Tag Archives: Hidden Valley

Wayne Maxwell tops opening practice in Darwin

Darwin ASBK FP1


There was a 20-minute delay to the start of the opening 40-minute practice session for Superbikes as a track clean-up was underway from one of the four-wheel classes. Riders were called to the end of pit-lane before then being sent back to get tyre-warmers back on. The track temperature was already nudging towards 50-degrees celsius and the ambient passing 30-degrees, perfect weather for standing around in your leathers…

Wayne Maxwell was the first rider into the 6s, a 66.942s recorded 15-minutes into the session then immediately backed up with a 66.830s, which was then followed up with a 66.879. He drifted back into the 67s briefly before then lowering the morning benchmark to 66.673s, followed by a 66.737 as the session passed its halfway point.

Glenn Allerton had spent the first half of the session on the S 1000 RR before then returning to the pits to ride the new M 1000 RR that they only took delivery of in Darwin less than 48 hours ago. On the initial shakedown laps the rear brake locked on due to the pedal free-play not being set quite correctly on the hastily prepared bike but that was quickly sorted and Glenn was back on track familiaring himself with the new bike.

Glenn Allerton shaking down the new M 1000 RR – Image Half Light

Troy Herfoss had put in a few 67.0s in the first half of the session before returning to the pits and then rejoining the track with 15-minutes remaining to drop in a 66.729s which was then immediately backed up with a 66.732s.

Young Oli Bayliss and his DesmoSport Ducati team-mate Mike Jones then also dropped into the 66s, a 66.775 to Oli and 66.899 to Oli.  The youngsters bike had a wardrobe malfunction during the session also and has some bodywork flapping in the breeze.

Some bodywork came adrift on the DesmoSport Ducati during the session – Image RbMotoLens

Wayne Maxwell left the pits with just under ten-minutes left in the session and immediately put his head down to lower the benchmark once again, a 66.265, then immediately backed that up with a quicker 66.240, then went quicker again with a 66.215. He then ran off briefly before rejoining the circuit and returning to pit-lane.

Oli Bayliss then moved up to P2 after putting in a 66.515 with just over five-minutes remaining in the session. Jones then pushed Herfoss further back to P4, a 66.704s to the #46 DesmoSport Ducati. Second laters though Herfoss demoted Jones to P4 once again after putting in a 66.536s to spoil the Ducati 1-2-3.

In the dying seconds of the 40-minute session Maxwell then put in new fastest split times across the first two splits but then failed to improve across the final split, this his 66.215 on his 19th lap of the session the early benchmark here this weekend.  That compares to the qualifying lap record set by Troy Bayliss here a few years ago at 65.601s, and the race lap record set by Troy Herfoss the same year at 65.904s.  The Boost Mobile Ducati squad without their crew-chief Adrian Monti this weekend as due to COVID restrictions he is working from Melbourne in constant communication with team personnel on the ground in Darwin.

Oli Bayliss a brilliant second place in this opening session. Seriously impressive for the 17-year-old who only joined the Superbike ranks this year, and previously has only ever ridden a 300 around this circuit.

Troy Herfoss (66.536s) third ahead of Mike Jones (66.704s) in fourth place.  BC Performance’s Bryan Staring next best on 67.012s ahead of NextGen BMW’s Glenn Allerton whose best of 67.077s was set on the fresh new M 1000 RR only put together overnight.

Bryan Staring – Image Half Light

Privateer Daniel Falzon ranked seventh in the morning session on the back of a 67.583s as he gets back up to speed after a lengthy break from competition. Cessnock Kawasaki privateer Matt Walters P8 ahead of the YRT entry of Cru Halliday while privateer Arthur Sissis rounded out the top ten.

Anthony West was 11th this morning ahead of Aiden Wagner and Josh Waters.

FP2 is schedule to get underway at 1420 Darwin time, which equates to 1450 AEST.

