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CIVIC OCCASION
Four New Zealanders went on a magical trip around Britain
recently, and used less petrol than anyone else has ever
managed. Donn Anderson reports on a fascinating week that
only confirmed his view that the UK is an absorbing place
to visit...
It was in the early hours of the morning, when you sometimes
had to smack yourself on the face to stay awake, that
the feasibility of the project was called into question.
Prior to our record-breaking fuel economy run around Britain
several people had asked why we were attempting the run
and yet they could never know just how tough this drive
would be.
Driving
the VTEC-E-engined Honda Civic 3-door hatchbackeconomically
was not so much tiring - after a while human body reached
almost automatically to the job of easing the most kilometres
from every gallon of petrol. What was draining was keeping
going from more than 40 hours at a time, sleeping only
every second night, and what seemed like a comparatively
simple (but not so simple) task of route-finding.
Drive
around the coastline of mainland Britain? Seems easy enough.
Just follow the road nearest to the coast, and keep the
sea on your left during the clockwise run. Alas, it's
not as straightforward as it sounds in a place where there
are literally thousands of roads, big and small.
When we
finally rolled into Brighton on a grey Saturday morning
in late September, a week after leaving same seaside town
in sparkling sunshine, it looked as tough we had a new
figure for listing in the Guinness Book of Records.
The top-up
at the same service station where it all started confirmed
these observations. We had covered 6111kms ( 3798 miles)
in seven days and used 200.86 litres of super unleaded
petrol for an average of 3.286 litres/100km. This 30.424km
per litre or 85.947 miles per gallon - as near as damnit
to 86mpg. Remarkable. Amazing, really.
Remember
the days when we thought 60mpg was incredible? Now US
President Clinton is asking the Detriot motor industry
to develop and build cars capable of 80mpg plus. I'd like
to tell the Americans that Honda is already doing it.
The 1992
succesful attempt in a pair of mechanically similar VTEC-E
Civics had resulted in 3.58 litres/100km (78.9mpg). We
had comfortably bettered this in a bid to use the least
amount of petrol in a production car within a specified
time.
Despite
covering 36kms more than the 1992 attempt ( due to becoming
lost), we used 16.66 litters less fuel. What with the
devaluation of the British pound and appreciation of the
Japanese yen (and the fact that we used less fuel!), it
cost the Japanese doctor and organizer, DrShigeru Miyano,
less to mount this year's run.
CAUTIOUS ABOUT RESULT
I wasn't optimistic at the start about bettering the 1992
result, particularly as the team of expert drivers last
year had included the late Denny Hulme. Some of the drivers
in the latest assault were inexperienced in economy driving,
and the 1993 model Civic was still comparatively "green"
with only 4000km on the clock.
At the same time, it was completely standard and had not
been given any pre-run preparation. Concern was heightened
when we were split into two teams. Sandy Myhre, my wife
Lynn, and I were joined by Franck Pasqualini, a 22-year-old
Corsican.
Franck's a keen motoring enthusiast with a sharp knowledge
of motor racing history. But he hadn't spoken English
for four years. His French was excellent, but he said
ours was awful.
Pasqualini had never visited Britain and had never driven
on the left side of the road! During his initial driving
of the Honda Accord Aerodeck station lead car, I thought
he was handling the difficulties of driving on the "foreign"(to
him) side of the road with aplomb when he suddenly negociated
a roundabout the wrong way. Fortunately for us all, no
one was coming the other way.
Meanwhile, Amanda McLaren, daughter of late Bruce McLaren,
was teamed up with Shigeru and the Dutch husband and wife
team of Jan and Ria Smit. This made logic since Amanda
was the only driver in team B who was totally conversant
in Englsih.
It meant there were four New Zealanders in the two teams.
As a counter to long driving hours which reached near
danger levels in 1992, a team of five English drivers
from Honda Drivers Club of GB came in to do the last night
run. By this stage we were so acclimatised to the lengthy
hops that another day on run wouldn't have been here nor
there.
