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Conference oass::racers

Title:Racers and Racing
Notice:As long as it's not NASCAR or F1 or Drags...
Moderator:RHETT::BURDEN_D
Created:Tue Aug 08 1995
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:391
Total number of notes:4486

200.0. "This weeks Race In Detail" by SUBWAY::JANKOWITZ (How much does a horsepower cost?) Tue Jun 05 1990 10:49

I was looking for descriptions of other peoples races and thought this
might be a good place to start... So, here is how this season started
for me. (If you don't want to see a long note type "next unseen").

    Well, Saturday was the first race in my new car. I had run a 1.7 liter 
    Porsche 914 for the last two years in ITA. Around Christmas my wife 
    said, "If you had some money, would you buy a formula ford"? It took me 
    almost a nanosecond to answer. She said, "Well, here's some money go 
    buy one". I didn't want to look too anxious so I didn't actually go 
    look at a car until the next day. It was a Lola T640 which I then 
    purchased.
    
    The 914 was usually a backmarker in ITA so I thought I could set some 
    realistic goals with the new car for my first race.
    
    1) Finish the race in one piece with the car still running. I did one 
    test day at Lime Rock and had a couple of little annoying things happen 
    which kept my track time down (loose bolt, loose wire overheating...).
    
    2) Finish in the top half of the field.
    
    One day events at Lime Rock run 1 session of practice/qualifying in the 
    morning, race in the afternoon. I went out in the middle of the field 
    for qualifying and found myself trying to get by cars all over the 
    place. Lap after lap not one clean lap. Finally I got a clean run down 
    the hill onto the front straight and there were no other cars in sight. 
    I passed the pits and saw my pit board "IN". No way I was going to go 
    into the pits and not get a time for this lap. One whole lap with no 
    traffic!!! I looked at my crew standing in the pits waiting for me to 
    come in and wondered if they would get my time. I went in on the next 
    lap to take tire temperatures. I went back out warmed up the tires, 
    came down the hill and the checkered flag was out to end qualifying. 
    My crew had a time with a question mark after it for my clear lap which 
    was almost 2 seconds faster than my next quickest time. Without my 
    clear lap I would have started 9th. My good lap was actually almost 3 
    seconds faster than my previous best and put me 3rd on the grid out of 
    17. All during qualifying I was looking in my mirrors for the faster 
    cars to pass me and wondered where they were. In the 914 cars were 
    always going by. And here I was actually passing other cars. A guy 
    could get used to this.
    
    Now I'm sitting on the inside of the second row, hoping I am not going 
    to do something stupid and hoping nobody behind me is going to punt me 
    off in the first turn. I still had the same plan as before finish 
    respectably. I tried to get the brakes and tires warm during the pace 
    lap, we come down the hill, pace car in the pits, foot on the floor, 
    green flag out, here comes the first turn. The guy next to me pulls 
    ahead and I'm not going to put up a fight. After two turns he is 
    leading the race and I'm in fourth. Not too bad. If I can stay with the 
    lead group I will be happy. I stayed in fourth, no problem staying with 
    the first three cars. We pull away from the rest of the pack easing my 
    mind, nobody punted me off and there's nobody behind me to try. After a 
    couple of laps I start seeing broken cars on the side of the track. 
    After 3 or 4 laps I see the first backmarker. A deep breath, I rarely 
    passed a car in the last two years of racing, and now, to stay with the 
    lead pack I had to find my way by when they did. The first car was 
    going slowly down a straight when I passed, let breath out, that one 
    wasn't bad. Then, more and more slower cars. A few more laps go by and 
    I'm getting through the traffic and still with the lead pack. The 2nd 
    and 3rd place cars change position a couple of times. One time they 
    go through the left hander side by side a couple of inches apart. I 
    thought I was about to inherit second but they both made it through. 
    Now there are some yellow flags around the track pointing out some 
    carnage. Around the 10th lap there are standing yellows around the 
    track and a red flag at start finish. It seems that someone punted 
    another car off into the woods in the Uphill. You couldn't even see 
    the car because it was so far off in the woods. I shut the car off so 
    it wouldn't overheat knowing that it doesn't start on the battery in 
    the car. I hope I can get it started again. To my surprise they thought 
    I was in 4th place, right where I thought I was! I get pushed into line 
    and my brother comes over with the battery cart and plugs the car in. 
    It feels like it's about 110 degrees in the car and people are coming 
    around with water bottles asking if I want a drink. I am afraid that I 
    won't have time to take my gloves and helmet off, take a drink, and put 
    them all back on and get the car started in time so I drool as they go 
    by. The engine starts right up and the pace car takes us around again 
    for the restart. Oh boy, there won't be any traffic for the next few 
    laps! The pace car goes in, foot on floor, green flag comes out, we go 
    into the first turn and the guy behind me ducks inside me on the first 
    turn. How could I have let him by? I am in 5th now and still don't want 
    to lose touch with the leaders. I sit back and get a good shot at the 
    left hander and run flat through the right onto Noname straight, pull 
    alongside and am back in 4th by the uphill. Phew! A couple more laps 
    and the traffic is getting thick again. I have been working on my lines 
    through the Uphill, Westbend and the Downhill and have no problem 
    staying right on the tail of the third place car. I have been going 
    through the esses well. I sit back again, good shot through the left 
    hander flat through the right hander pull alongside on Noname and I'm 
    in third by the Uphill. He is right on my tail and I expect him to try 
    to get by at the end of the front straight. I run a bit faster through 
    the Uphill, Westbend and the Downhill. We come down the hill, my 
    mirrors are full of yellow Reynard. I look up and there's the checkered 
    flag, I'm third. I'll take it.
    
    This is a lot more fun than being a backmarker! I know the 2nd and 4th 
    place cars weren't real fast. I wasn't driving as smoothly as I should 
    have been so I think I was lucky to take third. I am going to have to 
    try hard to do this well next time but I'm going to try.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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200.1By now it was Last weeks raceSUBWAY::JANKOWITZIlliterate? Write for free pamphlet.Wed Aug 01 1990 12:3992
    Finally after waiting over a month it's time for my second race in
    the Formula Ford. How time drags. Another race at Lime Rock only
    this time it's a two day race. Practice and qualifying on Friday,
    race on Saturday (you get Sunday to mow the lawn at home...).

    The thermometer on someone's trailer never went toooo far above 100
    degrees. The morning practice didn't start off too well for me. I
    had already warmed up the car so it fired right up. I went to put
    the car in gear and all that came out were grinding noises from
    first gear. Second gear, same thing, third, fourth and reverse
    were no different. The clutch felt OK so what was wrong? The
    clutch wouldn't disengage. We pulled off the body work and did a
    quick clutch bleeding. Started the car and no change. By now it
    seems fairly certain that the clutch has frozen to the flywheel
    over the last month. I put the car in gear and got some people to
    give me a push figuring that if the engine starts I'll be able to
    use the brakes to break the clutch free. Just pushing the car a
    few feet while I played with the clutch was enough to break it
    free. We put all of the fiberglass back on and made a dash for the
    track. One warm up lap, one timed lap and the session was over. Not
    much of a warm up for me but the car felt OK. I spent the next few
    hours looking over the car and waiting for qualifying. 

    I wanted to be one of the first cars out in case the traffic would
    be bad. The session before mine went out so I got in the car and
    got up to staging. There was already a long line of cars ahead of
    me. I guess my "early" wasn't early enough. We went out -
    thirty seven cars on a 1.5 mile track! I'm getting better at
    passing! Even so, for more than ten minutes I didn't get one single 
    lap where I could run my lines and my braking points. Then
    someone left a stream of oil around the back side of the track. So
    much for trying to go fast. That was the end of a frustrating
    qualifying session. Somehow I was able to get my time down just
    into the 57's. I expected to be in the low 57's which would have
    meant a couple more places forward. I had to settle for seventh
    for Saturday's race.

    Saturday was cooler, the temperature was below 100. It was cloudy
    so I went to put air in my rain tires. All 4 of them were flat!
    That's a long story about the previous owner that I had just heard
    the night before. I prayed that it wouldn't rain. It rained over
    night and there is a little rust on the calipers so I figure I
    will go brave the morning warm-up to clean them off. Better to
    clean the brakes now than when the green flag comes out. Warm up
    is all of the open wheeled cars at the race on the track at the
    same time! I do 2 laps and come in. The car feels OK and I now
    have several hours till the race. I take off the fiberglass, clean
    and inspect things, fill up the gas tank (I have to run a full
    tank of gas to be legal weight after the race).

    One of the cars in front of me didn't show up so I get lined up in
    6th on the outside of the third row. We go around and the guy
    starting on the row behind me sits on my side going around when I
    want to warm the tires up! This is really annoying me. I would
    like to use the whole track to warm up the tires but he never let
    me. We come out of the last turn, the pace car goes in and
    everyone has their foot on the floor. The green flag comes out and
    we aim for the first turn. I watch as a couple of cars go by on
    the inside, I just stay on the outside and go as fast as I can. I
    am afraid that a bunch of cars got by me. I work hard to get by
    the cars just ahead of me. At the end of the first lap I don't
    have a clue what place I'm in (the lap charts say I was actually
    back in 6th). I wasn't going too fast and noticed that as I lapped
    a slower car there was another car in my mirrors that wasn't there
    before. Now I make an effort to pick up my pace. After another lap
    or two he's gone. I try to bring my speed up a little bit each
    lap. The traffic got pretty heavy and I still didn't know what
    place I was in. My wife held up a 6. I was happy that it wasn't
    any lower than that but I was catching what I now new was the 5th
    place car. I got to him just as he slowed way down. I went by and
    aimed for 4th. As I got closer I watched 3rd and 4th swap
    positions back and forth a few times. I caught them on the back
    straight and moved to the right. He moved to the right. I moved to
    the left and got my nose next to his rear wheel, he moved to the
    left. I had to hit the brakes and dropped back a few car lengths.
    I spent the rest of that lap trying to get back up there. Just as
    he was passing a backmarker the backmarker spun (in front of me).
    I lifted to avoid him and lost what I had just gotten back. When
    we came down the hill onto the front straight the checker came
    out. I had to settle for 5th. I learned a lot from this race and
    hopefully will be able to use some of it next time for a better
    finish.

    I was happy when the official results came out that my fastest lap
    was in the 56's. That was one of my goals for the weekend and for
    a while it didn't look like I was going to get there. I don't know
    if I can get below 56 seconds in this car but there is still plenty
    of time out there and 56.78 is a long way away from 55.99

    Two weeks till the next race. Plenty of work to do by then.

    It was also nice meeting some other DEC people at the race.
200.2Friday was a long expensive weekend of racingSUBWAY::JANKOWITZIt used to have four wheelsFri Aug 17 1990 16:39124
        Well, another Friday, Saturday race at Lime Rock. I had spent the 
        time since the last race doing little maintenance things like 
        putting in another new battery replacing the foam in the headrest 
        and playing with the corner weights and ride heights and of 
        course cleaning things.
        
        I was hoping that my tires would still be good as people were 
        telling me that the tires go off and just don't handle as well 
        after only a few weekends. I got to the track Thursday night and 
        just about threw the tent out of the van and went to sleep. It 
        was nice to wake up and not have to drive anyplace. I just folded 
        up the tent and pulled the car off the trailer.
        
        I managed to find a couple of friends from the Porsche Club who 
        said they could help me get into the car, start it and take my 
        times. I could breathe a little easier. I went out for the 
        morning practice and everything felt really bad. Either the track 
        was very slippery or I had messed up the corner weights really 
        badly. The car was just sliding around and wouldn't stick. My 
        times at the end of the session were miserable. I talked to the 
        person who was helping me and he said the track felt fine when he 
        went out (SSC Toyota MR2). Now I was getting worried. I talked to 
        a couple of other people and got varying opinions. Some said the 
        track felt fine and some said it felt slippery to them also. I 
        figured I would go through qualifying and if the car still felt 
        really bad I would change the adjustments back to the way they 
        were before I started playing with the corner weights.
        
        I spent the day just looking over things and cleaning again. 
        Everything looked fine. I got lined up for qualifying as soon as 
        the previous session went onto the track. I was pretty close to 
        the front so I expected to get some clean laps. We went out and 
        at the end of my first lap I was a couple of car lengths behind 
        another car. I figured I would follow him around for now. We went 
        down the front straight and he hit the brakes! I wasn't even 
        thinking about hitting the brakes yet. I usually go at least 
        another few brake markers. I just went to the left into the 
        marbles and went down the escape road with my heart beating 
        pretty hard. I pulled back out onto the track and kept going. The 
        car felt fine now. I started bringing my times down pretty 
        quickly. After four more laps I was down within a second of where 
        I wanted to qualify and there were still a lot of places where I 
        wasn't pushing the car yet. And then...
        