Wayne Maxwell sporting a new graphics design on his Shark helmet for this round – Image RbMotoLens

Superbike Hidden Valley Friday FP1 Times

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m06.215
2 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m06.515
3 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m06.536
4 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m06.704
5 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.012
6 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m07.077
7 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.583
8 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.668
9 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.693
10 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.727
11 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.895
12 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.953
13 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.956
14 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m08.098
15 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.354
16 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.361
17 Mark CHIODO Yamaha YZF-R1 1m10.199
18 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R 1m10.283
19 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m10.609
20 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m14.844

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Friday, 18 June
10:25am – Practice 1 (40 min) FOX Sports
2:20pm – Practice 2 (30 min) FOX Sports

Saturday, 19 June
10:15am – Qualifying 1 (20 min) FOX Sports
10:40am – Qualifying 2 (15 min) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 91
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au

ASBK Insights – Paul Free on electronics and bike set-up

Penrite Honda Crew Chief Paul Free

On the eve of the ASBK showdown in Darwin getting underway we had a chat with Penrite Honda’s Paul Free, Crew Chief for Troy Herfoss. Hopefully some of these insights will help interested readers get more of an understanding of how things work these days in Australian Superbike.


Trev – What have you been working on primarily since the previous round and at recent test sessions?

Electronics. Really just been focussing on electronics. Up until now I just haven’t had a lot of mind space to really focus on the electronics side of it. With the help of Charlie Hallam, he has been coming to the track with me to collectively try and get our heads around the system, as it is really quite a complex system, we’ve just been working our way around that. The manual for it is in Jinglish, so it is quite difficult to navigate, but spending time together with young Charlie, spending time at the track and just playing with stuff and seeing what it does, looking at that on the data-logger, as some things don’t appear on there as they are necessarily meant to, so that’s been an interesting process, and something we will be spending a lot more time with ongoing.” 

The dash on the Penrite Honda

Trev – Is gearing fairly set and forget these days? With the bikes having such a broad spread of power, or is it something that still requires on-track testing rather than simple maths back in the pits?

When you go to a new track, like this (Hidden Valley) is new to this 21 model Fireblade then yes perhaps. But we will just start with the older bikes gearing from when we were here last, 2018 I think, as a reference, and then will change that accordingly to the Michelin tyres and this new bike.  We might change a tooth perhaps, but to be honest most likely won’t have to.  We went to Queensland Raceway to test recently, and we hadn’t been there for many years, and just used exactly the same gearing as we did at Winton and it worked perfectly. We do change it, but the bike has such a massive spread of power. Troy rides this current Fireblade right down to as low as 5000 rpm, right up to the 15,000 rpm limiter, so you’ve got a 10,000 rpm power-band there, which is a pretty damn useable power spread.” 

Penrite Honda setting up in Darwin this morning – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – I believe some of the earliest challenges you had with getting the new Fireblade set-up for racing here in Australia was in the mapping of the fly-by-wire throttle. Which is something the Kawasaki boys have been struggling with this season after receiving their new bike. Results wise it certainly looks as though that’s well and truly sorted now on the Penrite Honda, or are you still tweaking it from day to day in response to changing conditions and from track to track?

The stuff we initially had problems with was self inflicted. I will honestly say that. We played with some stuff and caused ourselves our own mischief. Once we learned that, it was pretty easy to see what and why things were happening.  But yes, like I mentioned earlier, we are starting to put a lot more emphasis on electronics, and opening up more of the package on that side. There is just so much adjustability in there.

Superbike race teams in Australia Trev are honestly getting to the point, you can see with the Ducati teams, you need a dedicated person to just be looking at electronics all day. Focussing on the data, interpreting that data, then talking to the rider and making the necessary changes based on those two inputs. But probably more so the data than the rider input. It’s getting very, very complicated and increasingly challenging, but I suppose it is just the way of the world… I can see before too long that each proper team will have one person that is just an electronics person, where that is all they do.” 

