Street Machine

ROLLING 30

Our homies over at Unique Cars had a shindig at Sydney Motorsport Park, so we checked it out

- STORY ANDREW BROADLEY PHOTOS SHAUN TANNER & ZANE DOBIE

WHEN our mates at Unique Cars reasoned they’d attended enough car events that it was high time they hosted one of their own, we thought we’d better tag along and suss it out. They’d seen how much fun we’d been having running events like

Street Machine Drag Challenge, and for their own foray into the event space they decided that while the whole Cars ’n’ Coffee formula was a winner, it could be improved upon by incorporat­ing a more dynamic element.

And so they concocted a Cars ’n’ Coffeestyl­e event to be run at Sydney Motorsport Park’s South Circuit, which included plenty of opportunit­ies for entrants to cruise the track, along with race car demonstrat­ions and ridealongs. The name ‘Rolling 30’ is a reference to that dynamic element of the event, along with the rolling 30-year-old rule that qualifies vehicles for historic registrati­on in most Australian states.

Owners of cars aged 30 years and older were able to park up, grab a cuppa, check out the many and varied classics that had

assembled, and enjoy the decidedly relaxed atmosphere of the day. A couple of Drag Challenge veterans in Alysha Teale, John Kerr and Gizmo Grima had their toys out for a play, but not all the cars were typical Street

Machine fare, with everything from a blindingly fast Lotus open-wheel race car to an oh-socool 13B turbo-powered HR ute on offer, but everyone seemed to lap up the variety.

Perhaps the cars to generate the most interest though were two of the rarest and most valuable Australian muscle cars in existence: a pair of XA GTHO Phase IV Falcons. The red one, which featured on the cover of Unique

Cars #425, was for sale (asking price: a cool two-mill). The Calypso Green car was at the event for display purposes only, thanks to Chester Fernando of Muscle Car Stables. Witnessing both Phase IVS take to the race track at once was a remarkable experience.

At the other end of the attainabil­ity spectrum, I turned some laps in my thongslapp­er-powered LC Torana, and really enjoyed the opportunit­y to take friends and family out for a spirited cruise. I also managed to wrangle

WITNESSING BOTH XA GTHO PHASE IV FALCONS TAKE TO THE RACE TRACK AT ONCE WAS A REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE

I THOUGHT THE TRADITIONA­L V8 GUYS MIGHT NOT ENJOY THE JAPANESE OR EURO STUFF, BUT THERE WAS A LOT OF MUTUAL APPRECIATI­ON THERE

event organiser Joseph Lenthall into the car for some laps and a chinwag towards the pointy end of the event.

“Unique Cars wanted a successful event – their own Drag Challenge – so that the brand could extend its involvemen­t in the scene and with its clients, readers, advertiser­s and traders,” Joseph said. “We had 167 cars entered and more than 300 people went out on track, whether that was as a driver, secondary driver or a passenger. Nearly 1000 people came through the gate to have a look, which was fantastic for our first event. To add some colour, we invited specific race cars all older than 30 years to do some demonstrat­ion laps with passengers. We had a collection of Group N historic cars, Improved Production cars and HQS.”

At the mention of race cars, Joe offered to line me up some hot laps in his mate Dan Ridley’s Improved Production VK Commodore (SM

LSX Tuner #3), which I’d been admiring in the pits earlier that day. Powered by a mental LS1 making north of 450rwhp, it was brutally fast, and with its rear tyres well and truly spent by that stage in proceeding­s, I giggled inside my helmet as Riddo lapped the technical South Circuit layout faster than I imagined possible – more often than not with tyres ablaze. It was a truly rad experience and one I certainly won’t forget in a hurry.

“The variety of the cars has been the highlight for a lot of people; that’s been the feedback,” concluded Joe as the first Rolling 30 drew to a close. “I thought the traditiona­l V8 guys might not enjoy the Japanese or Euro stuff and vice versa, but there was a lot of mutual appreciati­on there. That’s great, because that’s what Unique Cars is all about; it’s not just muscle cars.”

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