        I saw a another car a few hundred feet ahead and realized he was 
        going pretty slowly. I did a real quick lift going onto the back 
        straight so I could decide which side to pass him. He was right 
        in front of me in the middle of the track and there was another 
        car behind me which had been catching up to me for the last few 
        laps who I really wanted to stay in front of. I had beaten him in 
        the last two races. I came onto the back straight (which has a 
        slight turn to the right and then back to the left) and the 
        slower car was sitting right in front of me. He wasn't telling 
        me which side to pass so he probably didn't see me. I had to 
        either hit the brakes fairly hard, pass to the right which was to 
        the inside of the first little kink or pass to the left which was 
        the outside. Since this was qualifying I didn't really want to 
        hit the brakes, the last turn was a right-hander which put me on 
        the left already so I figured that was a reasonable way to go. I 
        got on the outside of him with my front wheels even with his head 
        and he  moved over to the left. That's were I was! I couldn't 
        figure out why he was moving over to the left when he should have 
        been heading to the right for the slight kink. I slowed down and 
        moved to the left with him thinking he would stop coming left 
        sooner or later. He just kept on coming. By now I had all four 
        wheels in the dirt. I couldn't see it but he had noticed the car 
        behind me and was pointing that car by on his right and was 
        moving left to let him past. I backed off the throttle and 
        straightened out the car. When he had pulled ahead I moved back 
        onto the track. When I got the car back on the track the back end 
        just broke free. It went to the right and I corrected to the 
        right. Then it kicked to the left and I put in full opposite 
        lock. The back end just kept going out though. There was 
        guardrail on the left and a dirt embankment on the right where I 
        had seen cars roll after going into it. I thought "this is a 
        nasty place to spin"! I didn't spin though. The car was pointed 
        about 60 degrees off to the right I saw a flash of blue out of 
        the corner of my eye, then I felt a thud and realized that the 
        car behind me had just removed the suspension from the right side 
        of my car! Several expletives came to mind. Meanwhile I was still 
        sliding towards the dirt embankment thinking now I'm going to 
        roll and destroy the rest of the car. Just as the car slid off 
        the track on the right a cloud of dirt sprayed up and all the 
        whole world turned brown as my visor was instantly covered with 
        dirt. I thought that was an appropriate color. The car came to 
        rest when the nose stuffed itself into the embankment. Lucky for 
        me there was no wheel on the right front corner or it might have 
        climbed up and rolled over. Since there didn't seem to be any 
        safe place to walk to I sat in the car for a second trying to 
        decide whether it was safer to sit in the car or get out and try 
        to climb the embankment. I got out and was slightly relieved to 
        see that the rear suspension was still on the car. I tried to 
        climb the embankment but it was too steep. By then the qualifying 
        session had been red flagged. There were three smashed cars but 
        we were all ok. I went over and talked to the driver of the blue 
        car for a minute waiting for the tow trucks to arrive. His car 
        was the worst of the three. All four corners were bent, twisted 
        and broken. I thought it would be a good idea to find the remains 
        of my wheel in case any parts were salvageable. I saw a wheel on 
        the right side of the track up about 100 feet from where my car 
        came to rest but it was a rear wheel and I was missing a front. 
        Then someone noticed that one of the cars had too many front 
        wheels. My wheel was actually under one of the other cars. Of all 
        of the bent and broken parts the only spare I had was a wheel. A 
        quick estimate put the damage well over $1000. That puts me out 
        for several races, hopefully not for the season.
        
        After the qualifying session resumed and then finished it turned 
        out my last complete lap was still good enough for 7th on the grid. 
        That was going to be an empty spot!
        
        I just got some pictures from a photographer. There were two good 
        pictures of the car and a third with it hanging from the back of 
        the tow truck. Yuk. 
        
        I am slowly buying new parts as I figure out what I can afford. 
        Hopefully I'll be able to afford to fix it by next month. There's 
        a race at Watkins Glen that would be nice to go to.
        
        Sunday morning after the "race" the phone rang. It was somebody 
        offering a Visa card with a $5000 credit limit. I said, "how soon 
        can I get it?".

	Money, it's everywhere you want to be!
200.3I need to be rich!RAVEN1::B_ADAMSTime to get tough!Fri Aug 17 1990 17:229
    .8�        the previous session went onto the track. I was pretty close to 
    .8�        the front so I expected to get some clean laps. We went out and 
    
    	Is this qualifying like the Twin 125's at Daytona...Where you race
    for a qualifying position?
    
    Good luck on the repairs!
    
    B.A.
200.4Glad it's Friday!RAVEN1::B_ADAMSTime to get tough!Fri Aug 17 1990 17:235
    .9�    for a qualifying position?
    
    	Woops!  Starting position I mean.
    
    B.A.
200.5Now all I need is a first. (Nice dream anyway)SUBWAY::JANKOWITZForget the lips. Read my mindFri Sep 28 1990 12:42182
The last race was just a qualifying session and then a race based on 
the results of qualifying. This race was 2 qualifying sessions which 
determined the starting order for a short race on Saturday. The 
finishing order from Saturday determined the starting order for 
Sunday.

This event was put on by Finger Lakes Region SCCA. They did an 
excellent job! Here's another long race description. Much better 
outcome than the last one (just getting to the race would be much 
better)!

          Well I finally got to go to a track other than Lime Rock with
          this car. This race was at Watkins  Glen. That has always been
          one of my favorite tracks. It can be pretty depressing with an
          under powered car but I think my car should be competitive in
          the engine department. I just give a  fair amount away in the
          aerodynamic department. Either way I was expecting a fun
          weekend.

          I got the car down off the stands on Thursday for the first time
          since the accident over a month  ago. With a little help and a
          fair amount of money I had fabricated a new set of a-arms,
          bought  a new upright, wheel bearing, had different machine
          shops fabricate a new bellcrank for the  pullrod, a new tie rod
          and a bunch of other little pieces. Friday after work I did a
          quick toe  alignment. My driveway isn't flat enough to do the
          camber. My brother was going to be there to  try out his new
          Ralt RT4. He would have the scales. Hopefully I'd have enough
          time to do corner  weights. I expected to have someone to do
          tire temps so I could finish off the alignment.
          Weather reports said Friday night rain, Saturday chance of rain,
          Sunday rain likely. Well this is  the Glen, what should I
          expect? Saturday was cold but not raining. The schedule called
          for  LOTS of track time. Ten minutes of warm, 20 minutes of
          practice/qualifying, 15 more minutes  of practice/qualifying and
          a 7 lap race on Saturday. Sunday was a 10 min. warm up then a 14
          lap race. I unloaded the car and went to work. Get the car
          through tech (re-inspect the suspension- ) get a new tire
          mounted to replace the one that was dragged around during the accident
          I  ended up heading out for the track after everyone else had
          gone out. I just needed a couple of  laps to warm up the new
          tire and bed the new brakes (the pads on the right had been torn
          up  when the broken rotor went through the caliper). I ended up
          being flagged down as I was about  to exit the pits. The warm up
          session was about to end. I guess I had to wait for the
          qualifying  session.

          I set up a tarp to keep out of the inevitable rain, went over
          all of the bolts in the front suspension  to insure they were
          all tight. When the qualifying session began I spent most of the
          time trying  to figure out which gear to use in which corner. I
          started off slowly and picked up my pace at  about two seconds a
          lap till I got down to a 2:10. I figure I should be able to get
          down to a 2:04  in the end. When the qualifying sheets came out
          I found out that there were only 3 Formula  Fords there
          including mine. I had never heard of such a small field for this
          class. I was 3rd.  Second was just ahead of me with a 2:09 and
          the first car was a few cars up with about a 2:06. I  wouldn't
          have any problem going faster than 2:09, 2:06 would be a bit
          harder. I set my sights  on second place.
          I spent the time till the next qualifying session cleaning dirt
          out of the car from a month before,  looking over the suspension
          to make sure there were no cracks and none of the bolts had loosened
          up. My wife wouldn't be up there until that afternoon, my








          brother was out on the track in  my session, his wife had his
          kids and some other friends who we thought could help each other
          were in the session before ours so couldn't help out. So, no
          tire temps. My brothers wife took  lap times for both of us
          somehow while holding onto the two babies. I went out in the
          second qualifying session and ran with the first place club ford
          for most of the

          session. I slowed down a bit too much for some debris on the
          track and he pulled away a bit. I  could see where he was
          quicker and where I was quicker. The fast chute at the end of
          the back  straight he would pull out a bit and I would catch him
          in the toe of the boot. There is a fast  lefthander that should
          be flat in third but I couldn't get there yet. He would pull
          away a bit there  too. I got down to a 2:08 but that still put
          me in third. The car right in front of me was the 2nd  place
          F.F. though a few 10ths faster. I would start alongside him. The
          first place C.F. actually  out qualified both of us which
          embarrassed me a bit. My car has newer more aerodynamic suspension
          so I should be faster at a track like the Glen.
          I made a good start for once in the race. I got ahead of the 2nd
          place car in the first turn and  passed the C.F. on the back
          straight putting him between us. That didn't last too long. Soon
          he  was on my tail. He would screw up and I would pull a few car
          lengths then I would screw up  (miss a shift, brake too late)
          and he would be right back on me. Again, I could see where he
          was  driving faster and where I was driving faster. In the
          middle of the 6th lap he pulled out to pass  me and I let him
          by. I sat right on his tail for the rest of the lap looking for
          a place to get him  back. I wasn't sure whether we were on the
          6th lap or the 7th. I would have been upset if he  passed me on
          the last lap. We came by the start finish line and there was no
          checker out so I had  a full lap to get back around. He missed a
          shift in the first turn which gave me more momentum  on the back
          straight and I went right by. He then spun in the chute trying
          to catch me again. I  got second but what a fight. That was
          probably the most fun race I have had. Sunday would be  twice
          the distance so that would be tough.

          I could now run a little faster down the chute although not as
          fast as possible. For the fast left I  would short shift into
          third (6000 instead of 6500) just before entering the turn, hold
          my breath  and run flat through on most laps. Running flat
          through that turn would leave me up on the  curbing on the exit
          every lap! I would exhale and my visor would fog up and then
          clear. Talk  about adrenalin.
          Sunday morning I drove out on the track for the warm up and the
          car wouldn't run. It coughed  and sputtered. I thought I was
          lucky to make it back to the pits. After taking the carb apart I
          found a wood splinter stuck in the main jet. Put the carb back
          together and it seemed fine.

          As the day went on the weather got worse. It started to rain








          lightly on and of. I couldn't decide  whether I should bother
          going out if it rained. I didn't want to rebuild the suspension
          again. The  rain became steady. I decided to give it a try.
          Someday I may not have as much of a choice  about going out. I
          could go out and if I wasn't comfortable I could always come
          back in. We  put air in the rains, bolted them up, taped up any
          gaps in the bodywork that we could to keep  the water out, set
          the swaybars full soft and I went out to the grid. I was now
          starting in 2nd. First in my class was the next  car up and the
          next car back was the car I had beaten on Saturday. The car
          behind me went by  me at the start and I quickly realized my car
          was a real handful to drive. I had wild oversteer  whenever I
          would try pushing. The two cars in front walked away and there
          was nothing I could do. After 5 laps a car got stuck on the
          track and they had to send out a two truck for it. They put  out
          the pace car and we got ready for another start. I thought I
          would try to stay with them  again. The green flag came out and
          by the time we got halfway down the front straight I  couldn't
          see a thing through the water being kicked up. I eased up down
          the straight till I could  see the first turn and then started
          pushing again. I still couldn't get the car to drive. It was
          side ways in every turn. It wouldn't be smoothly sideways
          either. I would correct one direction and  it would kick back
          the other and oscillate three or four times until I could get it
          straight. It got  pretty scary a few times. I kept looking in my
          mirror for the first place C.F. behind me but to  my surprise he
          never caught me. At one point I went through the esses onto the
          back straight  and felt the back end get loose where I was about
          to shift into 4th. I thought about just packing  it in for the
          day but the race was only a few laps from being over. I went
          passed start/finish onto  the last lap and saw a waving yellow
          flag in the first turn. It was the first place car in my class
          stuck in the  grass on the outside of the track where he had
          spun. All I had to do was get the car back around and I would
          take second again. I slowed up 20 seconds on that lap to insure
          I couldn't screw up and I  still ended up ahead of the C.F.
          race. Wheh, that race wasn't fun until it was over.

          Next time I will try disconnecting the swaybars all together.
          Maybe that will make the car handle a little better in the rain.
          Oct. 6th I'll be back up there. Hopefully the weather will be
          dry!

          By the way, there was only one other Atlantic besides my brother
          and he didn't get out in either  qualifying session. My brother
          had the pole for the first race 9 seconds ahead of the next car.
          He  also set a new best time for himself, 2 seconds faster than
          he ran in his old car. He walked away  in the race on Sat. and
          decided not to run in the rain on Sun.
200.6Still no first place. Maybe next yearNYTP05::JANKOWITZLost in WonderlandWed Oct 17 1990 11:5467
          This was probably my last race of the season. My second in this
          car at Watkins Glen. I had simple goals for the weekend. Finish
          the race! A finish would give me enough races for a National
          license next year.

          Since I didn't have a chance to do the corner weights since the
          accident I finally put it on the scales before the weekend. I
          was very surprised to find that the front corner weights were
          equal and the rears were within 8 pounds. I moved the weight
          around a bit to get the difference down a little in the rear.
          My wife and I went up to help my sister-in-law at the drivers
          school on Friday. She wanted to drive the Formula Atlantic once
          to see what it was like. My wife and I helped with their kids
          and the car. For a first time in the car she did real well.
          She ended up running times about what I ran in the FF. I haven't
          driven the RT4 but I am sure it's pretty intimidating. She also
          found the Shelbys intimidating during the school. When I had
          some free time I would do some cleaning and checking around my
          car. Everything seemed OK.

