Table of contents |
2 Route Plotting |
A map is essential for rallying. In any form of the sport, you will be using a map, either a standard type of map such as an Ordnance Survey map, or one provided by the event organisers, which may be in the form of a road book or pacenotes.
For road rallying, standard published maps are generally used, and in the UK these are the Ordnance Survey (OS) 1:50,000 "Landranger" series, or possibly the more modern 1:25,000 "Explorer" series. Both of these series use the same national grid, and the information here can be used with either type.
Before attempting an event, it is worthwhile becoming very familiar with the maps you will be using, and understanding how features are represented.
To describe the course of a rally and the correct route that the competitor should take, the organisers will provide route information which will relate to the maps you are expected to use. These come in many forms, as listed below.
Sometimes a white is used to disambiguate a route - these will be drawn as dashed lines.
Sometimes a white may be part of the route! This will usually be stated in the route information, or else the route will work only if you use a clearly marked white.
A Grid Reference is the standard way of plotting a point on a map. These may be given to varying degrees of accuracy, depending on the requirements of the event. A standard grid reference has 6 figures, but occasionally 8 or 10 figure references will be given. Sometimes, whole, half or quarter grid squares are specified, and for these only a four figure reference is required. For the OS maps, the UK national grid is based on gridlines drawn at 1km intervals. Each grid line has a unique number, but for clarity the map will only show the last two digits of the grid number. Since every 100km these repeat, a two letter code is assigned to each 100km square region to remove any possibility of confusion. Usually these are ignored, since it would be rare for a rally to cover more than this amount of area.
The grid numbers along the east-west axis are called EASTINGS, and the grid numbers along the north-south axis are called NORTHINGS. When giving a grid refernence, the Eastings are given first, then the Northings. A mnemonic for this is "crawl before you walk", though that may not help some!
A six figure standard grid reference provides a resolution to 1/10th of a grid square, which is 100 metres on the ground. The 1:50,000 map can be used down to 25 metres on the ground, which is where the longer references come in. For pinpoint accuracy - always needed for plotting on rallies - a romer is essential. This is a transparent ruler device which matches the scale of the map being used. By aligning the ruler marks accurately over the map, a pencil mark may be made at the exact spot given by the reference.
Example: Grid reference TL045672
TL locates the unique 100km square on the grid - we can usually ignore it since we know which map we are using.
04 - this is the EASTINGS square
5 - this is a point 5/10ths further into the square - i.e. to the right of the grid line 04
67 - this is the NORTHINGS square
2 - this is a point 2/10 further into the square - i.e. below the grid line 67
10 figure references are used to resolve down to 25m on the ground, and use decimal notation - 25, 50 and 75 meaning 1/4, 1/2 and 3/4 of the 100m value, e.g:
0452567250
gives square 04, 67
point 5.25, 2.50
Tip: Remember that the exact route must be correctly followd on a rally. A popular trick with organisers is to use a 10-figure reference to guide the route around a small triangular junction in a particular way (usually the unexpected way). Chances are, a manned control will be placed within sight of such a route, or else a codeboard (unmanned control) on the 'wrong side' of the triangle which you will miss if you fail to follow the exact correct route. Either way you will collect a fail for an incorrect route, so it pays to be careful and accurate when plotting references!
Grid references are straightforward and unambiguous. For preplot information such as the locations of blackspots, cautions, quiet zones and give-way junctions, they are generally always the way such points are listed.
For the actual 'en-route' instructions, normal grid references are rarely used except on the top level events where speed is more important - mostly the organisers are trying to slow you down, so many ways of 'encrypting' the information has been devised.Maps
Route Plotting
Route information may be marked with the statement "coloured roads only". This is not some sort of apartheid, but a way of indicating that the route information given relates only to roads coloured on the map - many tracks and green lanes are not coloured (so-called "whites"), and may be ignored when plotting a route.Grid References