by Glenn Wallace
THE ALCAN WINTER RALLY – A BITTER TEST OF PERFORMANCE MACHINES AND RALLY TEAMS, RANGING 4,700 RUGGED MILES FROM KIRKLAND, WASHINGTON, CLEAR TO THE SHORES OF THE ARCTIC OCEAN AND BACK TO ANCHORAGE, ALASKA.
As much as I wanted to compete in the Alcan Winter Rally, after five years of scheming my goal seemed as remote as the racecourse itself. I’d sold my previous winter rally cars, and most of my friends were already making plans, including Sports Car Club of America Pro Rally heroes R. Dale Kraushaar and Paul Eklund in Subaru-sponsored vehicles (a Baja Turbo and Forester XT, respectively). But then I realized I had the perfect car in my garage: a white WRX STi. It had plenty of power as well as a “secret weapon” – Driver Controlled Center Differential (DCCD) – which might even compensate for my mediocre driving skills.
The Alcan requires two drivers for the ice racing along the way, so I called my good friend Greg Hightower. It was a short conversation: “I’m taking the STi on the Alcan,” I said. “I’m in,” he replied.
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Subaru’s engineers easily could have omitted the switch and thumbwheel that allow the driver to manually control the amount of lock of the center differential – the transmission computer (TCU) is smart enough to apply the correct amount of lock in most driving conditions.
However, a high fixed amount of lock preset is an advantage when accelerating hard on ice, snow, or slick pavement. From a rally driver’s perspective, predictable acceleration and braking are paramount; manual mode can provide that predictability.
To warm up to the snowy driving conditions, we traveled with the Subaru team to Vancouver and the renowned Thunderbird Rally, usually the most popular TSD (Time-Speed-Distance) rally on the continent.
Practicing on Barnes Lake, we quickly discovered what an amazing car the STi is in winter conditions. With the DCCD on full lock (100 percent), it launched in second gear like a rabbit at a dog race! A fellow from an ice-racing club told us the crazy, purpose-built ice racers were hitting 100 mph on the long-course straight. The STi easily reached 90 mph on the short-course straight, going flat out over some scary ice heaves.
My previous five years of “T-Bird” racing involved wide eyes, sweaty palms and digging snow – but the STi made driving effortless. We spent the weekend giggling like schoolchildren as Greg and I won the event and Subaru took the team prize.

1. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17
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6. Sunday, February 22
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The first ice-racing venue on the Alcan was the Gold Pan Raceway at Quesnel, British Columbia. My heart sank when I saw it: a 10-foot-wide channel plowed through refrozen snow, extremely solid and slippery as an oval luge run. A fast impact with either bank could be terminal.
Taking it easy on my first run allowed me to get the feel of the bumpy track. With the DCCD locked, I had plenty of grip and acceleration. The quick-ratio steering helped me keep the STi on course. My second run was faster, but coming out of the final corner at full throttle I clipped a snowbank and lost precious seconds. I downshifted to second to pull myself back onto the track, but my fast run was ruined. However, Greg had decent times to put us in fourth place for the ice slalom. Paul placed first with two blistering runs in the Forester.
Our second ice-race venue, at Fish Lake near Whitehorse in the Yukon, was a superbly laid out technical course of four corners and two hairpins – and the slickest ice track yet. If it were a quarter-mile drag strip, we would have cleaned up. But ice racing is as much about technique as it is about grip. Greg put in two fast times, while I put in a slow time followed by a blazing run. On the final hairpin, I applied too much e-brake and throttle lift. On the ice, this was overkill: I went past the intended 180 into a slow 270 which I deftly turned into a 540. The crowd’s applause was small comfort, but Greg’s times were hot enough to earn second place behind Jake Engstrom and R. Dale in the Baja.
At Big Lake, outside Anchorage, the final ice race figured heavily in the overall results. Every team was going for broke.
The course was a large, oval track with a pronounced crown. As I walked the track with Paul, he described a crazy plan to bounce from corner to corner. Determined to avoid my prior disasters, I planned to stay on the inside of the crown and keep the car balanced. Both of my runs were perfect, with the car 45-degrees sideways around the entire track at full throttle and all four studded tires loudly chewing up the ice. My satisfaction waned when Paul produced two amazing, gyrating runs in the Forester – each more than five seconds faster than mine!
During our travels I was frequently asked, “What’s the STi like to drive?” My reply: “Like a 300-horsepower snowmobile!”
Greg and I were ecstatic to be first in our class, but even happier to discover we were the top Alcan rookies. And Subaru won the Alcan trophy for highest-placing team – a fitting tribute to its vehicles’ impressive winter capabilities.
| Vehicle | Overall | Class | Ice Racing |
| Forester | 3rd | 1st | 1st |
| STi | 4th | 1st | 3rd |
| Baja | 6th | 3rd | 2nd |
For more about the Alcan Winter Rally and other driving events, visit www.challengedriving.com and www.alcan5000.com.