          I wasn't very fast in the first qualifying session. There was
          plenty of time left out there but I ended up second on the grid.
          The first place car was a couple of seconds ahead. I figured I
          could cut 1 to 2 seconds off my time in the session on Sunday
          morning. I also figured that some of the other cars would also
          be faster on Sunday and I'd have to get my times down.
          Sunday's qualifying session was a disaster! We did about two
          laps and got red flagged because of a fire that broke out in the
          back of one of the Atlantics. This was his second fire of the
          weekend. After the first one melted his wires he borrowed the
          wires from my brothers car. Now my brothers wires got toasted.
          After they pulled him in we went back out. One of the Shelbys
          went back out right behind me. He passed me on the back straight
          and slowed WAY down at the end of the straight. He held me up
          for the rest of the lap. On the front straight I slowed way down
          to let him have some room so I wouldn't get held up again. That
          meant two lost lap times. I started to go again and then the
          checker came out within two laps. I hadn't even gone as fast as
          the first session. Luckily nobody from behind caught me. I was
          still in second for the start.

          To be considered a finisher I only had to complete more than 1/2
          the race. Since this was a 12 lap race I had to complete 7 laps.
          I actually thought if it came down to a dice for position I
          would hold off until the 8th lap. I got off ok at the start. It
          still takes me too long to get my times down when I go out. The
          cars in front of me pulled away pretty quickly and I pulled away
          from the cars behind me. I didn't have a pit board so I didn't
          know how slowly I was running. On the seventh lap I started to
          try to pick up my pace. The lap times don't show it because
          there was a yellow out in one corner that remained for the rest
          of the race. I didn't see another car until the second to last
          lap when I started to lap the backmarkers. It got so boring that
          I would go into the first turn and try to look up the hill at
          the 4th turn to see if there was another car I could try to
          catch. I saw one and tried to pick up my pace but by then it was
          too late.

          I shouldn't complain about a 2nd place finish. I still think I
          didn't run too quickly. With 9 cars in my class I'm surprised
          that there was only one car quicker than myself. Next year I
          will try to run some National races. Looking at old results I
          think I will be lucky to get a 6th place here and there. But it
          will give me more track time and that's certainly what I need.

          On to the rebuild!
200.7Bench-racing begins NOW!JETSAM::ROTHWed Oct 17 1990 12:5921
    	Get the National License!
    
    	National license is the way to more seat time, more choices of
    races, and a look at better competition.  Quality seat time.
    
    	Nationals typically have more tracktime; (untimed practice session,
    usually 20 min., timed qualifying session, about 25 min., and a race
    distance of around 45-50 miles)  as compared to Regional competition. 
    I do agree that the advent of two-day regionals has been a tremendous
    help providing additional seat time, but the race distance is still 
    usually half distance to a National.
    
    	Seat time is key, but chasing a Nationally competitive driver,
    (even if you just pointed him/her by, as in going a lap down) will 
    present you with the opportunity for a REAL education.
    
    	Let the bench-racing season begin!!!
    
    
    	br
    
200.8ALIEN::MCCULLEYRSX ProFri Oct 19 1990 19:0918
.13>    I do agree that the advent of two-day regionals has been a tremendous
.13>    help providing additional seat time, but the race distance is still 
.13>    usually half distance to a National.
    
    hunh?  what "advent of two-day regionals"?  When I started flagging,
    back in 1971 or 1972, I thought two-day regionals were the norm.  It
    was only recently that I found one-day regionals to be common, and at
    first I attributed it to the combination of Lime Rock Park and
    Connecticut's blue laws.
    
    But this weekend we have a one-day regional at Bryar/NHIS, for the
    first time in my memory it's a weekend that doesn't at least have
    road-racing activities both days (don't get me wrong, I am not
    denigrating the Solo folks, but they can and do run in almost any
    random parking lot while road racers have a scarcity of dates at a
    scarcity of venues).
    
    so I say again, what "advent of two-day regionals"?
200.9great weekendMLCSSE::EVANSMon Oct 22 1990 12:2412
    Well, we made it through the SOLO/RACE weekend up at NHIS with lots of
    fun. We tried to get a combined SOLO/RALLY/RACE weekend but couldn't
    pull it off. Maybe next year.
    
    I can say that a certain NER lady won the "Ladies Street Prepared"
    class in the NHIS pickup. No names. Her first official time posted was
    "LOTS". There is more than one NER lady who reads the notes file....
    
    At the awards ceremony, someone asked if "Ladies Street Prepared"
    should be classified as "Hooker" class.
    
    jim e
200.10FIRST RACE: Limerock Park, CT 7/20/90CSS::MCOXTue Feb 05 1991 09:47527

             GOIN' RACIN': Adventures of a Rookie Hotshoe
                             by Mike Cox
                           17 January 1991


	SATURDAY PRACTICE

	The car ran horribly when I started it up for the first 
        practice session.  Loading it onto the trailer the night 
        before, the engine had run fine.  Now it seemed to be firing 
        on one cylinder, coughing and wheezing badly.  Being a novice 
        'Gearhead', I panicked.  I had only five minutes to get to the 
        false grid before the start of the session.  I needed every 
        minute of track time, so I didn't want to be late.  John 
        Weaver, parked next to me, tried to help figure out what the 
        problem was, but there was no time left to do any serious 
        troubleshooting.  With the engine missing and sputtering, I 
        drove to the false grid anyway.  I was not particularly 
        thrilled about the way my weekend was starting.
	   Once I had taken my position in line, I anxiously climbed 
        out of the car and made one last feverish attempt to find the 
        problem.  The remaining few minutes slipped away quickly, and 
        I had to rush to get myself belted in as the cars around me 
        left for the track.  Since this was only the third time I'd 
        ever driven this car, I fumbled and groped getting in: first 
        with the five-point harness--readjusting the length of the 
        straps and getting all the twists out, figuring out which 
        buckle went where, and retightening each belt; then with the 
        window net--digging out the rod, attached to the top of the 
        net, from between the seat and the side bars of the roll cage, 
        shoving the rod tip through the microscopic hole in the rear 
        net support bracket, and buckling the front of the net into 
        position; then with my helmet and gloves; then with the safety 
        pin on the fire bottle.  By the time I finished, I was 
        wild-eyed and frothing.  Half crazed, heart pumping furiously, 
        I fired up the engine and putt-putted out, figuring, at worst, 
        I'd have to park in the grass and wait for the tow truck.
	   Once on the track, the engine misfire seemed to abate, but 
        I was still flustered from my anxiety-attack on the false 
        grid.  I soon realized I was missing the apex at nearly every 
        corner, some by four feet.  I thought it was me--thought I was 
        just too tense.  Twice I drove off the outside of the track at 
        the turn-in point for the second half of the Esses.  The first 
        time I was lucky; the two leftside tires kicked up a cloud of 
        dust, but I kept motoring.  The second time things got ugly.  
        I missed the apex at the Lefthander and the car drifted wide 
        as I accelerated through the corner.  I tightened my turn to 
        get back out to the entry point for the next righthand 
        corner--BIG MISTAKE.  The rear end started to come around; I 
        corrected; the car fish-tailed the other way, and I was in the 
        grass outside the track, headed straight for the brush at 
        50mph!!!   Terrified, I pumped the brakes furiously to slow 
        the wild beast.  The wet grass was like ice.  "This is it!"  I 
        cringed.  "My racing career is over, and I haven't even 
        qualified for my first @^#&$in' race!"  I braced for the 
        sickening THUD that I knew was coming.  Miraculously, the car 
        slowed and I regained steering control, barely twenty feet 
        from the edge of the runoff area.  My heart was doing a 
        double-time Rhumba.  "Thank you, thank you..." I thought.  
        "Now, about the engine..."
	   By the fourth lap I caught on: the welded rearend!  This 
        was the first time I'd driven the car since welding together 
        the spider gears in the differential. (We REAL racers do that 
        to 'get the power down' better in the corners).  My wonderful 
        'no-slip' differential was screwing up my turn-ins, causing 
        the car to understeer badly entering the corners.  Once this 
        realization lodged itself in my cranium, I started cranking 
        the wheel more to turn in, and-- SING HALLELUJAH!!!-- I found 
        the apexes!  
	   After six laps, the practice session was over, and I 
        motored back to the paddock.  The water temperature soared 
        quickly to the top of the gauge.  I shut off the engine, and 
        Charlie, my crew, and I pushed the car back to camp.  Opening 
        the hood, we discovered antifreeze had sprayed everywhere from 
        a pressure leak at the top of the radiator.  I was numbstruck.  
           This was my second radiator.  The first one hadn't been up 
        to the task, and it--and the inattentive driver-- had allowed 
        the engine to overheat in the middle of the driver's school, 
        six weeks earlier.  I'd put in this radiator two weeks ago, 
        along with the new engine.  
	   "A blown radiator and an engine that doesn't want to run;  
        What's next?" I muttered to myself.  This wasn't quite the way 
        I'd always dreamed it would be.  Racing was supposed to be 
        FUN, for God's sake!  It wasn't supposed to be a full-time 
        career in auto mechanics!  (Reality was taking awhile to sink 
        in.)  I was ready to cash in my chips and go do some serious 
        drinking.  "I really NEED this kind of aggravation!" I fumed. 
 
	   Time passed as I stared into space...

	   After a few minutes, I came to a sobering realization: I 
        couldn't quit; I had no choice.  I was a hundred and fifty 
        miles from home, and it was ten o'clock Saturday morning.  The 
        sun was out and the weather was beautiful.  And there was 
        something horribly addictive about driving fast on a 
        racetrack; I had to have more.  I had to make that car run 
        long enough to do irreparable damage to it.  Then I could 
        quit.  We went to work.
	   Charlie and I started first with the engine misfire.  We 
        pulled off the aircleaner and tried to start the engine.  Gas 
        flooded into the carburetor; it was getting way too much gas.  
        We looked at each other with that stupid expression that says 
        "Duh, whaddawedonow, Einstein?"  Neither of us knew anything 
        about carbs.  I begged John Weaver, now my best friend in the 
        whole world, to take a look to see if he could figure out what 
        the problem was.  He took the carb apart, fiddled with this 
        and that, and adjusted the float height (I guess).  We put it 
        back together and tried to start the engine.  It wouldn't run, 
        and we killed the battery.  
	   As I wandered around, now totally dismayed, I happened to 
        look in the trunk.  The fuel tank overflow bottle was full of 

        gas.  Through its vent line, it was feeding extra juice into 
        the carburetor and flooding the engine!  I drained the bottle.  
        "Geez, that was easy..." I thought.  [Hey dummy, how'd all the 
        gas get in the overflow bottle?]
 	   Next, the radiator leak.  Charlie and I debated: fix it 
        with the radiator in the car, or pull it out?.  I dreaded the 
        thought of having to reinstall that S.O.B., since access to 
        the bolts that held it in place was limited and it was going 
        to take time.  I was getting nervous now;  my qualifying 
        session was coming up soon.  We decided we'd have better luck 
        by taking the radiator out, so we did.  We reclamped the 
        plastic top 'cap' and gooped silicone sealer around the edges.  
        We left it out in the sun for as long as we could to dry the 
        silicone, then we stuck it back in the car, reclamped all the 
        hoses, and filled it with antifreeze.  We left the filler cap 
        loose so any internal pressure would be relieved before the 
        radiator sustained any further damage.  
	   Finished with the car, we gulped down a quick lunch.  My 
        anxiety, from hurrying to repair the radiator, subsided only 
        slightly as I waited for my qualifying session.

	SATURDAY QUALIFICATIONS
	
	With time dwindling, I pulled on my driver suit and climbed in 
        the car to see if the battery had revived enough, on its own, 
        to start the engine.  A couple of slow cranks was followed by 
        the old familiar rumbling of the barely muffled engine as it 
        sprang to life.  I motored slowly to the false grid, parked in 
        line, and shut off the engine.  I watched the other cars line 
        up as I awaited, with growing anticipation, the mad dash which 
        was about to commence.  I tried to keep calm and relaxed, 
        breathing deeply and closing my eyes.  I pulled on my hood, 
        helmet, and gloves in my usual slow, deliberate manner, well 
        ahead of time to minimize the pressure I felt building.  I 
        cleared my mind and studied the details of the car, noting the 
        feel of the steering wheel, the shift knob and linkage, and 
        the pedals.
	   The race group ahead of mine took the checkered flag and 
        drifted slowly into the pits.  The tension started to build as 
        the grid marshals gave us the five minute signal.  I felt 
        confident, but my pulse raced with anticipation.  Around me, 
        engines rumbled and raced as the one minute signal was given.  
        The sound of my own car was nearly lost in the din, but the 
        tachometer needle flipping across the gauge was the only 
        reassurance I needed.  Quickly I rechecked my harness belts, 
        helmet strap, gloves, mirrors, gauges.  I double checked that 
        I'd pulled the safety pin from the firebottle release handle.  
        I was ready.  The grid marshal waved us out.