SHIGERU'S ENTHUSIASM
My caution about expecting a good result was eased somewhat
bubbling enthusiasm of Shigeru Miyano. He is an avid motor
sport follower and an admirer of New Zealand's racing
greats. It was Shigeru who planned and built the memorial
to Bruce McLaren at Goodwood and who persuaded Hulme to
take a part in last year's economy run.
Shigeru is also confirmed Honda fan and his confidence
in the variable-valve VTEC-E Civic was well placed. This
1.5 litre single-cam 4-cylinder is a truely remarkable
engine. It has four valves per cylinder but uses only
one inlet per cylinder below 2500rpm: the second valve
, with its own cam and rocker, moves into action at higher
revs.
There would be no danger of both inlet valves operation
during the run. Indeed, most of times we had the reve
counter between 1200 and 1500rpm, which equated to speeds
of between 50 and 70km/h with this economy Civic's tall
final-drive gearing.
Honda claims a unique compact combustion chamber with
the VTEC-E which reduces the surface-to-volume ratio,
minimizing the time required for full combustion in a
lean air/fuel environment. At the same time, the engine
does not use any fuel on a trailing throttle due to fuel
cut-off.
At a steady 90km/h, Honda quotes 62.8 miles per gallon.
"Few cars have ever achieved this level of efficiency,"
say the Japanese. We would prove no petrol-engined car
has ever circumnavigated Britain on a mere 44 gallons,
or 200 litres, of fuel.
The VTEC-E produces 66kW(89bhp) at 5500rpm which, unusually
enough, is the same power output as the older carburated
engine used in the Civc LX assembled and sold in New Zealand.
Maximum torque of the variable-valve motor is 142Nm at
5200rpm.
Our Japan-registered Civic started life white, but was
painted a somewhat garish papaya orange for the run. Shigeru
is thorough om hos enthusiasm - the car's "McLaren
orange" colours illustrated a link between McLaren
and Hulme.
The Honda was emblazoned with two kiwi birds to provide
New Zealand connection. However, one well-lubricated Scotsman
at an Inverness service station thought the kiwi drawing
looked more like a "boodgie" than a flightless
bird.
Apart from installation of a much-needed radio telephone
and use of Microlon engine oil additive, the Civic was
straight out of the box. Dunlop Japan was one of the sponsors
and had fitted all-weather 165/70 SP20s to the narrow
13-inch steel wheels. They provided excellent, particularly
on the rare occasions when it was wet.
This was a Japanese domestic-specification car with full
emission equipment and the annoying warning buzzers which
drove us potty at times. Japanese market versions are
equipped with a 3.25 final drive gearing which is even
taller than the 3.75 ratio on the UK equivalents.
The VTEC-E is sold in small numbers in Britain but Honda
New Zealand elected not to have this relatively expensive
model for our market because of limited appeal. It's doubtless
the right decision.
Honda UK supplied a pair of North American-built Accord
Aerodeck station wagons which proved admirable support
vehicles. Cathay Pacific Airlines carried the New Zealand
contingent to Britain instyle, and there was also support
for Kiwis from the British Tourist Authority.
Managing the assault was John Howie, a keen Honda S800
sports car owner, who kept the operation flowing from
his home in Suffolk. John was involved in the 1992 run,
and ran this year's drive with millitary-like precision.
JOHN COOPER VISIT
After one of the Accords was stolen on the 1992 run, we
carried and used steering wheel locking clamps this time.
They were a nuisance to fit and remove, but we kept the
fleet intact, unlike the 587000 Britains who had their
cars nicked in1992.
The Mayer of Brighton flagged us away on a brilliantly
fine day and within a few minutes we were already finding
the route difficult as we threaded our way through busy
Saturday-morning traffic.
First stop was in nearby Worthing and the legendary John
Cooper's garage. Cooper is a Honda dealership and a centre
point for Mini Coopers, old and new. John Cooper was introduced
to the team, but didn't realise untill later that the
young New Zealander everyone wanted to photograph with
the famous racing car constractor was Bruce McLaren's
daughter.
