
PK Sport
At Sebring – Race Report

A race of steady
progress punctuated by very few incidents – that was the good
news of the first six hours of PK Sport’s 12 Hours of Sebring.
Here's Alex Caffi just after the start.

The bad news
was that the first incident to befall the #60 car cost the car three
laps and two places. “The gear lever broke,” said a
shrugging Hugh Plumb (after having climbed steadily up to seventh
in the fiercely competitive GT class) and the second cost it a race
finish, a suspected differential failure stopping the car out on
track with Peter Boss at the wheel.

“I was just getting
settled in for my second stint and got a box full of nothing going
into turn 10. I brought the car back but it was all over.”
Hugh Plumb was
understandably disappointed: “It was a good run while it lasted,
I had a good double stint which was tough at times as my drinks
bottle failed. The Pirellis were great, I’m getting used to
them and to the team and I’m looking forward to the season
with them.”

Robin
Liddell was rueful on hearing the bad tidings: “It’s
one of those things, these things can happen at a circuit as tough
as this. It’s a real shame, we were going better than we
expected we would.”
It was particularly sad
news for Peter Boss’s father, here in pit lane to see the
third of his sons compete in the 12 Hours of Sebring.
The luck for
the #61 crew looked rather similar at the halfway point.

Alex Caffi was
hugely encouraged with the car after a fast and steady first stint:
“The car is good, our set-up and tyres are fantastic, the
only problem we have had is that our top-end speed is not good,
that’s just because of our bad luck earlier in the week (when
the car inexplicably lost engines on two consecutive days)."

Having leapfrogged the
#60 car during the gearshift replacement, the #61 car was up into
the top 10 in the GT class when it was the victim of a rather overambitious
overtaking move from the Rollcentre Dallara prototype, which damaged
the front left hand wheel of the PK car and left the team needing
to replace part of the front suspension.
The PK crew worked on
the car in the pitlane and got the car back out into the race, with
David Warnock at the wheel, and began what they hoped would be a
run to the finish. Things were looking good and the car began to
climb the order once again - until Alex Caffi found the gearchange
stiffening in the 9th hour of the race. All too soon it was all
over for #61, the clutch apparently failing and stranding the car
in the pits. A brave run was over.
Tracy Krohn
was philosophical: “I’d been told this race was very
tough, and in terms of the level of competition it’s undoubtedly
the toughest in the world for a GT car. I’d been told the
standard was high but the driving ability out there is amazing.
I was pleasantly surprised that the level of physical challenge
wasn’t as bad as I expected – I guess the workouts helped!”

For PK Sport the 12 Hours
of Sebring was over too soon for comfort, but it’s a tough
race to start a long season of racing: a season which will take
another eight race meetings in the ALMS, plus the Superbowl of sportscar
racing, the 2004 24 Hours of Le Mans – a race in which the
team already has a guaranteed entry.
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