	   Rev it up.  Find first.  Now, out with the clutch as the 
        car eases out of the dirt onto pit road.  Short shift to 
        second.  There's Steve Hooper standing behind the pit wall, 
        thumbs up.  Short shift to third.  The excitement builds as 

        the car rumbles out onto the front straight, picking up 
        momentum.  Into the first turn, already the centrifugal forces 
        are pulling as the car accelerates up to race speed.  
        Cautiously I test the grip of the tires as I accelerate 
        through the Esses and onto No-Name Straight.  Now, stand on 
        it!  The engine winds up to redline before a quick hard jab on 
        the brakes and a flip of the wheel points the car into the 
        Uphill Turn.  Back hard on the gas, the car presses into the 
        track and lunges up the hill.  Over the crest, the car rises 
        then falls back onto its springs.  Down the Back Straight, the 
        right foot is nailed to the floor.  Hold it, hold it, don't 
        let up!  Eyes are glued to the turn-in point for the next 
        corner, West Bend.  Now!  Hard on the brakes for just an 
        instant.  A quick right flick of the wheel and the car rolls 
        hard to the left as the weight transfers.  The car starts into 
        a gentle, deliberate skid.  Eyes dart to the apex of the turn.  
        Quickly on the gas; the tires struggle to hang onto the four 
        tiny patches of asphalt below.  The car glances off the gently 
        sloped curb at the apex to the right and drifts left, coming 
        right out (gulp) to the edge of the pavement as it hurls 
        ahead, under the bridge and down the hill.  Quickly into 
        fourth gear; the track drops away.  Just as the front wheels 
        reach the bottom of the hill, jab the brakes again.  Look to 
        the apex, flick the wheel right and feel the back of the car 
        slip to the left.  Stand on the gas and feel the car hop 
        sideways as it zips over the bumps at the apex.  The car 
        drifts out to the left at the exit of the Downhill Turn, and 
        the engine struggles to make use of the torrent of gas spewing 
        into the wide open carburetor.  In agonizingly slow motion, 
        the car accelerates down the Front Straight.  Lap one goes 
        into the books.  Check the tach, check the temperature gauge.  
        Count down the braking markers going into turn one-- six... 
        five... four... three...  Hard on the brakes, blip the 
        throttle, down to third gear, flick the wheel right, quickly 
        but gently ease off the brakes, back on the power.  
	   By now, the butterflies have flown and we're all down to 
        business.  Around and around we circle, chasing and being 
        chased.  The laps fly by.  Each corner, each straightaway is 
        pushed from consciousness instantly as concentration shifts to 
        the next stretch of pavement.  There is precious little time 
        to think, only to react.  Watch the mirrors; who's that coming 
        up behind?  Point for him to pass on the right.  Watch your 
        line through the corner; gotta stay out of the marbles-- the 
        dirt and rocks and little balls of rubber that gets pushed to 
        the outside of the turns.  Get into that stuff too fast and 
        they send a wrecker for you.  Watch the gauges; temp's OK. No 
        oil light--that's reassuring.  Remember to look for flags.  
        Listen to the tires chirp at the turn-in-- not so rough!...  
	   Faster, and faster, the tach tells the story at each turn.  
        I watch the cars ahead.  I'm closing, slowly, inches at a 
        time.  Now I'm right behind, the caboose of a four car train.  
        I can't seem to catch the car ahead-- don't have the power 
        down the straights.  I brake ever-so-little too much at the 
        next turn; he pulls away.

	   The thrill of going fast is tempered by the ever present 
        voice of fear.  It subsides to a faint whisper as I exit 
        smoothly from a corner and head down the straightaway, then 
        builds in my mind to a deafening roar as the guardrail at the 
        Uphill Turn races eagerly to embrace me.  "SLOW DOWN! SLOW 
        DOWN!" the voice in my head screams, as I approach the braking 
        point, gas pedal still hard on the floor.  The temptation is 
        great to back off early, to be on the safe side.  Visions of 
        disaster struggle to gain consciousness, and must be fought 
        back.  There is no time to dwell on the possibilities, for the 
        demands of the moment are too great.  But lap after lap, 
        corner after corner, the inner struggle persists: to go fast, 
        or to feel safe?
	   The engine temperature's getting high.  The needle is near 
        the top of the gauge.  I'd better keep an eye on that; don't 
        need to waste another motor.  Clunk...clunk....  What the hell 
        is that?  Slow down... listen.  Clunk.  Sh*t!  Now what?  
        Panic lurks.  The engine seems to be running OK.  Check the 
        gauges.  Temperature isn't critical.  No oil light.  The 
        steering seems OK, nothing loose.  What can it be?  The 
        session is nearly over anyway; I'd better head for the pits.  
        Not my day... (not my sport?)

 	   Coming onto the Front Straight, I stuck my hand out the 
        window as best I could (damned window net was in the way) to 
        let the other drivers know I was entering the pits.  I coasted 
        to a stop and a cloud of steam puffed up from under the hood.  
        "Sonofa@%#&@Bitch!  Not again!"  I hopped out, threw my helmet 
        and gloves in the seat, and raised the hood.  Antifreeze 
        everywhere!  While on the track, the airflow through the 
        radiator was enough to keep the coolant from boiling.  Once I 
        pulled into the pits, though, the residual heat of the engine 
        boiled the antifreeze and it blew out past the loose radiator 
        cap--a slippery green lake formed under the engine.  I heaved 
        a big sigh of relief; the engine was okay.  But what was that 
        clunking?  I dropped to the pavement and peered under the car.  
        I couldn't help but laugh!  The clamp holding up the end of 
        the tailpipe had broken and the pipe end had been bouncing off 
        the pavement.  A lousy hose clamp would fix that!
	   I pushed the car to the end of the pits and started the 
        turn into the paddock area.  The locked differential made 
        pushing difficult, but several passers-by stopped to lend a 
        hand.  With the car back in the paddock, I finally relaxed and 
        enjoyed a tremendous sense of relief and exhilaration.  A wild 
        frenzy of joyful emotions raced through me as I reflected upon 
        my triumph.  I hadn't won anything; in fact, to anyone else, 
        what I had done was pretty unexciting-- I qualified 
        thirty-first.  But this car that I'd built, my very first 
        Frankenstein, had survived a session almost intact!  That was 
        a major cause for celebration!  "Hey, whaddayaknow; maybe I am 
        a 'Motorhead' after-all!" I thought.  Hope was renewed.  Light 
        at the end of the tunnel?  Maybe.  We'd know tomorrow.
	  In ten minutes, the tailpipe was fixed, and the radiator 
        refilled.


	SUNDAY WARMUP

	I barely made it to the false grid before the cars were sent 
        out onto the track.  (I guess next time I'll read the 
        schedule.)

	I drove easily, didn't push too hard.  I wanted to save the 
        car for the race.

	Very uneventful... It felt nice, for a change, to just motor 
        around, to get into a rhythm... Minute and fifteen seconds a 
        lap.

	The engine ran great.  


	SUNDAY, THE RACE

	I drove to the grid early.  Waiting in the car, I tried to 
        stay calm.  This would be my very first race start.  I had 
        watched many many races, on TV and at SCCA events, so I'd seen 
        everything under the sun happen at the drop of the green flag.  
        "What should I do?" I wondered.  "Be aggressive, try to pass 
        before the first turn, or drop back and stay out of the way?"  
        A serious dilemma; I'd seen these guys drive.  I feared 
        getting wiped out by some maniac going into turn one.  The 
        thought of wrecking my car on the first lap of my first race 
        was unbearable.  Besides, I had to finish the race in order to 
        get credit toward my racing license.  
	   My courage waned, and I wanted to fall to the end of the 
        pack and wait for the dust to settle.  "That's it," I decided.  
        "I'll drop back and let the hotshots take each other out, then 
        I'll pass 'em the easy way."
	   It wasn't that simple, though.  Dee and the kids would be 
        watching; they'd see me chicken out.  And all the corner 
        workers would see me at the end of the pack, too.  "Is that 
        the way you want them to see you, bringing up the rear?"  I 
        couldn't do it.
	   The rest of the cars came down and lined up on the grid.  
        Drivers climbed out and wandered around, jawboning to kill 
        time before the race.  I smiled feebly as one of the grid 
        marshals walked past.  "She must know I'm a rookie", I 
        thought. "I've got "NERVOUS ROOKIE" written in big bold neon 
        letters all over me, don't I?  I mean--look around; none of 
        the other drivers are strapped into their cars yet, are they?"  
        I tried to breathe deeply... relax... 
	   Finally, the signal came and we rolled across the pit 
        entrance out onto the track.  I lined up right behind a silver 
        VW Rabbit, the same guy I'd chased in the qualifying session.  
        Next to me was another Rabbit, and behind me was a third!  
        "God, I've got to be able to beat a bunch of @#^&%* Rabbits!" 
        I thought.
	   When the last car was in position, the pace car pulled away 
        and we started to roll.  By the time I got into second gear, 
        all of the drivers around me were weaving back and forth, 
        trying to get their tires warmed up.  I started weaving back 
        and forth.  "Hey, this isn't so bad", I mused.  "I can do 
        this!"   So far, so good...
	   I was surprised how slowly we moved around the track.  I 
        guess I had been expecting to be left in the dust, struggling 
        to catch up.  Through the Esses and down No-Name Straight we 
        motored.  As we reached West Bend, I had to stomp hard on the 
        brakes as the cars ahead of me slowed, almost to a complete 
        stop--obviously a cheap tactical maneuver on the part of the 
        pole sitter, intended to fluster the competition, no doubt.
	   As I reached the Downhill Turn, the cars ahead of me 
        accelerated briskly.  I FLOORED THAT MOTHER.  Courage came out 
        of nowhere.  "Damn the torpedoes!" I decided, "I'm GOIN' 
        RACIN'!"
	   We came down the Front Straight to take the green flag in 
        near perfect formation, everyone accelerating together.  
        "Where's all the jockeying around?" I wondered.  "Where's the 
        mayhem?"  We passed the sixth braking marker for turn one.  
        Nobody ahead of me braked.  We passed the fifth braking 
        marker.  Nobody braked.  We passed the fourth braking marker.  
        "I don't think I like this," I thought.
	   As I reached the one marker, everyone braked together in a 
        sudden maelstrom of confusion.  Cars were off into the dirt on 
        the outside of the turn.  The car in front of me and the car 
        in front of him were both in the dirt on the inside of the 
        turn!  Dust clouds billowed ahead of me, and I prayed for 
        deliverance.  I knew if anybody lost it in front of me, I'd be 
        in DEEP doodoo.  Nobody did.  I'm a believer.
	   Into the second half of Big Bend, I realized I was in a 
        great spot!  I clung to the back bumper of the car in front of 
        me, and since we held the inside lane through the corner, I  
        managed to pass three cars who were forced to stay to the 
        outside.  Into the Lefthander, I took the outside of the turn 
        and managed to pick up another position coming out of the 
        Esses onto No-Name Straight. 
	   By the Uphill Turn we had queued up, and we zipped through 
        the corner single file.  Down the Back Straight, the pace 
        quickened, and we were up to full steam.  By the time I got 
        back to Big Bend, the pack had strung out, and I could pace 
        myself; braking, turning, accelerating without concern for the 
        cars ahead of, or behind me.  I chased the silver Rabbit, the 
        one just ahead of me at the start.  He couldn't pull away from 
        me, nor could I catch him.  I'd close up on him into Big Bend, 
        and he'd pull away from me down the straightaways.  I was 
        getting frustrated at my lack of forward progress through the 
        field.  "Hey, this racing is harder than I thought."
	   I watched the joker in the white Rabbit behind me.  Coming 
        out of the Downhill Turn, he seemed a bit quicker than I, and 
        on a couple of laps, he pulled right up behind me as we came 
        down the Front Straight.  This time, he loomed bigger than 
        life in my rearview mirror, and I knew he would soon disappear 
        to my right as he pulled out to pass.  "No way, sucker!" I 
        thought to myself.  "You're not gettin' by me!"   Before he 
        moved, I eased to the right as we passed the Start/Finish line 
        and sealed off the inside lane into Big Bend.  "You want by 
        me, you'll do it on the outside," I sneered.  I knew I had to 
        pick up the pace, or he'd eventually get by me.  
	   By lap seven I knew I could catch the silver Rabbit.  I was 
        reeling him in now, slowly, but passing him wasn't going to be 
        easy; we were pretty evenly matched.  I tried to decide where 
        to make my bid.  As we reached the Lefthander, I closed right 
        up on him--this was my chance!  If I could come out of the 
        Esses with a bit more speed, I could pass him before the 
        Uphill Turn.
	   Coming onto No-Name Straight, I pulled to the right to 
        pass--now it was a drag race.  Slowly I moved up beside him.  
        Up to his rear bumper...to his rear wheel...almost even!  We 
        reached the braking point.  I had to decide: Hold fast and 
        hope he backs off, or back out and tuck in behind him for the 
        turn?  Since I wasn't ahead of him, it was still his corner.  
        And since it was my first race, I was chicken.  I followed him 
        up the hill.  Though disheartened, I decided that my car, 
        which I'd spent all winter building up from a dead rusting 
        hulk, was too young to die because of a stupid miscalculation.  
        This was the only chance I would get to pass.
	   On lap nine, I managed to get the car sideways, once again 
        coming out of the Lefthander.  I apexed the corner too soon 
        and tried to tighten my radius in the middle of the turn, and 
        again the car started into a spin (funny how that works).  As 
        I dialed in some opposite lock, the car wiggled a little 
        left-then-right and came straight just in time to make the 
        next right hand turn.  "Damn!  Will I ever get this @#&$in' 
        corner right?"  I cursed.   A noticeable blip in the ol' 
        pulse-rate ensued.
	   By the tenth lap I noticed that the car had started to 
        'push', or understeer badly as I turned into the second half 
        of Big Bend.  Early in the race I had been able to drive into 
        the curve with power on, and the tires had stuck.  Now, I had 
        to mash the brakes and pitch the car hard to induce oversteer, 
        or back way off, to keep the front wheels from sliding.  
        "Hmmm, I must have used up my front tires," I thought, with 
        just a hint of satisfaction.  A regular Keke Rosberg...
	   The next time around, as I approached the Lefthander, I 
        spotted a familiar lime green VW Golf coming up fast behind 
        me; unmistakably, the race leader--he had qualified on the 
        pole.  I had hoped it would take him at least eight laps to 
        catch me; my dignity was still intact.  As I entered No-Name 
        Straight, I kept to the right and pointed my pursuer by on the 
        left, the natural line.  A hundred feet behind him came the 
        second place car.  I wanted to stay out of his way too, but by 
        the time I got to the Uphill Turn, he was right behind me; and 
        staying to the right, as I did, I had left him the choice of 
        passing me on the outside of the turn (not at all recommended, 
        with the guardrail six feet away) or losing time and momentum 
        following me up the hill.  He chose the latter, and I fully 
        expected to see 'the fist' out the window as he passed me down 
        the next straightaway.  "Sorry."
	   Before I got through West Bend, I was overhauled by an 
        endless freight train of cars.  By this point in the race, I 
        just wanted to get the hell out of the way, so I clung to the 
        inside of the track and tip-toed through the Downhill.  
	   Once the traffic had cleared, I relaxed.  I realized I had 
        passed the half-way point, so I would get credit in my logbook 
        for completing the race.  I had little to gain by pushing the 
        car, and I was getting tired.  "Just finish; that's all I've 
        gotta do." I told myself.  
	   Suddenly, in the middle of the Lefthander (why is it always 
        HERE?), the engine started sputtering and coughing.  "Why me?" 
        I wondered, dismayed.  I pumped and feathered the throttle to 
        bring my dying car back to life, but it was no use.  Having 
        lost all power, I checked my mirrors quickly as I coasted into 
        the next righthander.  The white Rabbit--behind me the entire 
        race--was crawling into my back seat.  As I rounded the apex 
        and started down No-Name Straight, the engine revived.  "Oh, 
        Great!" I thought.  This was worse than parking it and waiting 
        for the tow truck.  "Now what do I do?  Keep racing, or call 
        it quits before I lunch the motor?"  
	   Since I had no idea what was wrong, I backed off the gas, 
        pulled to the right, and pointed the three vultures behind me 
        by on my left.  As demoralizing as it was to do, letting them 
        past seemed smarter than inviting them to ace-me-out through 
        the Uphill Turn.  "Next time, you bastards... next time..."
	   Down the straightaway the engine came back to full trot, 
        and I had no difficulty closing back up on the clowns I'd let 
        by.  "Damn, if you weren't such a @*#&$ wimp!  You could have 
        held 'em off!"  I made a mental note to kick myself when it 
        was over.  Now I was pissed.
	   Into Big Bend I was all over the car ahead of me, but 
        again, in the Lefthander, the engine choked up.  As I sat 
        there cursing my dying steed, I watched in bitter anguish as 
        the Three Amigos tooled off into the sunset.  On No-Name 
        Straight the motor came back to life.  Now I was totally 
        baffled.  Pissed and baffled.  I couldn't have been out of 
        gas; I had filled the tank before I got to the track.  I 
        couldn't possibly have burned twelve gallons of gas, could I?.  
        And why was it missing only in the Lefthander?  This was not a 
        good time for a lengthy analysis.  "Figure it out later-- 
        finish the race."
	   Yellow flags were flying as I passed under the bridge and 
        as I reached the Downhill Turn.  Two cars had come to grief at 
        the embankment near the trees, apparent victims of someone's 
        late-race brain-fade.  The next time around, as I approached 
        the Start/Finish line, the checkered flag greeted me with a 
        flourish.  It was a welcomed sight; even though the race had 
        lasted only fourteen laps, I was tired.  Three layers of 
        nomex, ninety-plus-degree air temperature, and twenty-five 
        minutes of the most intense concentration I'd ever mustered 
        conspired to sap me of all energy, but I scarcely noticed.  
	   As I drove my cool-down lap, I was swept up in a whirlwind 
        of thoughts and emotions.  As I parked the car in the paddock 
        behind the van, my mind was ablur as each moment of the race 
        flashed by again in vivid detail.  I grasped at these images 
        and clung to them as if they were the most precious of 
        treasures; indeed, they were and always will be.  I was 
        bursting with excitement, and I was torn between savoring the 
        moment in quiet reflection, or recounting every detail in a 
        breathless babble to anyone who would listen.  My exhilaration 
        and pride were immeasurable as I contemplated the outcome of 
        this, one of my greatest personal challenges.  To most of the 
        other drivers, no doubt, this was just another great 
        roller-coaster ride, or another chance to do some friendly 
        butt-kicking.  For me though, this experience was rare, and 
        magnificent.  Beyond the thrill of competing, the event held a 
        deeper, more personal meaning.
	   Ever since I was a boy growing up in Indianapolis, auto 
        racing had been a distant, mysterious, and awe-inspiring 
        spectacle, whose participants were god-like men of 
        supernatural skill and bravery-- the Jim Clarks, the Mark 
        Donohues.  To race had remained one of the most inspiring 
        dreams of my life, yet the experience of racing had seemed 
        forever out of my reach; beyond my abilities, and beyond my 
        courage.  Having finished this race though--indeed, having 
        started it-- I proved to myself that I was equal to the task, 
        that I could conquer my fear and master the moment.  And I 
        suppose I shouldn't have been surprised that the reality of 
        the experience was both far greater, and far more mundane, 
        than I had ever imagined it would be.  