John hadn't seen Amanda since she was three - and the
meeting was happy reunion. Cooper took us on a wonderfull
hour-long your of his facilities and recalled how he started
building Cooper 500s with his father Charles, in 1946.
In 1962 Cooper built the first GP car for Honda. Today
he looks little differnt from when his Climax-engined
cars were winning the F1 world championship in 1959 and
1960.
He showed us an amazing collection of immaculate Mini
Coopers spanning a decade, and said the original idea
of the Mini Cooper came from Bruce McLaren and Jack Brabham,
who put Formula Junior BMC engine in a standard Mini.
He also recalled McLaren's arrival in Europe and how the
young New Zealander asked where his car was. "It's
over there, in the tube rack," said Cooper. Bruce
had to set about and build the race car he thought would
be ready, waiting for him to drive.
John Cooper remembered 1961, the year in which the Mini
Cooper began production - the only time he has ever visited
New Zealand, when his cars were campaigned at Ardmore.
He nearly killed himself while testing a twin-engined
Mini in the sixties and points out with pride that half
the Mini production today are Cooper versions.
We were back on the road for the start of an adventurous
week-long escapade which would highlight Britian as a
land of amazing contrast. As a long-time anglophile, I
was looking forward to seeing more of the UK - and I wouldn't
be disappointed.
While Team B religiously followed the coast with the orange
Civic led by the Accord wagon, we took the "fast"
road to Teignmouth, colse to Basil Fawlty's Torquay in
the West Country. Waves were crashing over the promenade
walls with the highest tides in 100 years while we walked
the "olde worlde" seaside town, demolished a
five-pound (NZ$15) roast dinner and waited for the Civic
to arrive.
Soon after ten o'clock on a balmy Saturday evening we
were off on our first full section. Within a few kilometres
came our first near miss when a drunk stumbled out in
the main street of Torquay and almost fell across the
Civic's bonnet whole was driving.
From then on, the journey became time-warp of places and
maps, of countless roundabouts, of sights and experiences
which could only be relished in a unique place like Britain.
Days rolled together. It was like having extended jet-lag,
and you didn't know if it was Tuesday or Thursday. Nor
did you care.
But we did know the Civic was using preciously little
fuel - and was proving extraordinarily tractable, despite
the high gearing. The challenge car was proving much better
to drive than the VTEC-E Civic sedan lent to us by Honda
New Zealand for evaluation just before the run.
The plan to swap drivers every 100 or so kilometres went
awry. We tended to challenge over when convenient. But
the idea of using the Accord as a lead and navigation
car proved successful.
So did the radio telephones, although as the trip were
on, the 24-hours batteries (which we recharged during
the rest stops) began to die long before their best-by
times.
The Civic's speedo was hardly monitored. We drove by the
rev counter, striving to keep engine speed as low as possible.
Howie had thoughtfully marked charge-up points on the
speedo, and the critical rev range on the tacho.
But he had in characteristically missed marking our map
route on one section leading into Dartmouth. From previous
visits to this old naval port, I reasoned the car ferry
would not be operating as the clock approached midnight.
Still we eased into Dartmouth and wound our way down a
narrow street to join sailors returning home as the pubs
shut - and came slap against the gates of naval base.
We were lost.
"SCRATCHING" A CAT
The route regained, we headed on westward. Franck was
having his first driving spell, and he came on the radio
phone: "Orbit One to Orbit Two. I've scratched a
cat."
"What do you mean, you've scratched a cat?"
Well, I'ave' it a cat."
"How is the cat?"
"I think it is very dead..."
Two am and the night clubs are coming out in Plymouth.
There are taxis everywhere. Clearly, they take drinking
and driving seriously here. We gas up the Accord, but
the 45-Litre tank in the Civic is hardly impaired by the
distance already covered.
We would have no difficulty packing more than 1200km into
each tankfull of unleaded fuel as the Civic eased on with
economy that would make a diesel engine envious.
