Lightweight TT
Race details | |||||||||||||
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Date | Lightweight TT – 9 June 2012 | ||||||||||||
Location | Douglas, Isle of Man | ||||||||||||
Course | Road Course 37.733 mi (60.725 km) | ||||||||||||
Lightweight TT | |||||||||||||
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The Lightweight TT is a motorcycle road race that is a part of the Isle of Man TT festival - an annual motorcycle event traditionally held over the last week of May and first week of June.
History
1922 was the first time the Lighweight TT race took place, won by Geoff S. Davison riding a Levis, at an average speed of 49.89 mph (80.29 km/h) for 7 laps of the Snaefell Mountain Course. Between 1949 and 1976, the Lightweight race was part of the Grand Prix motorcycle racing season.
The event was dropped from the 2005 race calendar due to lack of entries. The Lightweight TT and the Ultra-Lightweight TT were later reinstated to the 2008 & 2009 race schedules, but were held on the 4.25 mile Billown Circuit in the south of the Isle of Man.[1] For the 2010 races, the Lightweight TT was again dropped from the race schedule on cost grounds.
The event was re-introduced for the 2012 races on the Mountain course, with a change to water-cooled four-stroke twin cylinder engines not exceeding 650 cc and complying with the ACU Standing Regulations.[2]
The Lightweight category
There have been several different categories of motorcycle that can compete in this event. In the 1950s and 1960s, the principal TT solo events were the Senior (500 cc), Junior (350 cc), and Lightweight (250 cc, or sometimes 125 cc). The 125 cc class was occasionally called "Ultra-Lightweight".
Currently the Lightweight class comprises road-based "Super-Twin" solo machines with liquid-cooled four-stroke engines of up to 650 cc engine capacity.
Eligibility
Entrants
- Entrants must be in possession of a valid National Entrants or FIM Sponsors Licence for Road Racing.
Machines
The 2012 specification for entries into the Lightweight TT race are defined as;-
- Any solo machine complying with the following specifications:
- Machines must comply with general technical rules as per ACU Standing Regulations and 2012 IOM TT regulations.
- Any four-stroke twin cylinder motor-cycle originally sold for road use with a water-cooled engine of up to 650cc.
- Eligible machines must be from models homologated for road use 2005 or later.[3]
- Machines must comply with general technical rules as per ACU Standing Regulations and 2012 IOM TT regulations.
Official Qualification Time
- 115% of the time set by the third fastest qualifier in the class.[4]
Speed and lap records
The lap record for the Lightweight TT is held by James Hillier in a time of 19 minutes 00.16 seconds[5] at an average speed of 119.130 mph (191.72 km/h) set during the 2013 race. The race record for the 4 lap Lightweight TT is a time of 1 hour 17 minutes 31.7 seconds an average race speed of 116.79 mph (187.96 km/h) for 4 laps (150.73 miles/242.58 km) held by John McGuinness during the 1999 Lightweight 250 cc TT Race.[6]
Lightweight TT Race winners
Rider | Wins |
---|---|
Joey Dunlop | 6 |
Charlie Williams | 5 |
Mike Hailwood, Jim Redman | 3 |
Fergus Anderson, Manliff Barrington, Kel Carruthers, Ian Lougher, Phil Read, Tarquinio Provini, Eric Twemlow | 2 |
Dario Ambrosini, Bruce Anstey, Maurice Cann, Syd Crabtree, Ryan Farquhar, Gary Hocking, Jimmie Guthrie, Wal Handley, Werner Haas, Dean Harrison, Tom Herron, James Hillier, Bill Ivy, Ewald Kluge, John McGuinness, Ted Mellors, Derek Minter, Jack A. Porter, Richard Quayle, Jimmie Simpson, Omobono Tenni, Carlo Ubbiali, Graham Walker, Stanley Woods | 1 |
See also
References
- ^ Manx Independent pp44 dated 22 November 2007
- ^ International Isle of Man TT Regulations 2012 page 41-42 Appendix-E ACU Events (Isle of Man) Ltd (2012) Isle of Man Department of Economic Development
- ^ International Tourist Trophy Regulations 2012 page 3/Appendix E page 43 ACU Events (Isle of Man) Limited (2012) Isle of Man Department of Economic Development
- ^ International Tourist Trophy Regulations 2012 page 19 ACU Events (Isle of Man) Limited (2012) Isle of Man Department of Economic Development
- ^ ITV4 Race 2013 coverage
- ^ TT News 1999 Issue 2 – Isle of Man Newspapers