Penrite Honda setting up in Darwin this morning – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – It is almost an endless black hole that you can pour infinite resources into essentially, and certainly employ more than one guy to focus on, particularly for a two-rider team. 

100 per cent. But in the end budgets rule everything. If you have one person dedicated in that electronics role, even in a multi-rider team, in fact that may even help speed up some processes, having data inputs from two different riders and bikes, but yes even for a single rider team it’s not far away. It adds a lot of costs to a team operation, that’s another person that has got to be paid, got to be fed, got to be accommodated and moved around the country, you know that adds up, but it is what it is.” 

Trev – With the new bike does Troy have the facility to change engine, traction control or engine braking control during a race as grip levels change? Or does he leave well enough alone and just trust his right hand?

To date no. He hasn’t been changing that during a race, to date, but that will change after what we have recently learned.”

Trev – From what I have witnessed, after spending so much time in pit garages with you over the past 20 years or so, is just how much work you put in to tweaking the suspension package, to a degree so fine that the uninitiated will never understand. Despite the bikes producing so much power now, we know that the power delivery is also now so refined and smooth that it does make putting the power down to the ground perhaps easier than it ever was. Thus it seems in modern racing you really win or lose on entry speed, so is the focus of the suspension tuning now much more critical on the front than the rear?

It’s balance. It’s completely balance. If the bike is not balanced you haven’t got a motorbike. When you know what you are looking at you can see that from a mile away, when you are looking at a bike and a rider, entering, going through and exiting a corner, a mile away. 

Trev – Has that balance changed more towards one end than the other in recent times? 

I don’t know if I can actually comment on that, because I have always concentrated on having a very, very well balanced bike, and a bike that is easy to ride. There is no point in having a motorbike that you can rip the ears off for one lap, because that doesn’t help you on lap 16 does it? So a really balanced bike, whether that was five years ago or now, I don’t think that has really changed.”

Trev – You have worked with Troy for a long time now. Where has he most improved of late do you think? 

A good question. A hard one to answer. I know that his level of determination, and his desire to succeed, at any time, is unwavering. He is just such a focussed individual, it’s crazy. To see that race at Wakefield Park, race two I think it was, six laps to go and he is two-seconds behind the leader, and he has an ability to pull him in and pass that guy, in six laps, I don’t know that anyone else can do that. But this guy here, he is just mental for success.”

Troy Herfoss and Paul Free – Behind Herf’s Colgate smile the intensity burns white hot

Trev – In recent times it does seem as though Troy and Wayne are performing a cut above the rest. Different bikes and different tyres, yet they never seem to be far apart.  Your time is spent giving Troy the best package you can provide, and Wayne’s team work hard to do the same. With the fine tuning of all the systems on these latest model bikes do you think technicians now are perhaps more important than ever? 

Mmmm.  I don’t know if they are more important than ever, it has always been extremely important that a rider has a good technician, a clever technician, someone that can assist the rider at every point throughout a race weekend, right down to a championship. I think there is ultimately plenty of riders in any championship that could be successful, if they had the right level of support, I think that is the big difference with Troy and Wayne at the moment. That’s not taking anything away from those guys, they are right now at their very, very best. I don’t want to sound like I’m a crew chief in Troy’s team and I am making him win, that’s not what I am saying at all, but I think it is vitally important that a rider has the right people around them, people that know what they are doing, understand the motorcycle, understand the rider, understand what’s required to make that bike and rider package be at its best, every day, every weekend, and make sure it is there and stays in that position. So I don’t know if they are more important now, than in the past, I don’t think so, I think it has been the same.

Trev – Are there any specific extra challenges thrown up this weekend in regards to the tyre allocation for the three-race format put in place for Darwin?

