Mt. Equinox Hill Climb

Kobus Reyneke Photo

Hill climbs are an early form of motorsports, competing to determine which car is the most powerful and which driver is the most skillful (or maybe more daring).  MG gained its reputation as THE sports car in the early 1930s with successes on race tracks and hill climbs.  

One of my favorite MG photos is the one of Doreen Evans running the BOC Hill Climb at Chalfont St. Peter in 1935.  Doreen Evans was a successful MG race driver on both closed circuits and hill climbs.  The photographer caught her exiting a corner and heading up the following straight section of the climb.  She has her throttle foot on the floor with the rear end stepping out in an oversteer, opposite lock applied, the overhead-cam engine screaming, dual rear knobby tires digging for traction, tossing rocks rearward.  I can feel the car slide, hear the engine rev, and my right foot stays planted.  The adrenaline rushes.




I wanted that experience.  So, I did.  

Hill climbs do not happen in Florida, our home state.  There are no mountains of sufficient size to provide the steep challenge.  So, a long trip to Vermont was planned to race a historic hill climb, begun in 1950, Mt. Equinox.  The photo at the top of the page is of Glen driving Angie near the summit of the mountain, completing a run up the mountain.










Vermont is a beautiful place with the very green White Mountains.  With such a long trip, time was taken to enjoy the surrounding areas.  Of course, a beginning was to explore Mt. Equinox at a leisurely pace using the tow truck for transportation.   There are gorgeous views from the road up the mountain.



















Before the road was paved, it passed over the top of Little Mt. Equinox, the prominent mound to the left.  The first races here were even more challenging than today.











This area is a vacation destination, so why not make it one.  An old inn, very close to the mountain, was selected for the atmosphere.  Breakfast was included, but do not think of one of the modern hotel preprepared, barely edible breakfasts.  This inn had their own chicken coop.  Farm fresh eggs every day, offered in many different preparations.  A warm, relaxed start to each day.











And, the inn provided a great place to end the day.  Without the hill climb, a visit here would still be most enjoyable.  But, back to the cars and the hill climb, the reason for this trip.










Race cars are stressed to the maximum, and sometimes beyond.  Things break.  While waiting for the first run up the mountain, Angie fractured a rocker arm.  The exhaust valve in #4 cylinder no longer opening, the engine began backfiring and running very rough.  Could have been the end of the weekend before the first run up the mountain was completed.  Not having a spare rocker arm made it look like the trip home might be early.

The atmosphere at the Mt. Equinox Hill Climb is very welcoming.  More camaraderie than competition.  One of the other MG T-Series entrants had an entire rocker arm assembly and offered it to the cause.  Other competitors pitched in and repairs were made before the second run up the mountain began.






A call to the grid is given and cars move to the parking lot in front of the visitors' center building.  Looking at this photo, you can see that the VSCCA runs true vintage events.  Cars are limited to 1960 and earlier, with a few select cars up to 1965 added.  It was a perfect event for Angie, our 1955 MGTF.  There were four T-Series MGs entered, a TC, a TD, and another MGTF, also from Florida.













A grid steward works from a list of run times up the mountain to organize the cars so that cars of similar times are started in sequence.  The run up the mountain is a lone task, one car at a time.  If a very fast car starts a minute behind a slower car, the fast car might catch up to the earlier starter.









Then, to the gate that admits visitors to Skyline Drive, the road up the mountain.  The starter, watching the clock to appropriately space the cars, drops the green flag to begin each car's run up the mountain.



Kobus Reyenke Photo










Finally, the few minutes that all the work has gone toward, the run up the mountain.  The road to the summit creates many different challenges in addition to the horsepower-sapping steep hill.  It rises 3248 feet in 5.2 miles of road.  There is a downhill decreasing radius, off-camber corner, quite unexpected when one is expecting to face an upward-sloping road.  There are many tight hairpin corners, some back-to-back.  The section known as “The Saddle” is breathtaking.  The Saddle is a concave area between two summits.  As you approach the first summit, after a straight that has allowed you to gain considerable speed, all that can be seen is the sky.  It is difficult to keep the right foot planted when it appears that you are running off the top of the mountain.