Back behind the wheel, I was starting to become sleepy.
The tiredness comes in waves. A boost from BBC Radio 2
which can be heard nationwide but plays same fifties songs
it did when I visited Britain 25 years ago. Even the disc
jockeys are 1968 vintage: some things in Britain never
change.
I wind up the good-quality FM radio and Bing Crosby and
Sachimo (Louis) Armstrong keep my spirits up. In the "dead"
hours, just before dawn, a great jazz session on Radio
2 would again revive me. Good music has a stimulating
effect on the brain.
LAND'S END REACHED
It is a long, long way to Land's End on a bleak, overcast
Sunday just after 7am. We stop for photos and verification
of the Civic's Guinness logbook. The car park is deserted,
save for a lone manwho says we can't park where we've
stopped. We ignore him.
Now we're heading north, through picturesque St Ives,
and the weather is brighter as the sun appears. Hunger
pains dictate a breakfast stop where we encounter the
only rude person on the whole trip - and he is definitely
not British by the affliction of his southern European
accent.
Everyone else is helpful and fascinated by the economy
attempt. The warmth and hospitality is gratifying.
We head to New Quay, running past superb, sandy beaches
eaual to the best in New Zealand. The Civic skirts Exmoor
National Park, negotiates Porlock hill (the steepest road
in Britain) and on into Minehead and a welcome dinner
and bed. We finish this section late afternoon - but the
finish times would be much later on subsequent stages.
As Team B headed off into darkest Wales, we slept befor
tackling sodden M6 motorway north to Liverpool, home of
the Beatles and Cilla Black. We find our bed and breakfast
hotel rendezvous at Wallasey west of River Mersey by cleverly
asking direction from a driving school instructor.
Team B is not so fortunate, and waste about an hours trying
to find us. Finaaly they phone in, and we run out tolocate
them with the help of a local. his part of Liverpool looks
depressed and bleak, but an excellent Italian meal sparks
us away for northward run.
Our drivers have already experienced tolled private roads
in wayward regions, and men sitting in little booths at
3am to collect small fees, sometimes as little as 20 pence
(60 cents). North from Liverpool to Southport, through
affluent areas reflecting a wealth which had not been
apparent an hour or so earlier.
At Blackpool in Lancashire, the famed north England seaside
town and home of TVR, we look in vain for public toilet
at 1am. I listen to Isle of Man radio as we skim the edges
of the Lake District before entering Whitehaven, a depressing
working-class town.
Breakfast is nowhere to be found. We stop at supermarket
adjacent to a service station but they can't sell us a
cup of coffee. We buy banana-flavoured milk and pour it
over Weetabix but it doesn't really work. These Kiwis
must look mad, and a garage attendant strolls over."I've
heard about your plight, and I'd like to make you all
a cup of coffee,"he says. A touch of northern hospitality.
BONNIE SCOTLAND
Across the border into Scotland, and immediately the countryside
looks more like New Zealand. There are signs to nearby
Lockerbie where the ill-fated PanAm Jumbo came down.
We wind through amazing roads, travelling for miles without
seeing another car or person. Down to the Mull of Galloway,
through enchanted little fishing villages that haven't
charged in a hundred years.
We'd love to stop, but there isn't time. But it's daylight
and we are treated to sights the tourists and almost all
Britons will never see.
Northward towards Glasgow, but, it's a long, long drive
when you follow the coast. We see rabbits, deer, fox,
squirrels and occasional hedgehog. Most humans are in
the bed, lucky sods.
Glasgow is huge, but we cross the Cyde and heard through
Jackie Stewart's old town of Dumbarton. There's a misty
rollercoaster ride through wooded up hill-dpwn dale country
into Arrochar for our overnight stop.
It's 2am, we're sevral hours late, and we are drunk with
tiredness.We 've been on the go for 43 hoursand
wondering why on earth we agreed to such a drive.
Next morning the landlord at Mansfield Country House -
who used to race formula 3 - taps on our door. Otherwise,
we'd still be sleeping. After breakfast we stroll along
the shores of Loch Long before heading north through magnificent
highland country which matches the best you'll see in
the South Island. The weather is perfect.