	When's the next race?



200.11SUNDAY???MLCSSE::EVANSTue Feb 05 1991 10:1712
    Hey Mike,
    
    Great writeup!!! Was this written for your manager??? We qualify on
    Friday and race Saturday at Lime Rock.....  :-)
    
    You can tell Mike is a former flagger as he comes out of the grid. He's
    waiving and giving thumbs up to the workers with their thumbs up.
    
    Then again, if he doesn't, he'll hear about it at the after-race party.
    
    jim e (a.k.a. Pit Puppy)
    
200.12Lime Rock demolition derbyNYTP05::JANKOWITZDazed and confusedWed May 15 1991 09:4089
          Well, the new season is finally here. I now have my National
          license which means I can be in more competitive races and not
          do nearly as well as last year. The races are longer though so
          there'll be more time on the track and that's what this is all
          about.  I was also hoping that the people would be a bit more
          experienced and maybe the races would be cleaner (nice thought
          anyway).

          The first race was at Lime Rock. I picked up a fresh set of
          tires for the first practice session. Since the Formula Fords
          were put in with the Formula Continentals there were quite a few
          cars on the track at all times. Last year I was one of the
          faster cars and didn't have to worry too much about being
          passed. Now all of a sudden my work was a lot more
          difficult. The FCs were always around and I had to really keep
          my eyes open.

          The car wasn't handling real well. I pushed the front sway bar
          adjustment to full firm and the rear to full soft to get the car
          to where the back end wouldn't go wild. I found out a few days
          later that a sway bar link had broken and the front bar wasn't
          doing anything! I still wasn't driving very fast. There was more
          time available in just about every turn. For qualifying I picked
          up a little time here and there. There was still plenty of room
          for improvement though. I ended up with a time in the low 57
          seconds. It was only good for 9th out of about 21 cars. Eighth
          place was only 1/100 of a second quicker and the next car was
          not too much farther away. I was looking for a top 6 finish so I
          would have to work for it.

          With all of the Continentals in my class I was starting from the
          middle of the field. That was a big change from most of the
          races last year where I was usually in the first couple of rows.
          I thought I would just try to make a clean start and see what
          happened from there. We came down the front straight and got the
          green flag on the second attempt. I moved over for the inside
          line into the first turn. As we got near the braking zone a big
          cloud of dust came up from the first turn. Then straight up
          through the dust came a car! It seemed like it was 10-15 feet in
          the air. So much for a good start. I figured -we're going to get
          red flagged, re-lined up and get another start- so I slowed way
          down. Half a dozen cars went by me and we never got a red flag.
          Now I was down the pack pretty far and had lost the cars I
          wanted to race with. I tried to work my way back up as well as I
          could. I still wasn't running as quickly as I should have been
          and I didn't have anybody around my speed to help motivate me.
          After a few laps there was a car behind me that would catch me
          in one turn and I'd pull away in another. We ran that way for a
          couple of laps. I'd just try to concentrate on my driving and he
          couldn't get close enough to make a pass attempt.

          It seemed that every couple of laps there was another accident
          someplace around the track. After about ten laps (?) the pace
          car came out so they could clean up some of the debris. Luckily

          for me, the lead car was between me and the car behind me. The
          pace car waved me on around so I was able rejoin at the tail of
          the field. instead of losing a lap. That meant that I had more
          cars in front of me to try to get through. It also meant that
          the car I was running with was now a lap down and wouldn't
          bother me any more.

          The pace car went in and the green flag came out. Again cars
          started to litter themselves around the track. I was going
          through the fastest turn and the slowest turn fairly well by now
          but the rest had room for improvement. With all of the yellow
          flags I didn't have many laps where I could push hard for the
          whole lap.

          One of my problems seemed to be that I would slow down too much
          for yellow flags. It seemed that the other cars wouldn't slow
          down very much and I would lose them. With all of the accidents
          I thought at least a few of them must have been cars in front of
          me. No such luck. Every single one of the cars that went out of
          the race was either a Continental or Ford that was already
          behind me.

          After about another 10 laps they threw the checkered flag ending
          the race about 7 laps early. The final results have me in
          10th place. Certainly not the results I was hoping for. After
          that race it was a triumph just to be driving the car at the
          end.

          It was another good learning experience. I'm going to have to
          start using some of what I'm learning soon! The next race I'm
          planning on is at Watkins Glen in about 4 weeks. The sway bar is
          fixed, now I just have to make the car handle better (maybe a
          new set of springs) and then just drive faster! No problem!
200.13ITB/C Race at NHIS, May 27, 1991SOLVIT::MCOXWed Jun 19 1991 18:25175

	NEW HAMPSHIRE INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY, 
	SCCA REGIONAL RACE, MAY 27, 1991
	RACE GROUP 2, ITB & C

	    "Man, it just dudn't get any better than this."


	    I started outside row 7.  As I motored down the pit lane,
            I felt great confidence.  I'd survived two previous race
            starts, so I knew what to expect (yeah, right).  In the
            qualifying session, I'd cut 2 seconds off my best lap time
            from last Fall, and half a second off my best practice lap 
            last Thursday.  I was psyched.  I planned my starting
            strategy.  As we circled the track on the pace lap, my
            excitement and determination built, and I eagerly awaited
            the melee which was about to commence.

            As we rounded the last turn and started for the front
            straight, I wound 'er up and looked for a passing
            lane to open up.  Unfortunately, the guys ahead of me had
            the same idea, and I had no way through as we reached the
            Start-Finish line.  Suddenly everyone ahead of me 
            backed off the throttle, and I had to jump on the brakes
            to keep from clouting the car in front of me.  After a
            moment of confusion, a quick glance at the Starters Stand
            revealed a waving yellow flag; we'd been waved-off. 
            Momentary disappointment vanished as I realized I'd have a
            second chance to move up at the drop of the green flag.  I
            continued warming my tires as we made our second circuit.  

            Past the tires stacked at the apex at turn ten, I floored
            the gas.  In second gear, the car leaped ahead,  and I had
            to mash the brake pedal to maintain my position in line. 
            The car was ready to rumble.  I could hardly wait.  First
            year jitters were gone; I was ready to mix it up.

            Around the bend at the north end, I goosed that baby for 
            all it was worth and looked for an opening.  Coming onto 
            the main straight, the two cars ahead of me moved apart
            momentarily, and I nosed up between them.  As we passed
            the Start-Finish line, I found my next opportunity; the 
            yellow 2002 up ahead was diving to the inside going into
            turn one--three abreast into the corner!  I figured, "What
            the Hell, if he'll fit, I'll fit!"  I missile-locked on 
            his rear bumper and tried to keep up.  I knew I had to
            keep low on the track to keep from causing a big scene,
            and the car managed to hang on as three of us rounded
            turns one and two flat out, side-by-side, with me on the
            apron.  What a rush.

            Into turn three, I recalled the great move somebody pulled
            on me last year; it's called "outbrake the outbraker".  It 
            worked for him, so I gave it a shot.  I pulled all the way
            to the right, held my breath, and dove into the corner on
            the inside to make it three abreast!  The driver in the
            middle of the sandwich had no track left to himself as the
            car on the outside turned in, so he backed out early.  I
            knew it was going to be close, so I made a sharp right
            past the tires at the end of the concrete barrier, and put
            two wheels into the dirt rounding the apex.

            The easy pickin's were behind me; now it was getting tough.  
            The guys ahead of me all had pretty stout ponies, and I
            had trouble closing up on them.  The yahoos behind me
            weren't taking the situation lightly either, and they
            stayed right with me as we dove into turn one.  Into
            three, I held a couple of car lengths lead over the next
            car, and I lined up on the left to brake for the turn. 
            "You stupid &$#^$%&^!!!," I thought to myself.  I'd left
            the door wide open, and Peter, in the blue Datsun came
            barging up the inside under braking and slipped by (nice
            move, you dirt bag!).  I tried to stay with him on the
            outside as we left the backstretch and started up toward
            six, but he managed to pull ahead as we crested the hill.

            As I chased the Datsun, I checked my mirrors.  The White
            Golf behind me wasn't drifting back like he was supposed
            to.  I fact, he was being downright obnoxious.  Through
            one and two, he hung there in my left outside mirror. 
            As we jinked off the backstretch and I got on the binders,
            he switched over to the right and pulled up alongside me
            as I reached the turn-in point at three.  "You did it
            again, didn't you!  GEEEZZZ, when are you gonna get
            smart?"  I couldn't believe I let another one by me!  I
            was humiliated.  Where was my Samuri sword?  That was 
            supposed to be MY maneuver!  Where the hell did my brakes
            go?  Must be those DS11 pads; just no grip...(It wasn't MY
            fault).

