Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsHill climb notches 20

Hill climb notches 20

By Iain Curry

Fifty Sunshine Coast drivers battled some of Australia’s finest racers at the 2017 Summer Noosa Hill Climb, enduring a mix of sunny and then treacherously wet conditions at the event’s 20th anniversary edition.
Over 150 racing, classic and modern sports cars raced up the challenging 1.5-kilometre Gyndier Drive climb in Tewantin, with about a third of the field living on the Sunshine Coast.
Fastest of all through the 14 corners of State Forest was perennial champion Michael von Rappard of Airlie Beach in his open-wheel 1992 Dallara Hayabusa, who narrowly missed out on lowering his own track record at Noosa with a time of 50.43-seconds.
Only seven drivers managed to get under the 60-second mark, with Doonan local Grant Elliott being the fastest Sunshine Coaster with a time of 58.14-seconds in his 2006 Elfin Streamliner MS8.
A huge variety of competing cars offered everything from a 1925 Austin Sports Special to a replica of the 1967 F1 World Championship-winning Brabham Grand Prix car, right through to moderns such as Lotus Exiges and Toyota 86s.
This year’s event celebrated 20 years since the inaugural running of the Noosa Hill Climb, with four drivers taking part who had participated in that first event – Rob van Wegen, Philip Redhead, Peter Walsh and Allan Conway.
The latter three are still using the same race cars too – a 1960 MGA, 1969 Jaguar E-Type and 1960 Lotus Seven respectively.
Event chairman Bruce Anderson said the event’s success was in part down to many drivers continuing to come back to Noosa for its unique racing challenge.
“To have four drivers and three cars that were at that first event is exceptional, and there are a whole heap of other drivers who’ve attended the event over many years. The drivers always say it’s a lot of fun, it’s great grassroots motorsport and fantastic social engagement.”
“We’re always trying to improve things for spectators too, and the feedback we get is they love seeing all these incredible cars that they don’t get to see on the road anymore.”

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

The Freddys in February

Local favourites The Freddys bring vintage classic rock to Tewantin-Noosa RSL on Valentine’s Day, Saturday 14 February, 8-11pm. So if you feel like dancing...

Ballet double act

Birding in India

More News

Council asks: what makes Noosa liveable

Five years after Noosa Council conducted its first Liveability Survey in November 2021 it is asking residents to complete the 2026 survey to gain...

Birding in India

Ken Cross has just returned from his sixth birding trip to India. What is it about this country that attracts Ken? He proclaims,...

10 years of finding frog

The Mary River Catchment Coordinating Committee has announced that Find a Frog in February has been gathering data from the Sunshine to Fraser Coast...

Tewantin tennis serves up smash hit

The Tewantin Noosa Tennis Club hosted its first and hugely successful Tennis Party over the weekend, drawing more than 200 locals to its picturesque...

Traditional owners blast dingo kill

Today is a deeply sad day for the Butchulla people, and I want to begin by acknowledging the profound emotional impact this news has...

Discover the last frontier in style, Antarctica awaits

Discover the ‘White Continent’, fabulous Antarctica and sail with Viking’s Antarctic Explorer voyage for thirteen magnificent days. Journey to the stunning Antarctic Peninsula, a landscape...

Slow Down, Breathe and Bathe

In a world that rarely slows down, Japan offers something increasingly rare: space to breathe, time to reflect, and traditions designed to nurture both...

Powell backs dingo kill after tragedy

Environment Minister Andrew Powell has backed a departmental decision to destroy K’gari dingoes found near the body of Canadian visitor and resort worker, Piper...

Dingo kill knee jerk claim

K’gari dingo conservationists have accused the state government of an uninformed knee jerk reaction to the tragic death of Canadian visitor Piper James, whose...

Dingo cull a ’step towards extinction’

The Queensland Government’s culling of K’Gari dingoes was a “significant step towards the extinction of dingoes on K’gari,“ according to a statement from Humane...