At Spean Bridge, Franck is in a panick. He's left his
jacket, complete with passport, French ID card and money,
in the wardrobe at our Arrochar hotel. No problem. I ring
Mansfield and our kindly host posts the jacket on to one
of our southern hotels.
The drive up to Loch Ness is considerably less taxing
for us than the trip around the top of Scotland to John
O'Groats for Team B. Not a monster in sight on this sparkling
day. We enjoy a good meal in Inverness, grab three hours'kip.
and are ready to go again at 1am. We haven't a clue what
day it is, but Amanda arrives and says she has just had
three hours'sleep in the support car. She is always saying
that! We head through the night, through the places like
Banff, Macduff, and on into Aberdeen. Darkness turns into
another beautiful day where the lead car loses me in a
magical little fishing village. Through Dundee, and on
to savour the sights of impressive St Andrews, that most
famous of golfing towns.
MORTALLY WOUNDED
Sandy asks policemen in a village to verify the logbook.
He says he's be happy to do that for us Ocker Aussies.
"Actually, we're from New Zealand," says Sandy.
"Och, I've mortally wounded you," replies MrPlod.
The Firth of Forth Bridge looks amaizing on such a splendid
day, and Edinburgh is a sight to behold. I'm in love with
Scotland. Again.
We head to Dunbar, and into Jim Clark country. This is
a long section back into England that starts to go terribly
wrong for us in darkness at Newcastle Upon Tyne. The lead
car loses me on a roundabout when a car chops in front
of Civic. I take the wrong exit, realise the error, and
stop at the first opportunity.
The radio telephone fails to work. Worse, the spare route
map has been taken out of the car and I haven't a clue
where I am. Newcastle is huge. Just huge. I wait for half
an hour, but, the lead Accord also gets lsot attempting
to retrace steps.
It's 9pm and I'm somewhat depressed at the prospect of
throwing the whole challenge away. ut
have some money and make for the first service station
where I gas up the Civic and buy a map of the area. On
a dual carriageway the Accord sees me going the other
way but, in frustration, cannot turn around!
THEY FIND ME
I'm on my own. Fortunately I remember that the destination
is Filey in Yorkshire. I plan the route, hit the road,
and an hour later there's a flash of lights behind me.
Miraculously, we've found each other. They're glad to
see me. I'm glad to see them.
A midnight stop in darkest Yorkshire to refuel the Accord.
"You must be glad you've just got the Olymoic Games,"
says the attendant.
"Actually, we're New Zealanders," was our reply,
which we had heard before.
Filey and bed have never been so welcome just after 1am,
as the Honda UK team took over the Civic to head south
for New Romney and the Blue Dolphin, a 16th-century hotel,
our last night stopover before the easy run in to Brighton.
With all the sights and experiences, it would have been
easy to have forgotten the whole point of the exercise.
But we never stopped trying tosqueeze as much economy
out of the Civic as possible. The lack of power steering
was never a handicap, but we would have liked illumination
of the electric window controls. The ventilation was unable
to cool the interior on the warm, sunny days when we could
not open the windows for fear of impairing economy.
The drive had been real adventure, an opportunity to explore
rare territory, to hear a different accent at almost every
stop, a chance to appreciate some of Britain's magnificent
past, and to prove a point. It was also a solid test of
relationship and endurance.
There were times when we were holding up traffic, but
these were infrequent because so much of the route was
in the depths of night or lonely country roads. And we
wrote a line or two in the book for a better environment.
Only a diesel car has done better, at around 100 miles
per gallon. This was a one-litre Daihatsu Charade 3-cylinder
diesel. But already we're thinking about a crack at the
diesel record, and I believe we can improve on the 1993
petrol result with a VTEC-E Civic. That's the trouble
with these record-breaking runs. You always think you
can do better.
A pity about "scratching" the cat, however.
He was the only real casualty of the whole trip.
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