            I wasn't ready to give up.  Over the top of the hill at
            five, I saw my opening.  Michael, in the Golf, had taken
            up position behind Ted (in the Escort), who was battling
            with Peter in the Datsun.  Ted and Michael were on the
            outside going into six, and Peter was on the inside, with
            a welcome mat hung out on his rear bumper.  As Michael got
            on the brakes to follow Ted, I motored right up behind
            Peter, stealing the inside line and forcing the Golf to stay
            outside around the turn.  Peter took Ted, and I squeezed
            in front of the Golf as we exited six headed for seven.

            "Alright Ted, your next".

            Coming out of the north Esses, I got a good jump on the
            Escort as we started down the front straight.  Following
            in his draft, I pulled up right behind him as we reached
            the first corner, and I dove for the inside, still hard on
            the gas (My God, what am I doing???!!!).  

            I just knew it!  I watched as the Escort drifted down the
            bank toward the white line at the apex between one and
            two--the sucker cut me off, forcing me down onto the
            apron. I had to ease out of the throttle to keep from
            sliding into him as we rounded the bend.

            Into three, I waited until his lights came on, pulled
            right, and stood on the brakes.  "I've gotta watch this" I
            thought, "I've gotta remember my first crash!"  I
            reached the corner, the car twitching nervously. Just
            as I started to turn, my field of vision was filled with a
            panoramic closeup of the right side door of a Ford Escort.
            "EEEEEEAAAGGGGGHHHH!"  I swerved to the right through the
            dirt, just missing his door by inches.  "Okay, you win
            this one..."

            I checked the mirrors.  The Golf was on my left.  Now my
            right.  Left.  Right.  He tried to pass me on the inside
            through one and two.  I slide over in front of him into
            the braking zone for three.  I cut across his bow into
            six.  "Yeesh, this guy doesn't give up".

            Onto the front straight, again I inched up on the Escort. 
            He was two car lengths behind Peter in the Datsun; I was two
            car lengths behind him; that damned Golf was two car
            lengths behind me!  "Will somebody (beside me) please goof, 
            so I can get by!"

            Through one, I drove that poor car as hard as I could.  
            I could feel the tires struggling to hang on.  I couldn't make 
            up an inch on Ted.  "Sucker's really hooked up."  Michael 
            was in my left mirror again!  "Look you PEST!  BACK OFF!!!" 
            Into three, I scraped him off again, as I inched him
            toward the stack of tires on the left at the entrance to the 
            "jug handle", forcing him to back down.  "Brake late! 
            Brake Late!  Don't let him inside!"

            Around ten, I got a good jump on Ted.  I wound the engine
            up and pulled to the left alongside the Escort as he swung 
            right to line up for the Esses.  He held a slight lead as
            we reached the left hand turn at the north end of the
            track.  I backed off as he sliced across in front of me to
            the apex, narrowly missing my front bumper.

            I scraped the Golf off my left side again, as we reached 
            the braking zone for turn three, and again at six.  

            At ten, Ted must have missed a shift.  I easily pulled up
            alongside him as we raced for eleven; he was on the
            inside.  We jogged left.  I could see it coming.  I
            climbed on the brakes as he held his line straight for the
            right side of the track, leaving me with nothing to drive
            on but dirt.  Bad boy.

            Down the front straight, I was gaining on Ted again.  "I'm
            gonna get you, you weasle!" I thought to myself.  My
            concentration was broken by a blur of motion to the left. 
            The checkered flag heralded the end of the game.

            This race was over much too soon.

	    (Out of 25 starters, Peter finished 9th, Ted 10th, I was 
	     11th, and Michael was 12th.)

    
200.14BEING::MCCULLEYRSX ProWed Jun 19 1991 19:384
    great description of great fun!
    
    and just think, as soon as you get enough experience and feel ready for
    some intense competition you can upgrade to Nationals!
200.15Excellent report!NEWOA::SAXBYA house! My kingdom for a house!Thu Jun 20 1991 05:236
    
    Keep 'em coming.
    
    That was brilliant, just like a written in-car camera, but better! :^)
    
    Mark
200.16I sweated when reading it!EEMELI::JMANNINENUntouchableThu Jun 20 1991 06:474
    I almost started to steer my terminal...
    
    
    - Jyri
200.17Looking forward to next reportJUPITR::JROGERSFri Jun 21 1991 11:494
    Good piece of writing.  Now I have to wait for my heartbeat to slow
    down....  
    
    Jeff
200.18Slow on the track, slow in notesNYTP05::JANKOWITZSlime is oozing from my terminalMon Jul 01 1991 09:43167
	This note is actually a week old now. The race was 2 weeks ago.
	Procrastinate? Who me?

OK, I wasn't thrilled with the results from my first National race. I
decided it was time to get serious about this stuff. I could run well
in Regionals without putting in much work in preparation and without
really driving too hard. Now I have to work to be competitive. I want
to finish in the top 6 which means working for my results.

What does it take to be serious?
I started by painting the car! You say that's not very serious? Part
of being serious means looking serious and the paint was starting to
get chipped. It also was a way of making it MY car instead of "Isn't
that John Gerbi's old car". I also tried to make a mold for the nose
so I could make a new one if (when) I smashed this one. That's a long
story by itself. 

Next, I fixed the broken sway bar arm. That was serious and was surely
not helping me in the last race.

Then I disassembled the suspension in all four corners. I found the
spring rates which I didn't know. The front of the car was too soft
for my tastes and even with the ride height way up it was still smashing
the car in different places on different tracks. The only problem was
that the car handled fairly well already. I didn't want to mess it
up. Now, it costs money to just go out and buy a bunch of springs and
swap them in and out until you find a good balance again. It also
takes testing time to find that point (and more money). What do you
do? I measured up all of the suspension points and plugged the numbers
into my BGC Systems suspension analysis programs, worked with the
numbers and it spit out some new spring rates that would give me the
same balance at a lower ride height and make it so I only had to buy
one set of springs. With full confidence in the programs I plunked my
money down on new springs for the front.

- installed the springs
- lowered the car 1 inch in the front and 1/4 inch in the rear
- re-set the corner weights
- aligned the car putting more camber in the wheels than I ran
  last year
- put new numbers and my name back on the car courtesy of my next
  door neighbor (thanks Tony)

Finally, I bought some VP Red racing gasoline to bring with me
instead of just buying the CAM 2 at the track. I had a full
tank of CAM 2 already so I would do the first session with that,
the second session with 1/2 and 1/2 and the final session with
just the VP Red. That seemed like a good way to judge the
performance.

Finally, off to Watkins Glen. I started out behind someone I
thought was pretty quick but hadn't been to the Glen before.
He was quicker down the back straight than me but really held
me up in the turn at the end which is a deceptively fast down
hill, off-camber sweeping turn. At the end of the down hill
turn you should be going about the same speed as you were at
the end of the back straight (maybe faster). After following
him for two laps I dropped back for the first turn and chucked
the car into the turn. Then you run flat through a
short chute which leads through a flat out right-left-right
steep up hill section onto the back straight. I stayed pretty
close to him up the back and held my braking till the last
second, ducked my nose in under him in the turn and led
him down the hill. I stayed ahead of him for the rest of the
lap but he out dragged me again on the back straight and really
held me up at the turn at the end again. Since this was just a
qualifying session and there were only 8 cars out on the 3.3
mile track it was silly to be getting in each others way. I
backed off the gas and let him get a few hundred feet ahead
and then started pushing again. In the next two laps I dropped
my time by two seconds. Unfortunately that was about the end
of the session because I was still 1 second slower than I had
been at the end of last year.

I came in and checked the tire temperatures. I took some camber
out of the left rear and put another 1/2 turn in the right front
and adjusted the tire pressures all around.

The next session they put the Formula Continentals (FF 2000s) in
with us. This still only put about 20 cars on the track. I never
really pushed the car in the first session. NOW it was time to drive!
I started pushing the car through the turns harder than I had all
of last season. The car was handling nicely and I felt comfortable
really sliding it around. I couldn't stay with anybody down the
back straight but I could stay with just about anybody through the
turns. My crew held up my times and they were slower than the
morning session?????????????? I played with the swaybar settings
and set up a bit of oversteer and really hung the car out for
two laps but the times didn't get any better. At the end of the
session I had been one second slower than the morning when I
was just taking it easy. My tire temperatures were 30 degrees hotter
and the temperatures were much more even across the tires. It
showed that I was driving harder and the changes I had made were
all in the right direction. Serious confusion set in.

I didn't know anything about carburetors. Everyone was very helpful
and gave me hints on setting them up. Joe Stimola (worked with
Chip Gnassi's Indy car team last year) looked at my plugs and
suggested which jets I should put in the carb. That, and one
small change to the tire pressures and get ready for Sunday. I
had only qualified 6th out of 8. Not very good especially since
I had been faster with old tires last year.

They posted speeds for cars at the end of the back straight. The
first place Formula Ford ran something like 129, 127, 131, 132.
My speeds were 118.3, 118.6. 118.5. More depression! My car isn't
as aerodynamic as most of the other cars but that was ridiculous.
It said it didn't matter how I went through the first turn, my car
was going to get to 118mph and that was all!

A last minute scramble got me ready for the Sunday morning warm up
session. The car was only just getting to 6000 rpm at the end of
the back straight when it would get to 6200 much farther back
last year and would pull 7000 with a tow. Now I couldn't even get
a tow. The plugs looked a little better so I had again made a change
which should have made me faster.

I was gridded near the back and didn't see much hope of moving up with
the times I was running. I decided to push the car as hard as I could
anyway. The starts always make your heart beat fast. I warmed the tires
up well on the pace lap. Being in the back I thought I'd try to get a
little jump at the start. I came around the last turn with my foot on
the floor. The field was pretty ragged and they waved us off. We did
one very quick lap (only about 15 seconds off my qualifying time). When
we got to the 180 degree uphill turn (the Toe of the Boot) the car
starting next to me spewed out a cloud of white smoke and left a stream
of oil right on the line through the second half of the turn. He was
almost directly in front of me at the time and my car and my helmet were
covered with oil. I knew if we went green on that lap there was going
to be a mess when we came through racing. Sure enough we went green that
time around. I held my position (there wasn't too much question about
that happening) and worked my way around the track up the back straight
down the hill into the the boot. When I headed towards the Toe of the
Boot I saw the oil flag and waving yellow fags. There were cars
spinning in all directions. I already new which line I wanted to take
to avoid the oil. I picked my way through the spun cars and debris and
got back on the gas. When I came onto the front straight I was third
over-all and second in class! And I was complaining about people who
over-drive the flags! Good things couldn't last though and there was a
red flag at the start finish line. Since the whole field never completed
a racing lap they lined us up in starting order again for a single file
restart. Two of the cars in my class were bent and couldn't continue.
We started the race again and I drove as hard as I could but I couldn't
stay with the cars in front of me. I drove hard for the entire race
even though I never had another car in my class to race with the whole
time. In the end I was yet another second slower than I was on Saturday.
More confusion but a 4th place finish.

Monday night I did a compression test of the engine. It said -
165 lbs, 155 lbs, 90 lbs, and 160 lbs. A leakdown test of the
engine showed that cylinders 1,2 and 4 were all leaking badly passed
the rings and 3 was dead in the top end. I'm usually pretty nice to
the engine so I didn't think I could have bent a valve even though
that's what it looked like. I pulled the head, and the intake valve
in the #3 cylinder had a chunk missing along the edge and a crack
running through it. If that crack had gone a little farther a large
chunk would have come off and made paper weights out of many engine
parts.

With only one week left now I have ordered a new intake valve for
over-night delivery. The head should be fixed in time for the race
this weekend. I knew the bottom end was bad but the leakdown showed me
how bad. After this weekend I will tear the engine apart and rebuild
the bottom end. Since it already has new rings it means that it will
probably be a new set of pistons and a set of cylinder sleeves. I hope
it doesn't rain for the rest of the season 'cause that was the money
for my rain tires (plus quite a bit more). Ahhh, the joys of racing! 
200.19Another typical SCCA NationalNYTP05::JANKOWITZSlime is oozing from my terminalMon Jul 01 1991 10:1640
I got the car together in time for this weekends race at Lime Rock. I 
had some mixed fortunes but like always, it will take me some time to 
write it down. I thought the GT1, GT2 race was interesting, so thought
I'd put this in here. 

I was happy that my friend Doug Arnao was on the GT2 pole (his usual 
position) in his 914-6. More interesting though were a couple of the 
GT1 cars ahead of him.

The car starting second was being driven by a 51 year old man who was 
reportedly in his first season of racing. He decided to go racing by 
giving Jack Roush a reported $750,000 to $800,000 to run a season of 
SCCA GT1 National races! Judging by the familiar Roush/Ford paint 
scheme on the familiar looking Trans-Am car, with the matching 
tractor-trailer and with the courtesy coach with viewing stand and 
microwave dish on the roof and tent with a bar on the ground, 3/4 of a 
million dollars is not hard to imagine. What a way to start racing? 
That should be illegal in this form of racing. But he was only 
starting second!

Starting first was a very unobtrusive looking Chevy with a not very 
impressive yet slightly familiar looking two-tone red and blue paint 
scheme. The rest of the car contained not one word with the exception 
of the drivers name over the door. If you hadn't recognized the color 
scheme and hadn't noticed that the car came out of a very flashy 
tractor trailer with sponsors names including K-Mart you might have 
thought that the name on the car was just a namesake and not the 
familiar -

Paul Newman

Newman took the lead in the first turn and the two traded places and
battled for the first part of the race. An off course excursion by the
Roush car gave Newman the lead for the rest of the race. My friend
also swapped back and forth leading the GT2 field. Towards the end he
was in second when the first placed Lotus made a very poorly chosen
pass attempt braking his suspension and putting him into the tire wall
and bringing out the pace car. 