No, we have got nine tyres, in total, over the three races and the qualifying sessions. So we have no challenge with tyres whatsoever, we have ample tyres in that allocation, no problem at all. The big challenge here will be the outright temperature. We see this track temperature at different circuits, around the country, and when we go testing and stuff. We just checked the track temperatures here now, mid-afternoon on Thursday here, and it was 50-degrees. We see those temperatures throughout the year, but what you don’t see is just the outright heat of the ambient temperature. It is so, so humid and hot here, I think the biggest challenge up here in Darwin is just keeping your rider physically hydrated, if you can keep him physically strong and fit all weekend then come Sunday you will be right on top of it.

Trev – Thanks for your time Paul, a pleasure as always, good luck for the weekend. 

Penrite Honda setting up in Darwin this morning – Image RbMotoLens

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Friday, 18 June
10:25am – Practice 1 (40 min) FOX Sports
2:20pm – Practice 2 (30 min) FOX Sports

Saturday, 19 June
10:15am – Qualifying 1 (20 min) FOX Sports
10:40am – Qualifying 2 (15 min) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 91
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au

Three days of Live TV coverage for Darwin Superbikes

Darwin ASBK TV package announced

ASBK fans will be able to follow all the action from the Northern Territory round of the 2021 mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship via an extensive live TV package announced today.

Fans will be treated to live coverage of every practice and qualifying session on Fox Sports Australia. As an added bonus, the Saturday and Sunday ASBK race action will also feature as part of Channel 7’s free-to-air coverage of the Repco Supercars Championship Merlin Darwin Triple Crown.

ASBK Rnd HV SS R field
ASBK 2018 at Hidden Valley Raceway

This means ASBK fans will be able to closely follow the strategies employed by teams as they come to grips with Darwin’s hot conditions during practice, soak up the tension as riders explore the limits of their machines during qualifying, and then be captivated by epic, wheel-to-wheel combat during the weekend’s trio of 16-lap races.

The broadcast coverage will be produced by Supercars Television, internationally acclaimed for its coverage of motorsport events, and Repco Supercars Championship General Manager of Television and Content Nathan Prendergast said the bikes will add to the Darwin TV spectacle.

ASBK Rnd HV R PM
Darwin’s Hidden Valley Raceway pit-lane – Image by PM
Motorcycling Australia CEO Peter Doyle

We’ve been very proud to have provided fans with live TV coverage of our races over many seasons, but racing in Darwin with Supercars provides a chance for a whole new audience of race fans who now get to witness ASBK from Hidden Valley. Three days of ASBK action will provide viewers an insight into the high-pressure environment of superbike racing with Australia’s fastest two-wheel racers. Coverage during practice and qualifying sessions is a great addition as it’s where teams have to make spur-of-the-moment tactical decisions in the heat of battle. Fans at home are in for three action-packed races on Saturday and Sunday as the ASBK championship is shaping up as a mega battle in 2021 and it continues in Darwin’’.

Hidden Valley has been a happy hunting ground for Josh Waters in previous years, seen here in 2018 – TBG Image

As an added bonus, all the thrills and spills of the Alpinestars Superbike Races 1 to 3 at Hidden Valley Raceway, plus additional behind the scenes exclusive features stories will be aired on SBS in HD at 1pm-3pm on Sunday 4 July, while fans can also catch up on ASBK TV at any time via SBS On-Demand.

The ASBK action at the Merlin Darwin Triple Crown commences with a pair of practice sessions on Friday, 18 June.

Daniel Falzon at Hidden Valley in 2017 – TBG Image

ASBK Round 4 – Hidden Valley Schedule

Friday, 18 June
10:25am – Practice 1 (40 min) FOX Sports
2:20pm – Practice 2 (30 min) FOX Sports

Saturday, 19 June
10:15am – Qualifying 1 (20 min) FOX Sports
10:40am – Qualifying 2 (15 min) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Jack Mahaffy leads a crazy Supersport 300 race at Hidden Valley
Jack Mahaffy leads a crazy Supersport 300 race at Hidden Valley in 2017 – TBG Image

2021 ASBK Calendar

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Source: MCNews.com.au