart Pringle pops, MotoGP stops Silverstone MD Stuart Pringle opened an impromptu press briefing on Sunday evening with a fulsome apology to the specta- tors, and a promise that, "we will be in contact with all the fans," who had booked in advance in the coming days. But he would not give any details of any planned compen- sation, nor whether he would Shoddy workman- ship to blame? The main culprit for ruining the British MotoGP was a resurfac- ing job that turned out to be laughably inadequate in the rain. It wasn't just a matter of poor drainage, as has been seen in Malaysia and at Motegi, but poor profiling as well—with the track actually pooling water at some areas where there were dips in the surface. One of these was on the entry to Turn 7, at the end of the Hangar Straight, where the multi-bike pile- up happened in FP4 on Saturday, and even more so at a bigger dip before the next corner. This was confirmed by Race Director Mike Webb, in an impromptu press briefing on Saturday evening, and again on Sunday. "The problem is not water running onto the track but that it actually collects water, and it doesn't run off," he said. The track became unsafe in very heavy rain, or after "a couple of hours" of steady rain. One problem is changes in the camber and profiling com- pared with the previous surface, which was replaced after grow- ing complaints about increasing bumpiness, as well as dislike of a mixture of several different types of asphalt from previous patching. The full 3.66-mile lap, the longest on the calendar, was resurfaced in February by a British company called Aggre- gate Industries, whose website Valentino Rossi was steadfast in his desire not to race.

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