Doug won GT2 and Paul Newman won GT1.
200.20BEING::MCCULLEYRSX ProMon Jul 01 1991 12:189
    re .25-
He decided to go racing by giving Jack Roush a reported $750,000 to $800,000 
...That should be illegal in this form of racing. But he was only starting 
second!

Starting first was [...] Paul Newman
    
    
    Isn't amateur racing great? !?	Viva Le Trans-Am!!!
200.21MIKE DINGMANSOLVIT::PLATTTue Jul 02 1991 14:363
    The gentleman who gave Jack Roush whatever amount of money, was Mike
    Dingman who, I believe is the former President/CEO of Wheelabrator Frye
    out in Hampton, NH.  BIIIGGGG BUCKS!!
200.22More fun at Lime RockNYTP05::JANKOWITZSlime is oozing from my terminalMon Jul 08 1991 10:28174
I got the new intake valve on Tuesday night, lapped it in, installed
it and replaced the head. At least the top end of the engine should be
back to normal. The bottom end is still bad but I really wanted to get
to the Lime Rock race before I tore the engine apart again. I'm not
sure how much time or money will be left after that. 

Engine back together on Wednesday night, leave for the track Thursday
night. Hopefully, the engine will be back to the condition it was at
the end of last season. I still want top 6 finishes. 

Friday morning comes - very hot - weather report calls for thunder
showers for Saturday. I hope not. I can no longer buy a new set of
rain tires because all of the money currently in my racing account is
now budgeted for the engine rebuild. The rains I have came with the
car (at least 2 years old now) and look pretty bad. 

The first session is an untimed practice session. The Formula Fords
and Formula Continentals are both in the same group again. That means
that there will be plenty of faster cars on the track to keep an eye
out for. Between 25 and 30 cars on the 1.5 mile circuit, a fair amount
of traffic. I get out behind an older FF and quickly find out that he
isn't letting me by very easily. I drive with my nose stuck under his
tail for the entire lap. He is running considerably slower than I am
ready to run. I pull up alongside him in one turn and he seems to not
notice I'm there and turns in on me. I turn over the curb,  back off
and head to the right side of him and come up along side him again and
again he turns in on me. I go up on the curbs and back off again. Turn
after turn he chops me off. On the straights I don't have the power to
just go by. I drop back before the front straight and run flat out
down the hill through the turn onto the front straight and start to
catch him. Behind me is one of the faster Fords. I point him by on my
right and duck in under his tail. I figure he'll hold the car in front
of me a little wide and I'll go through behind him. We get to the end
of the straight, the slower car on the left, the faster car to the
right with me about 6 inches behind. The slower car starts to slow and
turn in on us. The car in front of me backs off the power and I'm
caught off guard. I lock up a couple of tires pull the car to the
right and try to hold the car to the inside of the turn instead of
sliding straight off into the other two cars. We come through the turn
and the slow car is still in front of both of us. The faster car makes
what to me looks like a brave dive to the right in the turn leading
onto the back straight and starts to walk away. I'm still stuck
behind. Again, I pull alongside in each turn and get chopped. The
corner workers aren't showing any flags to this guy even though I'm
inches from his tail. I hang back in the last turn again and run flat
out down the hill again. This time I am moving quite a bit faster and
draft right up to his exhaust pipe and easily go by. Two turns later
he's out of sight. 

Next I came up on a Continental running about the same times as me. I
was still picking up my speed though and soon wanted to get by him. My
car is handling and braking incredibly. I try the same move, hold back
in the last turn... He has more speed down the front straight so I
can't get alongside him no matter how fast I get onto the straight. In
the first turn I'm all over him again. The next lap I make another
attempt. Flat down the hill onto the front straight but I'm still two
car lengths behind him. I pull to the inside, he hits the brakes, I
hold off till the last instant and dive on through from two car
lengths behind. Phew! He follows me around for the rest of the lap. We
both pass a slower car going into the first turn on the next lap.  He
must have been cut off because out of the corner of my right eye I see
him behind me with the brakes locked and sliding towards my right rear
corner. I straighten out the car and drive down the escape road so he
doesn't hit me. He let me back out of the escape road in front and
guess who's just come by? That slower car again @#!$. This time I
dispense with that car more quickly and start to drive. My last lap is
my quickest at 56.9 seconds. I think I did one unofficial 56.9 last
season so I'm back on target. The tire temperatures show that some
small tire pressure changes are all that seem to be required. 

The next session was qualifying and boy is it hot out! How did it
happen? That same slow car is in front of me again! It takes me two
laps to pass him again. He is running times at 1 minute even and won't
let me by. I don't know who it is but I won't have any kind words for
him if I meet him later. Every turn I pull alongside and he chops me
off and runs me up on the curbs. Still the flaggers don't show him the
blue flag. I pass him again the same way as before and my time comes
down 3 seconds per lap. The car feels great now. I am sliding it
through every corner. The car is pretty neutral. I don't see a car out
there that can out brake me or run faster through the first turn. The
second turn, the only left hand turn I can finally get the car
through, bringing the back end around and really getting on the
throttle early. What a change from last month when the car wouldn't go
through this turn at all. Then it's back to the left and flat through
the right hander drifting out to the edge on the back straight. A
light brake then into the uphill turn. I go through there a little
quicker each lap and there's still more time left. Some more light
braking into West Bend which took the side off my Porsche 3 years ago.
There's still some time left in that corner also. Then shift into 4th
and flat down the hill. The car hits the bottom with good scrape and
slides to the left edge over the bumps with plenty of room to spare
(maybe as much as a foot). There is nobody helping me in the pits so I
don't know how my times are and don't have anybody to take my tire
temperatures at the end of the session. My sister-in-law was timing me
from the down hill. At the end of the session I've run 1/2 a dozen
laps in the 56s. My best time is 56.2. Almost a second faster than my
previous official best. It puts me 6th out of 16 cars, fastest non
Swift Formula Ford. The next non Swift is in 11th. I'm thrilled with
the time and then realize that there was easily 2/10ths of a second
left out there. I am dreaming about that extra couple of horsepower
when I fix the bottom end. I still hope it doesn't rain on Saturday. 

Saturday brings a long wait. My race isn't going to be run until
nearly 3:00pm. Since I didn't get any tire temperatures and everything
else looked good I haven't changed anything. I decide not to go out
for the morning warm-up session. 

We line up for the race and it's sunny and HOT. Better that than rain.
We warm up the tires on the pace lap and come down for the start. I
know I don't have any power so I have to try not to lose any
positions. We come down the hill, the pace car pulls into the pits and
the green flag comes out. This by itself is a rare occurrence in my
class. The first start is almost always waved off. I got on the gas
early and am holding my position down the front straight. I move to
the right for the first turn and the car behind me goes around to my
left and around the outside. The cars are still all bunched up inches
from each other as we head to the second turn. I go for my normal line
and someone pulls to my left on the inside line and holds me to the
outside and gets by. I am right on his tail as we head for the uphill.
He brakes earlier and much harder than I am expecting and I have to
lift and get on the brakes as we go into the uphill. In 3rd gear I've
lost all of my momentum and the next car is able to just walk by me.
Four turns and I've lost three positions. Not a good start. I know I
can get them all back though but it will be interesting. The next lap
there is a car stuffed into the guardrail in the uphill turn. Waving
yellow flags and then black flags in the next two turns. At the start
finish line was a red flag. On the front straight were smashed Formula
Continentals littering the track. It seems that some of the front cars
hit the brakes for the red flag (as they are supposed to do) and
somebody else didn't! They lined us up in the order from the previous
lap which left me in 9th. I still knew I could get 6th back. The
person who ducked to my inside said he made that move because he
trusted that I wouldn't run him off. I told him he could count on
that. I thought to myself that I will give him that same trust in a
few minutes after we restart the race ;-}. On the pace lap the car
that passed me on the outside pulls off onto the grass, 8th place. We
come down the hill to the green flag and I lose a few car lengths on
7th and 6th places. I start to pick up my pace and the two cars get
caught behind a Continental. That was just what I needed to catch
right up to them. They both squeezed by the Continental and left me to
make my own way by. Meanwhile they were fighting against themselves
back and forth for position and not pulling away. In fact they were
running pretty slowly and I saw some other cars coming up behind me. I
decided it was time to get by the Continental and get myself out of
there. I squeezed by the Continental. The person now in 6th had
started to pull away. The car in front of me in 7th was the one who
said he had trusted me. I was about to return the favor. I closed
right in on his tail under braking into the first turn and stuck there
inches away. He went wide for his line this time and I repeated the
move he showed me a few laps before, 7th place and 20 laps to go. The
next car was about 4 or 5 seconds ahead. I set my sites and started
walking away from the car I'd just passed. I started pushing and so
did he. At the end of that lap I hadn't gained anything. I had a clear
track now and could start working on my driving. There was plenty of
time to get him. Before the back straight I got a whiff of radiator
fluid. There was nobody directly in front of me so I couldn't figure
out where it was coming from. I looked down at the gauges on the back
straight and everything looked fine. After the next turn I looked down
again and the water temperature said 0. That meant there was no water
left covering the sensor. I pulled to the side and coasted down the
hill, shut the engine and rolled into the pits. DNF! 

That was still the most fun I'd had in several races. I also can't
complain as this is my 4th year racing and that's my first DNF. With
only 1 DNS (Did Not Start, due to qualifying accident) I shouldn't be
too unhappy. Inside though I still wanted that 6th place. 

It turned out that when I topped up the water before the race I didn't
get the cap all the way closed. It worked its way loose and the water
just boiled away. Bummer! 

That was a week ago. The engine parts should be in today giving me 
three to four after work nights to rebuild the engine. Because of the 
DNF I want to get the car done for this weekend more than ever.
200.23At least I had a fun raceNYTP05::JANKOWITZSlime is oozing from my terminalWed Jul 17 1991 17:31142
The new pistons, bearings, gaskets... arrived late Monday night. The
engine was rebuilt, installed and finally started by Thursday night.
All that was left to be done at the track before the race was to bleed
the clutch and brakes. Hopefully the engine would give me a few more
horsepower to get up the back straight at Watkins Glen and hopefully I
hadn't forgotten anything during the rebuild. I've now replaced the
bearings and rings more times than the brake pads. My goals for this
weekend? Same as all the other races this year, top 6 finish AND I
wanted to take 2 seconds off my best time last year of 2:06.2.

A late departure Friday night plus the usual miserable traffic in
Pennsylvania meant that we didn't get to Watkins Glen until 1:30am.
With 4 hours of sleep we were off to breakfast and then registration. 

Remember I had mentioned that I hoped it wouldn't rain 'cause my rain
tire money went into the engine rebuild? Bet you can't guess what the
weather was heading towards as my first qualifying session approached.
If God had intended man to stay on budget he wouldn't have invented
credit cards. 

I wanted to take an easy lap to warm up the fresh engine and the new
rain tires. I've only driven the car one other time in the rain so I
also figured it would take me time to get used to the car again. The
rain was coming down pretty hard but the worst part was that you
couldn't see the corners or the flag stations because of the fog.
After 3 timed laps our session was finally stopped because of the fog.
How bad was the rain? Well, during the last two laps the car felt like
it was cutting out from the water in the middle of the back straight.
I lifted off the gas and realized that the sudden loss of power was
actually because the rear tires were spinning (at about 100mph). That
session came to about $200 per lap for the tires. It did however leave
me in 6th on the grid.

That wasn't to last however as the fog lifted and the rain stopped so
racing could resume. For our second qualifying session the track was
dry except for the line of oil in the "Toe of the Boot" (sharp steep
180 degree uphill right turn). That meant that you had to either stay
to the outside of the turn or the inside. You couldn't take a normal
line. I would try both sides and see how it felt. I was having a few
other problems though. The car wasn't turning in well for the left
hand turns and the transmission was being difficult downshifting into
second. The engine was only pulling 6200rpm up the back straight. That
was the same as last year so I expected more since the rebuild. One of
the faster cars passed me on the back straight and I tried not to lose
him too quickly. He was slipping away and on the second pass through
the boot I slid a little wide into that line of oil. The back end went
to the left, then the right, then the left, then the right all the
time sliding up towards the guardrail. I managed to gather it all back
in and keep going with my heart beating a little faster. On my last
lap I ran my fastest time of only 2:06.998. Not very impressive and
only good for 8th out of 9 cars. The pyrometer's battery was dead so
we didn't get tire temperatures. I had no idea what to do to make the
car better for the race. I had all night to think about it though. 

I arrived at the track Sunday morning, lowered the front of the car a
touch and set the tire pressures back to where I had them at Lime Rock
two weeks ago and went out for the morning warm up. Usually there are
too many cars out during the warm-ups to get any real times. I was
lucky and got some clear track space. On top of that, the pole winning
Formula Ford went by me and it made me realize where I could pick up 
some time. I brought my time down to 2:05.8. I came into the pits and
my wife had borrowed a pyrometer from one of the other teams. I got
the tire temps and had something else to work with. With any luck I'd
be able to make a run at the person starting ahead of me who qualified 
in the mid 2:05s.

