Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1980's

Cycle News 1980 11 19

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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Soon Johnson and R~ler had 20 minutes on Ogilvie as Bruce turned the bike over to Miller at Oasis. Since the carb was still acting up, Ogilvie headed down the pavement to. meet Miller at EI Chinero. where they replaced the carb with one from another bike. Between Oasis and EI Chinero, R~ler hit a rock in a sandwash and cracked the front hub. "I hit something >.and it went crunch. The wheel started shaking and I stopped and looked down and there were cracks all over. So I went about 10 miles an hour into .our pit just past El Chinero, and we decided to put both front and rear wheels on it. I had a real good ride from then on," said R~leT. The third place machine, the WalIingsfordlHarden Husky, was also having problems. Wallingsford had to ride the bike 40 miles in to Oasis with a flat rear tire that eventually came off the rim and took the silencer, side plate, etc., off with it. Harden had lost some time earlier when, unaware that you could either take a sandwash or the Baja 500 course into Santa Catarina, he had opted for the longer 500 route. At EI Chinero R~ler had a 22 minute lead on Ogilvie, with Harden another eight minutes back.. Seven minutes later came Fishback and Rut· ten leading their class, with the Class 22 Husky of Clarke and Timms, sponsored by Rossetti Construction and Up Tite Husky, 10 minutes behind. The lOth bike through EI Chinero was the Maxwell/Howard Class 20 enny, with a very secure lead after Wayne Martin had seized the machine he was riding with Case, and it was nhree hours before he could finish changing the piston and get going again. Shirey and Staats had 10 minutes on Class 30 competitors Douglas and Peterson at El Chinero, while Vick and Watkins were still leading Class 38. Johnson got on the lead Yamaha when R~ler returned to El Chinero, and then took it for the second time past San Felipe and on towards the return route. R~ler picked it up at Valle de Trinidad to ride to the finish, and going past Nuevo, still had the ,daylight with him. But just before Pjos Negros, near disaster hit when the 465cc motor spit its spark plug. "I ,guess it just worked loose - the hea t .and the compression or something. I managed to get a plug in and get it tightened as much as I could. I took it easy from then on and just cruised," said Roeseler at the finish in Ensenada, where he was interviewed by Jim McKay andJaclUe Stewart for the Wide World ofSports broadcast. Miller was the next rider to finish, after encountering a car on the course near the finish. "All the way from EI Rayo to EI Coyote in the dark I was chasing this Bronco that was bookin' down the trail. I got by and he got roosted. I slowed down twice," said Miller, who also added that he felt he and Bruce had locked up the Class 22 points championship. Wallingsford, third into the finish, was a little down. "We just had all kinds of problems. " Fishback's trouble·free ride finally ran into obstacles between Valle de Trinidad and 'Nuevo when his light went out. He navigated into Nuevo with the light from the miner's lamp on his helmet, and they replaced the ignition and lighting coil at Nuevo. Knowing he had a big lead, he just cruised into the finish for the team's fourth straight win in 1980. Clarke and Timms finished next, and were the top privateers in the overall motorcycle finishing order. The Maxwell/Howard Class 20 machine had seized near San Felipe and lost some time, but were still leading the class handily. But disaster hit near Santa Catarina when the connecting rod broke. Maxwell had to spend a cold night in the desert before hitching a ride back to Ensenada the following morning. In Class 30, Shirey had to take over for his partner Staats, when Steve crashed near E1 Chinero and was unable to continue. The engine suffered a seizure on the Diablo Dry Lake, but the bike kept running and Shirey brought it in for the win. Rick was one of many entries to encounter thick fog on the nine-mile pavement section between the Pepsi Stand and Ensenada, where visibility was near zero. Douglas and Peterson continued on to place second in Class 30, despite a hairy time when they lost the lights be· tween Diablo and Mike's Sky Ranch. They were two hours be.hind the leaders at the finish. • Casey Folks continued his solo ride right into the finish for third in Class 30, having spent 17 hours and 35 minutes on the bike. "It was a very personal thing with me to run and finish this race," he said later, Richard Jackson and Dennis De Camp, two-time winners this year in Class 30 on a Kern Sportcycle Husky, placed fourth in this event. They spun a flywheel and had to replace it, welding a new unit right onto the shaft and using clothes hanger wire to shim it. Vick's and Watkins' Class 38 win hopes ground to a halt when the piston did likewise on diablo Dry Lake. Vick managed to get the 'machine to a Yamaha pit in the vicinity and changed the piston, but the time lost dropped them to fourth in cl.ass. Davidson and Grant also seized on the San Felipe loop, but their machine kept going, albeit losing its lights t':Vice on the way in, and they picked up the class win. Don Teeters and Lee Hamby took second on a Lakewood Honda/Watering Hole-sponsored Husky. Perseverance paid off for Case and Martin, as they finished in the wee hours of the morning to take the Class 20 win, and Case later thanked Mike Goodwin for prepping the bike, Goodwin was to have ridden the bike with Kurt Pfeiffer, but Pfeiffer was injured in another race and he sold it to Case, The Coutts/Folks Husky recovered from four and a half hours of downtime when they broke, and then replaced, the magneto, to finish 57 minutes behind Case and Martin and place second in class. Six teams from France were entered, and four finished. Yann Cadoret and Michel Merel had the best placing, a sixth in Class 22. Many-time ISDT medalist Herbert Schek of West Germany was entered on a BMW with Tom Sachenacher, and they finished with a time of 19 hours and 48 minutes. Scheck reportedly got lost coming' into the finish and spent an hour winding his way through the streets of Ensenada. . Of the 52 motorcycles that started, 29 finished within the 28 hour limit. • o 00 O'l ..... O'l ..... $.< Q,j ..c S Q,j > o Z (Abovel Jim FIShback (shownl and Bob Rutten made it a 1980 sweep of Class 21. IBelowl Bruce Ogilvie and Chuck Miller Ishownl took second overall. They probably locked up the 1980 Class 22 championship. Results CLASS 22 IOPENI: 1, I..arTy Roeseler/Jock Johnson IVamI12:45:13.91; 2. Bruce OgilvioiChucl< Miller IVam) 13:04:4021; 3. Brent WaiingafordlScot Harden (Husl 13:20:13.85; 4. Rusty Clarkol Cory Timms IHus); 5. Randy HoIlenbecklPoul Eddy IHusl; 6. Vann CadoretJ Michel Meret (Yaml; 7. Jeff Preoch/Bill Conroy IVam); 8. Torry Clart

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