Le Mans to Berlin and a bit beyond

The great thing about endurance racing and Le Mans in particular, is that practice week and the practice cessions themselves are so long. The cessions for the 62 cars of the main event are three hours each. To put that into perspective, an F1 Grand Prix is about 90 minutes, whilst a MototGP is about 45 minutes. OK, if you are a team and have a serious problem, then three hours might just flash by, but for a paying spectator, it’s bloody good value.

I bicycled up to Mulsanne, which is about 15 minutes. From the entry check point it’s maybe 10 minutes walk to Mulsanne Corner, along the sprint (ie against the direction of the cars) as they hurtle towards Indianapolis / Arnage, where my camper van is. I arrived in time to buy a beer and stand in several good spots to snap some pictures. I guess I spent an hour there. I then pedalled back to the Armage campsite and watched for another half hour from there. They are still going round now. That is good value, as my entry ticket runs from last Friday, right through to a week on Monday.

The other great thing about coming to practice week is, besides no great crowds, you get a chance to see all the cars, many of which will either change liveries for Le Mans and / or there’ll be some in the field of 62 you’ve not seen before. It’s a good way to orientate yourself. As the slower cars are lapped in about seven or eight laps (20 minutes) practice looks pretty much like the race itself, as the cars are all jumbled up. Sometimes you’ll just see one car on its own, then (just as suddenly) you’ll see five or more all dicing against the clock and each other. I guess it’s the purest form of racing, rather like the long distance Olympic running races are very different to the 100 metres sprint.
 
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it's amusing me that you are using cession in multiple posts rather than session, presumably a word you use at work so mistype or your spellchecker is assuming you need the c version
 
Monday, and it’s time for breakfast:

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I still need to buy a Tischmülleimer.

There’s nothing going on on the track today, the roads having gone back to public use. I’ll probably take the opportunity to pedal up to the top of the circuit, to see what’s what. That if it doesn’t start to rain, following yesterday’s blue skies.
 
I have done my bit for English / French relationships.

The camp site wouldn’t let the lad plug his scooter in to charge. My generator came to his rescue:

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With the generator running, I took the opportunity to bang the van’s leisure battery up to 100% at the same time. It’s been fine on solar charging, despite me being parked in the shade, facing north and it not being wall to wall blue sky:

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It’s hardly straining itself, running in eco mode:

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The Honda generator (I bought a shop store display / demonstration model, for a pretty good discount) is a significant step up from my last, which was also a Honda in a sewing machine type case. More power (not that the last was underpowered) with better power sockets, now fuel injected and having the useful Bluetooth app to check on the fuel level and the like.
 
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I took the opportunity to order from the Amazon, a campsite hook-up to Euro standard mains female converter lead, which I’ll pick up in Mulsanne tomorrow.

I think that completes my full set of leads and converters.
 
I have done my bit for English / French relationships.

The camp site wouldn’t let the lad plug his scooter in to charge. My generator came to his rescue:

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With the generator running, I took the opportunity to bang the van’s leisure battery up to 100% at the same time. It’s been fine on solar charging, despite me being parked in the shade, facing north and it not being wall to wall blue sky:

View attachment 510520

It’s hardly straining itself, running in eco mode:

View attachment 510522

The Honda generator (I bought a shop store display / demonstration model, for a pretty good discount) is a significant step up from my last, which was also a Honda in a sewing machine type case. More power (not that the last was underpowered) with better power sockets, now fuel injected and having the useful Bluetooth app to check on the fuel level and the like.
Bonshure;:clap:D
A proper holiday wapping; :beerjug:
 
A proper holiday wapping;

Thank you.

It’s pretty relaxed coming down to the practice week, chatting to bods and whatever.

Providing you don’t have to buy loads or go miles, say out for lunch, then a bicycle is more than adequate. Having the generator is just a luxury, of more use to my neighbours than to me so far. But hey, it helps them out and they’ve bought me 10 litres of fuel, which I didn’t ask them for.
 
Is that a Yeti Trailhed chair? :nenau
I’ve been looking at good fold up chairs recently because I discovered the other day that my mega comfy fishing chair won’t fit under the bed of my small van! :blast
 
Is that a Yeti Trailhed chair?

It is.

It is very comfortable, but you don’t want to be carrying it slung over your shoulder, too far along the trail. For sitting in out on the circuit, I have a Maclaren Gadabout chair from the early 70’s, which must be getting on for 50 years old.
 
Tuesday and the weather (so far) has brightened up a bit.

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No great plans, so I’ll just see how the day unfolds. The campsite is starting to fill up, unsurprisingly. Long gone are the days when we used to rock-up at Arnage midmorning on Friday, buy maybe 10 tickets for the race weekend and all the car parks from a fellow, sweating in a sea container in the blazing sun.

In other news, the lead I ordered is on its way from the Amazon and should arrive for me to pick up in Mulsanne, later today.
 
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