Kobus Reyenke Photo

























Kobus Reyneke Photo




Finally, the race car reaches the top of the mountain, trips the electronic timer, and receives the checkered flag.  The run up the mountain is finished.  A short race, but an adrenaline-fueled trip that allows no big mistakes.

Kobus Reyneke Photo


Kobus Reyneke Photo





The cars gather at the top of the mountain, waiting for the last car to make the run up the mountain.  Then the cars make the trip back to the bottom as a group.  The break provides some time to share stores,  troubleshoot issues on the car, and have some good camaraderie.




The goal of experiencing a mountain climb, one of the competitive events that helped make MG's reputation as "the" sportscar, has been accomplished.  The sanctioning body that organized the races, Vintage Sports Car Club of America, did an excellent job.  The event ran smoothly in every aspect.  All of the competitors were welcoming creating a very positive and fun atmosphere.  It was a great event.

SVRA Sebring Speed Tour



Sebring, Florida, February 23 - 27, 2022   The first sportscar race at Sebring was held in 1950.  MGs were on the track competing.  MGs raced every 12-hour enduro race at Sebring for decades.  Much of the MG post-war racing history was created at the Sebring International Raceway.  Partly to experience the history, and to become part of that history, the crew chose to make the first race for the MGTF the SVRA race at Sebring.  And, in part, because the first sports car race that Glen attended was the 1959 12 Hours of Sebring.

But first, a part of the story of the race track must be shared.



Hendricks Army Airfield was built in 1941 to train pilots of heavy bombers. such as the B-17, to serve in WWII.  After the war, Alec Ulmann, a sports car racing enthusiast who was involved in rebuilding military airplanes for civilian use, saw the airport runways as a perfect place to stage a race.  The first race, in 1950, was named the Collier Memorial Race in memory of MG racer Sam Collier.  The original track layout was 5.2 miles long.  The growing needs of the current airport and industrial complex have shrunk the track to 3.75 miles long, a challenging, technical course with 17 turns.  Some of the racecourse is the original 1941 concrete and is rough, tossing the cars around.

Interested in taking a lap around the track?  Jim Pace, who was a highly regarded racer and race instructor, 
provides that opportunity through a YouTube Video.  A Lap at Sebring



SVRA is the acronym for the Sportscar Vintage Racing Association.  SVRA organized their first race in 1978 as a support race for the 12 Hours of Sebring and has been holding races every year since.  In 2022, SVRA will have 19 races, from Florida to Washington State.  https://svra.com/   The Vintage racecar that the crew has chosen to campaign this year is a 1955 MGTF.  Well over 200 cars were entered in a variety of classes and different groups.  Our MG was the oldest car and, therefore, the most vintage racecar at Sebring.  The detailed description of the car would best be accomplished in a separate post and that may be done in the future.  This image shows the car on the pit straight just past the walkover bridge.


The Sebring race schedule had competitors arriving on Wednesday to get in long lines to register, then wait for the slow process of moving the race cars and trailers into the paddock.  Thursday had practice sessions scheduled, three for each race group.  Friday had a practice session and a qualifying session to set the starting order of the first race.  Two races were run for each race group, one on Saturday and one on Sunday.  A long weekend and a lot of track time.  This image is of the TF in race #1 on Saturday.  Fellow MG owner, George Butz, captured this shot.


All of the action at the races doesn't happen on the race track.  The paddock, where the cars, trailers, and crews are located, is always active with work on the cars.  Changing race setup to reduce lap times and effecting repairs keeps all the crew busy.  In this image, the crew looks contemplative, considering the next step.  Geoff Ashcroft, the driver, Tony Cassata, and Dave Burrows are pictured here.  Geoff, Tony, and Dave, all good friends, came to Sebring to aid in the maintenance of the race car.  This image could be one used in a caption contest.


Another photo of the crew appropriate for a caption contest.  Three heads are better than one?  Brain Trust?  Tony Cassata, Dave Burrows, and the driver study a broken throttle linkage shaft and consider repair possibilities knowing that a new part is not available.  A fix was determined, changes made, working correctly for the rest of the weekend.  A true repair will be made after the car returns home.


Sebring proved to be an enjoyable race and a true shake-down for the car before a journey north to experience some favorite race tracks with long histories of MGs racing.  Many thanks to all who helped with the car during the weekend.  A true adventure among classic and fast cars.  Now, the Moore MG is a part of MG Sebring history.