here - SVW Register
Transcription
here - SVW Register
SVW NEWSLET TER Paul Campbell [email protected] www.svwregister.co.uk T WELCOME TO THE SVW NEWSLETTER his month we have a report on the SVW Event that took place in Belgium in mid-June. There were some 20 SVWs and 52 people from seven countries in attendance at Trooz. Mike Dalby’s timely submission relates his own experience of this very enjoyable event travelling in Alan Dolman’s VA Saloon. The 2017 SVW Event is provisionally planned to take place near Colchester in the first week of July, organised by Jane and Robert Crayston. And now a green theme! Piers Hubbard sent in some details of MG2016 which took place in Louisville, Kentucky, and Walter Preschl tells us about his postrestoration sortie in his VA Tourer. Our Regalia man, Chris Cox, has been looking at options for garments (caps, polo shirts, fleeces, etc.) that our members may wish to purchase with a newly designed SVW Register logo. Is this something you would like? It would be good to hear your views either way (email above as always). SVW EVENT IN BELGIUM “Would you like to come to Belgium in the VA?” asked Alan. He explained that it was a trip organised by the MG Car Club SVW Register to the Ardennes region and his wife was unable to travel great distances in the car. I had been to Montlhery with him in the car previously and so after about two seconds the answer was “Yes please!” I remembered that the German offensive in the winter of 1944 had taken place in the area in which we were to stay and I hoped that we would be visiting a museum of the events. All bookings were made and we left Devon on Sunday June 13 for the long drive along the south coast to Dover for the overnight accommodation. I knew the first one hundred miles or so past the “Wall and the five legged Stag” at Charborough Park, but the scenery from the navigator’s seat was all new to me after the picturesque Arundel Castle. We were due to sail on the 10am boat to Dunkirk, but the French customs were checking every passport on the buses and lorries and so the process was so long that we missed the 10am and had to cross the Channel on the 12.00! That of course made us late to start our journey to our Chateau Harzé, 15 miles south of Liège. 38 SAFETY FAST! SEPTEMBER 2016 MG_SafetyFast_Sept16_3-52.indd 38 Whilst waiting for the boat other SVW cars arrived, including a large MG WA Tickford, plus Tourer versions of our VA saloon. John and Gail Bannister, the dedicated tour organisers from the SVW Register, had provided us all with a detailed route to our Chateau. The route was mainly dual carriageway and some of the cars shot off at 60mph, but we kept up a steady 50-55mph. Nearing Brussels the traffic became very heavy and suddenly we saw all the other cars in our party stopped at the side of the dual carriageway. One had its bonnet open and it transpired that a new condenser was required, which we were able to supply! All was well and we again ventured into the nose-to-tail traffic on the Brussels ring road. Our route took us through the middle of Liège, but using underground through tunnels – a brilliant method of traversing a city quickly. It was becoming quite late and we still had 30 miles to go, so thinking that we were unlikely be able to obtain food at the Chateau, we purchased a pizza at a service station. It was to be very welcome and, as we had thought, the restaurant was closed! Tuesday was a free day but we had to register for the event at the rally Chateau Bleu ‘HQ’ at 5pm in Trooz about 12 Restaurant on a pole at Gileppe! (Paul Campbell) www.mgcc.co.uk 23/08/2016 17:50 SVW NEWSLET TER Mike Dalby dines with a mystery guest at Chateau Bleu (Paul Campbell) Norbert and Marcella Huyghebaert, owners of Chateau Bleu, together with John Bannister our event organiser (Paul Campbell) View from the restaurant of some of the SVWs on the Gileppe Dam (Paul Campbell) miles away. However, it was decided to go there in the morning and meet the other participants and see the cars. There were many cars from all over the Continent, including a very new ‘Woodie’ VA (see March edition – Ed) that had recently been completed in Holland and has been featured in several magazines already. What a superb job – beautiful! Another car was a dark blue SA saloon that had also been recently finished and was as pristine inside as out! No dirty boots in there! As we had a few hours to spare and the Spa-Francorchamps motor racing circuit was not far away, that was the place to visit! The weather was wet but undeterred we found the way and toured the circuit. The circuit lap is 4.5 miles and the fastest lap time is 1 minute 47 seconds set by Sebastian Vettel in 2009! One does not appreciate on television the steepness of the gradients until one sees the circuit for real. Before the event I had done some ‘homework’ on the Battle of the Bulge of December 1944 and found that the German advance had finished at La Gleize, which just happened to be on our way back from Spa to Trooz. We stopped in the village where the VA attracted much attention, but we didn’t visit the museum or see the King Tiger tank – maybe later. Registering at HQ we obtained the rally plate for the car and an extra one for me! The plan was to leave our cars at the Chateau Bleu and to board a coach for the trip back to our Chateau so we were able to partake of the local hospitality! Returning by the ‘school bus’ the following morning we received our detailed route books with the ‘Tulip’ diagrams, helpfully also recorded in miles. The route book had been compiled by Norbert Huyghebaert, the owner of the Chateau Bleu, who also owns an E-Type Jaguar and an MG T type ‘Q replica’ which sounded very ‘Brooklands’ www.mgcc.co.uk MG_SafetyFast_Sept16_3-52.indd 39 The countryside in the Ardennes is steep valleys and densely wooded hills and very much an agricultural economy – all very picturesque. Our route took us on the ‘wigglies’, rather than the dual carriageways, and guided us through many villages and up and down steep hills, but the cars performed admirably, all arriving at the first photo shoot outside Chateau Neuville after 17.3 miles. “Gentlemen, start your engines!” It was off to the lunch stop and tour of the Chateau de Modave. Another beautiful chateau