![]() Sidecars 33.611s Rick Ford and Henk Zeeven 26 August 2018 (round 2, race 1) Sidecars 33.769s Rick Ford and Henk Zeeven 21 February 2016 (round 5, race 1)į4 28.769s Jason Hearn 29 October 2017 (round 4, race 2)į5 29.812s Nathanael Diprose 29 October 2017 (round 4, race 2) Mt Wellington Kart track (0.495km) anti-clockwise:į4 28.483s Aaron Hassan 11 September 2016 (round 3, race 2)į5 29.831s Nathanael Diprose 15 February 2015 (round 5, race 1) #ISLAND RACER 2018 ARCHIVE#You can view the archive of AMCC Bucket Championships here.īucket racing (F4 and F5 Miniature Road Racing and Sidecars) is a great introduction to road racing. There is a race meeting almost every month in Auckland, there are monthly practice days, an 8-round Auckland championship series, and two annual events - the two-hour two-man endurance race and the Dominic Howe Memorial Trophy race. There is also a national GP title, currently raced at the Tokoroa kart track in March or April. There are opportunities to travel to other centres to race, such as Taumaranui, Wellington and Tokoroa. ![]() There are even bucket race meetings in the South Island for those keen to travel.Īlthough directly descended from airfield bucket racing, almost all events are currently run on outdoor kart tracks. The Auckland Motorcycle Club runs bucket meetings at the KartSport Mt Wellington kart track on dates published in advance. The bucket calendar is released with the kart club calendar which runs from January to December, while the bucket racing season is July to June, so the new year dates are usually announced in October. Bucket racing has a summer recess so as not to clash with holidays and the national road race season. ![]() It isn’t unusual for bucket race bikes to end up in the back of someone’s garage not being used. If you have a bucket that you are not racing or you know of a bucket that is not being raced, please do your best to ensure that it gets back on the track where it belongs. #ISLAND RACER 2018 FREE#There is free advertising available in the club newsletter. ![]() The AMCC Bucket Committee sends out sporadic emails to remind bucket racers about what events are coming up and any other items of interest. If you would like to be added to this mailing list, email you want to know what bucket racing looks like, there are some sample of photos in the bucket racing gallery here. Also there are loads of great photos of recent bucket racing events, and other AMCC "big bike" events, on Chris Cain's Flickr page here. Huge thanks to Chris and Simon Cain for their many great photos. The rules that govern what types of bikes can be used for bucket racing and how bucket race meetings must be run are set out by MNZ (Motorcycling New Zealand) among the rules that govern all motorcycle racing in New Zealand. These rules can be found on the MNZ website. Below is some general information and some useful links to the rules that relate to bucket racing. To be eligible for bucket racing, a motorcycle must have an engine that is derived from a road-legal motorcycle. The F4 class is a popular entry-level class (even though the engines are bigger than in F5) because the bikes are readily available and we run B-Grade and C-Grade classes for F4 riders of different levels.Įngines from motocross bikes, enduro bikes, road-race bikes and pitbikes are not eligible. ![]()
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