The first night of the first ever
MotoGP night test, held at the Losail circuit in Qatar, has been dominated by world champion
Casey Stoner.
Just 167 days after the project's approval, the world's largest permanent sports lighting system - covering an area akin to 70 FIFA football pitches - was officially switched on in a ceremony ahead of the test, which finished at 1am local time.
The quest to eliminate as much shadowing as possible has resulted in the provision of enough light for a hypothetical street running from Qatar's capital, Doha, to Moscow in Russia - while the power required amounts to some 5.4 million watts, enough to provide electricity simultaneously to some 3,000 houses.
None of which was probably on Stoner's mind as the young Australian burst three-seconds clear of the field just 45-minutes into the test and, after the full seven hours of day one track time, the Ducati star - making a rare appearance in full Marlboro livery - was still standing 0.689secs in front.
"The first impression is like playing on the videogame 'Need for Speed'!" said Casey. "It's definitely a lot different to what we're used to. It's not better or worse, just different. The most interesting thing is that with lower visibility, at least with regard to the imperfections on the track, you have to have more confidence than your instinct tells you to have."
Stoner's best lap, of 1min 55.330secs, was 1.2secs inside his own fastest race lap at the 2007 grand prix - set
en route to his debut MotoGP victory - and just 0.3secs from
Valentino Rossi's pole position time.
Fiat Yamaha rider
Jorge Lorenzo was the rider closest to Stoner, the reigning 250cc world champion headlining an impressive opening day for the four premier-class rookies - who were all inside the top six.