He added: “A lot of these ideas come about as a combination of some engineering for certain aspects, but also our mechanics, our technicians and all our team members also have good ideas. Certain people will know what we’re talking about with this topic, but there was a lot of mechanic input to what you see here.
“And not only in this project but in other ones as well that quite often you can make some really useful work very quickly by just having very handy people doing things immediately. If you go away and think about it for too long, say that everything has to be calculated, everything has to be designed, everything has to be tested on a rig… then you’re two months behind. If you can take everyone’s ideas, bring them into reality as quickly as possible and then reverse engineer them to be available immediately, you can save that time.”
But when is the snorkel in play? Not all the time. The deployment of the snorkel is controlled by the co-driver via a solenoid valve. It’s essentially a glorified version of the button the co-driver’s push to close the regular air intake when the car goes through a watersplash. The precise deployment strategy hasn’t been decided on yet – but I’m sure Kalle, Elfyn and Taka will be happy to share that with us as the event progresses…
The main thing to understand is that, when the rain comes this week, the GR Yaris Rally1 will likely take on a certain submarine-like capability.
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