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Rally raid
Type of long-distance, multi-day, off-road racing
Type of long-distance, multi-day, off-road racing

Rally raid is a type of off-road motorsport event competed with different types of vehicles. Along with shorter baja rallies, rally raid constitutes cross-country rallying. Both the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) and Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) co-organise a common World Rally-Raid Championship featuring the same events and types of vehicles.
The length of a rally raid can be as short as 2–3 days to as long as 15 days with marathon rally raids like the Dakar Rally. With skill in navigation being key, the driving skill and endurance of riders, drivers, co-drivers, and machines are put to the test. The total distance covered can be between 600 km to over 5,000 km with terrain ranging from sandy dunes, forest roads, mountain roads, and dry river beds; among others.
Origin
The Peking-Paris of 1907 was the first long distance rally raid, the French term of "raid" for an expedition or collective endeavour whose promoters, the newspaper "Le Matin", rather optimistically expected participants to help each other; it was 'won' by Prince Scipione Borghese, Luigi Barzini, and Ettore Guizzardi in an Itala.
Characteristics
Rally raid
Well known rally raids include the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge and Rallye du Maroc which are included in the world championships. Others include the TransAnatolia Rally Raid, Hellas Rally Raid, Dinaric Rally Raid, Borneo Rally Raid, and Raid De Himalaya.
National cross-country rally championships are held in Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Brazil, Argentina and South Africa, among others.
Marathon rally raid
The most well known marathon rally raid is the Dakar Rally, which can last from 10 to 15 days. Other prominent marathon rallies include the Africa Eco Race and Silk Way Rally. For amateurs the Budapest-Bamako has been considered the world's largest amateur rally raid spanning two continents and 9,000 km.
The first African rally raid run was the Côte-Côte Rally, first held in December 1976.
Vehicles and classes
Rally raid is made of various different categories and classes of vehicles. Regulations from the ASO, FIA, and FIM define the rules for each category.
Moto class
The Moto class is divided between three groups: RallyGP, Rally2, and Rally3. RallyGP is the top moto class with riders and manufacturers eligible for the World Championship in FIM rankings. This class is only open to the most experienced competitors while Rally2 is available to any rider not considered RallyGP. Rally3 is for moto-enduro machines adapted for rally use. All three have a maximum capacity of 450cc. Rally2 and Rally3 are given World Cup status in the FIM-rankings.
Popular motorcycles include those made by KTM, Gas Gas, Honda and Husqvarna because many of their bikes have finished in top positions. BMW motorcycles, Yamaha and Triumph have also been successful in the Dakar.
Quad class
The class for quads was originally a sub-class for the larger moto-class, but has been given more prominence in recent years. The class also has World Cup status within the FIM.
Car class—T1 and T2
Main article: Group T1, Group T2
The car class is made up of vehicles weighing less than 3500 kg and subdivided into several categories. The T1 Group is made up of Prototype Cross-Country Cars and is subdivided into four primary categories: T1.U, T1.1, T1.2, and T1.3. T1.U (T1 Ultimate) is a recent category built exclusively for vehicles running on renewable energies; such as the Audi RS Q e-tron. T1.1 (4x4) and T1.2 (4x2) are open to vehicles running on petrol and diesel fuels; including the Mini John Cooper Works Buggy, Toyota Hilux, and Peugeot 3008 DKR. Subclass T1.3 is open to vehicles conforming to SCORE regulations. This includes the Hummer H3 buggy and various other buggies.
The T2 category is open to Series Production Cross-Country Cars; primarily the Toyota Land Cruiser and Nissan Patrol.
Other prominent examples in the Car Class included the Mitsubishi Pajero/Montero, the Volkswagen Race Touareg, the Bowler Wildcat 200, the Mini All4 Racing and the Nissan Navara.
Lightweight and SSV class-T3 (CHALLENGER) and T4 (SSV)
Main article: Group T3, Group T4
While originally a sub-class under the car category and later a combined class; the T3 and T4 classes have been recently separated into their own respective categories.
T3 (CHALLENGER) vehicles are officially described as Lightweight Prototype Cross-Country Vehicles and can include purpose-built machines such as the Red Bull OT3 and PH-Sport Zephyr while also allowing modified variations of vehicles built and sold by Polaris, Kawasaki, Yamaha, and Can-Am. The T4(SSV)category is for Modified Production Cross-Country Side-by-Side (SSV) vehicles; such as those built by Polaris and Can-Am, but built closer to production standards.
Both categories must weigh no more than 3500 kg and are eligible for their own respective FIA World Cups.
Truck class—T5
Main article: Group T5

The Truck class, also known as "Camions" or "Lorries" is made up of vehicles weighing more than 3500 kg. While originally designated as Group T4; they have recently been solely given the T5 category with the T4 group now referring to Side by Side (UTV) vehicles.
Made up of both Prototype and Production Cross-Country Trucks; the class has been dominated by trucks built by Russian manufacturer Kamaz. Other competitors include Iveco, Hino, MAZ, Tatra, LIAZ, Mercedes-Benz Unimog, Renault Kerax, and various others. A FIA World Cup is awarded to drivers and co-drivers in this class.
Notable events
- World Rally-Raid Championship
- FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies (Defunct)
- FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship (Defunct)
- Dakar Rally
- Rally dos Sertões
- Africa Eco Race
- Australasian Safari (Defunct)
- Hellas Rally
- Silk Way Rally
- Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge
- Rallye OiLibya du Maroc
- Merzouga Rally
- Rallye des Pharaons
- 2008 Central Europe Rally
- Budapest-Bamako – Largest amateur rally raid
- Sonora Rally
- Rally Adventure Georgia
- Rimba Raid
- Rebelle Rally
- Udabno Rally
References
References
- (10 December 2018). "FIA Cross-Country Rallies General Prescriptions – 2019". fia.com.
- (13 February 2019). "2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship Regulations". fim-live.com.
- Andrews, Allen. ''The Mad Motorists: The Great Peking–Paris Race of '07'' (Harrap, 1964), p.16.
- Race Dezert http://www.race-dezert.com/home/the-trans-saharan-budapest-bamako-rally-49536.html
- The Motorsport Memorial Team. "Motorsport Memorial". Motorsport Memorial.
- (15 January 2016). "Top Five Differences Between Desert Racing And Rally Raid - race-deZert.com".
- "FAQ".
- "Regulations DAKAR 2022".
- "FIA CROSS COUNTRY RALLIES".
- "FIM Documents".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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