originally built in the Middle Ages, but rebuilt in the 17th century with very elaborate interior stucco work, too ornate for my taste. However our lunch was good! A number of cars had minor troubles, the only major one being a slipping clutch on a supercharged SA saloon that had to be taken back to England on the back of a lorry! But only after the transport had picked up the wrong car and had to return it, much to the SEPTEMBER 2016 SAFETY FAST! 39 23/08/2016 17:50 A quick stop at The Menin Gate at Ypres on the way home (Paul Campbell) amusement of the others and the consternation of the German owner! The route took us past our chateau and so we stopped there, only to find that we had been locked out of our room even though it had been cleaned earlier in the day! A joiner was eventually found who broke the lock and we were eventually able to change for the evening’s festivities. There was all-round amusement to hear of our exploits. Looking on the bright side we had, however, missed the Register AGM! It was again onto the ‘school bus’ after the festivities to our chateau, to be returned next morning after a hearty breakfast to re-join our car at the Chateau Bleu. Thursday’s tour was to finish at a scenic restaurant, but first a visit to a Second World War museum about the Battle of the Bulge. It was a superb museum with a mobile device that told the story of each exhibit. There was also a film show during the visit. Off again to drive to the lunch stop! However, this was the only time 40 SAFETY FAST! SEPTEMBER 2016 MG_SafetyFast_Sept16_3-52.indd 40 that the route book let us down and there were cars going in all directions. All was duly sorted out when we realised we had still a further 15 miles to drive. What a restaurant we found when we did arrive! It was 150 metres up in the air and we had to go up the outside in glass lifts! Very scary, but the view of the dam from the dining area was superb despite the rain and the mist. The scariness tended to wear off after two glasses of wine! For some this was the official end of the tour and they made their farewells. The rest departed back to their chateaux and we took a couple who had been in another car all day, but were staying at our hotel. Our route took us again past La Gleize and this time we paused to see the King Tiger tank – it was huge! It was obtained for the museum in exchange for a bottle of brandy! Going round the museum, it was quite similar to the other with dioramas depicting various phases of the battle, all with authentic military uniforms of both sides. We took a route from the museum up a steep hill and with four in the car it performed admirably and never missed a beat. That evening we went out for a farewell meal at a local restaurant in the village with our new friends, saying that we would meet up again next year for the annual SVW event in Colchester, Essex. Leaving for the drive back to Dunkirk at 6.30 the following morning, the car made good progress until we were held up after Liège in a 3.5 km queue following a lorry accident. It took over an hour to pass, but crawling along the temperature of the car’s radiator never climbed at all. We still made Dunkirk with an hour to spare! Back home in Devon, we had covered a total of 1,152 miles in weather that at times had left something to be desired as we had some torrential rain, but the car had never leaked and had done all that we had asked of it, at a speed that was in keeping with the age and time of the car. Mike Dalby www.mgcc.co.uk 23/08/2016 17:50 SVW NEWSLET TER WEDDING DRIVE IN GERMANY Walter Preschl in his VA Tourer driving Anke and Thomas In 2015 for the mid-September weekend I was asked to transport a bride and groom in my vintage car. Why not, I thought, as the old lady VA764 had just completed a frame up restoration of seven years a few months earlier. VA764 was bought in 2007 in Reading from the son of the late Dennis Sears. So on Saturday September 19 I visited the flower shop in the morning and at 2pm I had to be at the church in our neighbouring village of Willsbach. Shortly afterwards the ceremony was over and the newly married couple came out. After a photo session with about 50 guests, they climbed into the car and off we went to the restaurant where the extended family and many friends enjoyed a champagne reception. The restaurant was nicely located on top of a hill between vineyards. On my ride to the flower shop and back we had rainy weather, but before the ceremony was over and with the ringing of the church bells, the sun came through and I could open the top. All the way to the restaurant the couple, Anke and Thomas, were competing with the sun with their smiles. Walter Preschl CHAIRMAN’S NOTES The Register held its AGM in the Ardennes, Belgium this year - we always try to hold the AGM at our annual event as that way we get a goodly number of members attending. Keith and Ann Bush, Jeff Gibson and David Smyth all left the committee and I want to record our great thanks for their enormous contribution in recent years. John Bannister and John Bates have both rejoined and I look forward to their company over the coming months. The new committee structure is shown on our website. John Bannister also organized the annual event in the Ardennes, about which you can read here - he did a great job, despite the weather. My especial thanks to Paul for putting this newsletter together - Paul has taken over as full-time scribe for the Register following Anne Bush’s departure. John Dutton MG2016 – KENTUCKY MG2016 is the five-yearly gathering of MGs in North America when the Registers come together. The SVW cars come under the banner of MMM. It was held at Louisville, Kentucky, this time; a big gathering as there were 100 tables of 10 or 11 each at the farewell dinner. This car was the only SVW in attendance at the Show. There were outings to the Corvette factory, a Bourbon Distillery and continuous tech sessions prior to this. It was hot on the show ground; I gave up counting MGAs when I melted at 95⁰F. Both Peter Cook and Brian Woodhams from MGCC Overseas were in attendance, so there may well be further details of this event published. Piers Hubbard www.mgcc.co.uk MG_SafetyFast_Sept16_3-52.indd 41 SEPTEMBER 2016 SAFETY FAST! 41 23/08/2016 17:50