Citroen C3 WRC Sets Sail For Corsica
March 28, 2019 by Citroën
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Number of wins: 2 (2016 and 2018) Esapekka Lappi, Citroën Total WRT driver: 'I have always really enjoyed this rally and I can't wait to get started. I love driving on clean tarmac like here or in Catalonia. The challenge will be to take good pace notes from the word go. I think pace notes are even more important on asphalt than on gravel in order to get the line right and to know what speed you can carry through corners. With the revised itinerary, we'll all be in the same boat with regards to familiarity. Although it won't be easy, it's an opportunity for us, since we generally have a bit less knowledge of the roads on the other rallies. In any case, our tests went well and I feel confident. I hope I can be at least as competitive as last year.' Number of appearances at the event: 3 Best result: 6th (2018) KEY FIGURES - 14 timed stages covering a total of 347.51km - 133.34 the number of kilometres this year where crews will need to take new pace notes - 47.18 km for Castigniccia, the weekend's longest stage, held twice on Saturday's leg - 6 overall wins secured by Citroën at the Tour de Corse in the WRC: 1 with Xsara Kit-Car (1999), 3 with Xsara WRC (2001, 2005 and 2006), 2 with C4 WRC (2007 and 2008) - 2 for the second year running, Citroën France is the lead official partner of the Tour de Corse TOUR DE CORSE SCHEDULE (GMT+1 until 30/03, GMT+2 from 31/03) With the opening leg taking the crews from Porto-Vecchio to Propriano, then heading north on day two towards Castagniccia, Cap Corse and the Désert des Agriates, before finishing next to Calvi, this year's edition of the classic island rally remains faithful to the recently-restored tradition of touring the whole of Corsica. In addition to the various regions covered, the 2019 Tour de Corse has plenty of other ingredients to make it a serious test. The total competitive distance is now close to 350km (compared with 333.48km in 2018), Friday's leg only has a tyre-fitting zone at the midway point, Saturday features some 174.50km with two runs on the 47.18km-long and especially demanding Castagniccia stage, all rounded off with a longer Power Stage (19.34km) than usual, set against the magnificent backdrop of the Fango valley. The other major difficulty stems from the fact that more than 62% of the itinerary has been revamped. Of the fourteen stages, only three – Valinco (SS2/SS5, 25.94km), last contested in 2015, Cap Corse (SS7/SS10, 25.62km) and Désert des Agriates (SS8/SS11,14.45km), both contested last year – are familiar to the current crop of world championship crews. This makes it all the more important for them to get to grips with and take good pace notes on the 133.34 new kilometres in just two passes during recce at a limited maximum speed (80kph). Recce looks set to be even more crucial than usual and will call for unremitting concentration throughout.
posted on conceptcarz.com
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