I adjusted the tire pressures and did the other dozen things that
needed to be done before the race. We lined up for the start. It
really is a depressing feeling lining up on the last row of the grid.
We went around on the warm up lap. I got the tires and brakes up to
temperature as we came around towards the last turn before the start.
I was going to lift off the gas and then put my foot down around the
last turn. My timing was a little off though. Everyone else got on the
gas just before me and I ended up a 1/2 a car length behind when the
green flag came out. I kept to the inside and kept my foot down even
when I saw the tire smoke coming up from the middle of the pack in the 
first turn. It was just a locked brake and I could see that there was
no danger. I ducked under the car that started alongside me. I
realized that I had to get up to speed quickly and drive hard if I
wanted to do any better. The people in front of me traded places going
through the esses up the hill onto the back straight. I kept my nose
right in there and didn't let them pull an inch away. We worked our
way around the first lap and I wasn't having any problem staying up
with the three cars in front of me. On the next lap the two cars
directly in front of me traded places again. I was still hanging right
in there. The car in front of me was starting to hold me up now and
the cars in front of him were starting to edge away. I hadn't run
wheel to wheel with the car in front of me before so I didn't know if
I could trust him if I went to pass. I tucked my car uncomfortably
close behind him and let him tow me up the back straight. A few
hundred feet from the end I pulled out to the right and got my front
tires alongside him. I wasn't sure if he'd chop me off or let me
through so I backed off as we hit our braking points. I let him stay
ahead but he did stay wide. I could have gotten through. I ducked in
behind him down the hill again. He was braking earlier than I would
have in almost every turn. We exited the toe of the boot with my car
still inches from his transmission. I pulled to the right but was
still a bit far back to make the pass going into the next turn. I was
feeling him out and letting him know that I was going to make a move
soon. Again, he stayed wide enough to let me know I could make a safe
pass when the time came. I ducked back under his tail and followed him
around for the rest of the lap. We ran up the back again. I pulled
closer and closer. There couldn't have been three inches between us.
Three quarters of the way down the straight I pulled out to the right
and moved up alongside him. This time I wasn't going to back off. He
stayed wide and I went by on the inside down the hill. He pulled over
to the inside to try to get me right back but I had good speed and he
couldn't pass me. I pulled away a few car lengths through the left
hander at the bottom of the hill. As I went through the turn I saw the
two cars now in front of me and started to concentrate on them. I
wasn't far enough in front though. He was able to get back behind me
and draft me up the back straight. He ducked to the inside and came up
alongside me. I knew I was faster through the turn and decided to stay
on the outside. As we came over the rise at the end of the straight we
started down the hill side by side. I noticed that there was rubber
and garbage on the outside line and backed off letting him back in
front of me. I faked to the inside down the hill just like he had when
I passed him. At the bottom of the hill though I started having
trouble downshifting into second again. I lost a couple of car
lengths. I went by the pits and they showed me my last lap time was a
2:04. The next lap was even worse though. I ended up coasting half way
through the turn before it finally went in gear. I lost more distance.
For the rest of the race I would start to catch back up and then slip
back when the car wouldn't go into gear.  The last 3 or 4 laps the
front tires started to go off pretty badly. The car wouldn't turn in
in several turns. I would turn the wheel and the car would just push.
I had to wait and wait before I could put my foot back down. I tried
to play with the throttle to get the back end around but it didn't
work. The engine was pulling better and better though as the race went
on. By the end of the race it was pulling 6400rpm in 4th gear without
a tow. That is about 128mph compared to the 118mph from the last race.
And for another rare occurance, none of the Formula Fords spun,
crashed or broke. I ended up finishing in 8th. 

My 2:04.2 would have been enough to qualify on the pole and most
likely win the regional race here last year. I still accomplished one
of my goals though. The person who finished behind me said that 6 of
the other drivers made it to the runnoffs last year and that 4 of them
finished in the top ten. I guess it was a pretty tough field. Due to
my finances I will probably only do one more race this year. At least
I don't think there's any major work to do to the car. I'll probably
just look at wheel alignments, corner weights and of course the gears.
200.24BEING::MCCULLEYRSX ProThu Jul 18 1991 13:2315
>I've now replaced the bearings and rings more times than the brake pads. 
    
    umm, Glenn, about your maintenance schedules.  I'm not sure this is the
    recommended situation :-)
    
    
>At the bottom of the hill though I started having
>trouble downshifting into second again. I lost a couple of car
>lengths. [...]The next lap was even worse though. 
    
    don't you just hate it when the car lets you down just as you get a
    good dice started?
    
    Sounds like you're getting a good introduction to National competition 
    though.  Good luck in the next race!
200.25ITA/B REGIONAL RACE, LIMEROCK PARK, 7/20/91SOLVIT::MCOXMon Jul 22 1991 18:07175
        As I sat there, strapped in the car cranking the starter, I
        felt a tremendous sense of relief.  And new panic.  I was two
        feet off the right side of the track pointed toward the dirt
        embankment, less than a hundred yards past the top of the
        Climbing Turn.  Harold, one of the corner workers ran up and
        looked to me for some direction.  Will it start?  I could only
        shrug.
            Twenty seconds earlier, as I started into the uphill
        turn, I knew I was in trouble-- I'd turned-in a fraction of a
        second late.  As I passed the appex, I would have given three-
        to-one odds that I was going to nose into the guard rail just 
        before the worker station.  I fought a massive wave of fear;
        instinctively I played with the throttle and the steering wheel 
        to try to get the car to turn just a little more-- I was going
        too fast to lift off or touch the brakes.  As I started up the
        hill, I was more optimistic; I figured I'd escape with merely
        side-swiping a hundred feet of railing.  As the two left tires
        dropped off the pavement into the dirt, I thought maybe, just
        maybe I could make a clean getaway.  Then the rear end swung to
        the left; I realized that the engine was winding up.  I
        thought for sure the back-end would hit the railing.  The corner
        workers were diving for cover-- thanks for the vote of
        confidence, guys.  It dawned on me that I should lighten up on
        the gas; I had induced a severe case of power oversteer.  I
        cranked in some opposite lock, and the car hopped back onto
        the straightaway and I was headed the right direction.  The
        rebound hit before I could respond with the wheel, and the car
        snapped into a counter-clockwise spin, across the track and
        into the sand.  As I came to a halt, I realized I'd been too
        late with the clutch; the engine had stalled.
           Harold and the other workers pushed me off to the side, and
        I unstrapped and climbed out.  It was a tremendous relief to
        get the helmet and nomex hood off.  The heat of the morning
        was already oppressive.  After a moment to catch my breath, I
        couldn't help but smile to myself.  I'd managed to keep my 
        string of spins during qualification runs intact.  "You picked
        one Hell of a spot to do it," I thought, almost amused.  I
        knew I had turned some pretty good laps, and I had managed to
        get enough laps in to qualify and get the hang of my new
        technique through the fast corners.
           In less than five minutes, the session was over.  I
        wandered back to the car, fired it up, and motored back to the
        paddock.  I got a big ovation from the workers at West Bend as
        I drove past.  
           Back in the paddock, I got my lap times, and I was
        astonished.  I'd shaved 2.6 seconds off my best lap in the 
        Friday morning practice session.  My qualifying time was 3.3
        seconds faster than my qualifying time last year.  Those Yokies 
        had lived up to their billing.  I was starting to feel better 
        about the weekend, and my prospects for the race.

           By the time race group 8 took to the false grid, the heat
        and humidity was taking its toll.  Moments after I climbed
        into the car, Sydnia, one of the grid workers, came by and
        offered water, and I realized how hot I really was.  The water
        was cold and refreshing, and it revived me.  After a cup, I 
        turned my attention to the start of the race.  I would be
        starting from the outside of row ten.  I wasn't excited about
        starting outside, and I was afraid it would be difficult
        holding my position through the first turn.  "What the hell am
        I going to do?" I wondered.    
           On the pace lap the field surged and halted, and surged and
        halted, all the way around the track.  It was maddening.  As
        we reached the Diving Turn the pack accelerated, and I held the
        car in second gear all the way up to 7000 RPMs, 500 over red
        line.  I pulled up on the white Golf ahead of me.  He held a
        nice straight line down the left side of the track, so I
        squeezed right, pinching Paul in the 320i to my right.  He
        eased back and I pulled alongside the Golf just as everyone
        got on the brakes.  The field slowed dramatically, and I
        realized we'd been waved off.
           Again the field made its way slowly around for another
        start.  This time we got the green flag, and again I moved to
        the middle of the track.  This time Michael, ahead of me,
        moved right to plug up the hole to the inside.  His move left
        him unprotected on the outside, so I switched left and held my
        braking until the one marker at Big Bend.  As he got on the
        brakes, I pulled alongside on the very outside edge of the
        pavement.  Just ahead, Ray Blethen in the MR2 was tracking
        along the  outside too, and I snuck right up behind him as
        Michael, in the Golf, got pinched from both sides and dropped
        back.  As we fought toward the Lefthander, Ray swerved left
        into the dirt to avoid the black Rabbit which had cut over,
        apparently to block my inside move.  I jabbed the brakes to
        miss the Rabbit.  As we started into the turn, I switched back
        to the right and made a futile attempt to get inside him
        coming out of the Esses.
	   Down No-name Straight, the cars ahead lined up on the left
        to make a normal entry into the Climbing Turn.  The track on
        the right was completely open, and I figured I could get
        past the Rabbit before he made his turn-in.  I kept my foot in
        it until very late, since we weren't yet up to full speed, and
        as we reached the corner, the Rabbit turned in.  Maybe he saw
        me, maybe he didn't.  He turned in hard, and was headed for
        the curb on the other side of my car!  I turned away from the
        charging bunny, and I rounded the appex with my right tires 
        three feet behind the curb.  That we avoided contact was truly
        miraculous.  He pulled ahead, I gasped for air.
	   Lap two.  I pushed the car as hard as I could.  I waited
        until the two marker before braking for Big Bend; the tires
        squealed and the rear-end got loose as I trailed the brakes 
        into the turn.  The front tires protested loudly as the car
        understeered into the second half of Big Bend and the
        Lefthander.  The car drifted sideways, first right then left,
        throught the Esses, and I had to tinker endlessly with the
        wheel to keep the car straight.  The tires howled as I snapped
        the car into the Climbing Turn, and the left wheels bumped
        along the broken edge of the track at the exit, the car
        fish-tailing slightly as I held the wheel to stay on the
        pavement.  And still the white Golf closed in.  Down the Back
        Straight, he moved right to pass.  I started over to protect
        the inside line into West Bend, but he was determined, and I'd
        have had to completely cross the track to slow him up.  I
        stabbed the brakes for an instant and slashed in right behind
        him through the corner.
           Two more laps passed.  I didn't know how long I could keep
        up this pace.  I shuddered every time I approached the Uphill 
        turn, West Bend, or the Downhill.  I forced myself to stay off
        the brakes, and the tires screamed in agony at every turn-in.
        The car slid wildly as I bumped up onto the curb at the apex
        of the Climbing Turn; it bounced and twitched sideways through
        the bumps in the Diving Turn.  This was not fun, this was
        stark terror!
           Down No-name Straight the silver Golf caught me, and I
        backed off to let him by as we turned up the hill.  My spirits
        sagged as a quick glance in the mirror revealed a train of six
        cars behind me, nose to tail, right on my heels.  Blue flags
        flew at every corner.  "I KNOW THEY'RE BACK THERE, DAMMIT!!! 
        And if I can do anything about it, THEY'LL STAY BACK THERE!"
           But there was nothing I could do about it.  Two laps later,
        Paul, in the 320i, pulled along side me down the Front
        Straight, and I stayed wide to let him by into Big Bend. 
           On lap ten, Steve, in the next silver Golf caught me at the
        turn-in to West Bend.  I slowed and stayed wide to let him
        through, and I realized I was scre*ed.  Right on his tail was
        a yellow 914, and a yellow Rabbit.  I had lost my momentum,
        and the 914 slipped by me before I could close the hole.  I
        squeezed in toward the curb when suddenly I realized the
        yellow Rabbit was coming through too, despite my efforts.  I
        knew we were going to hit, and I swerved back left. 
        Incredibly, we missed each other, and as I regained my
        composure, the red MR2 snuck by me as well.
           I've seldom felt as discouraged as I did watching the MR2
        slip away down the Front Straight.  "God, when will this
        wretched race be over?"  
           The tan 2002 behind me was having trouble.  I could match
        him down the straightaways, and for a lap or two he couldn't
        get close enough to catch me in the corners.  My tires were
        starting to give out on me in the corners and the car was
        sliding badly.  I had to brake for the Climbing Turn, and
        Wayne caught me as we approached West Bend.  There was nobody
        else behind me.
           As I came down the Front Straight, I spotted the bright
        orange RX2 a hundred and fifty yards behind me.  I knew he was
        the leader, and he was going to further trash my badly mauled
        ego by lapping me.  I glanced at the starter's stand and
        smiled when I realized the checkered flag in his hand was
        going to save me that embarrassment.
           One lap to go.  Wayne was only a few car lengths ahead.  I
        had to pass him back.  I drove like a maniac.  I pulled up on
        him through the Uphill Turn.  I pulled right to pass him as we
        exited West Bend.  I had him!  I was going to get him on the
        inside at the Downhill Turn.  THERE WAS A FREAKING GOLF
        LIMPING ALONG IN MY WAY!  For a split second, I toyed with the
        idea of splitting them, passing the Golf on the left and Wayne 
        on the right throught the turn.  DAMN!!!!  I tucked in behind
        the 2002 and stayed on the gas through the Diving Turn.  Down
        the Front Straight Wayne moved right to block.  I drafted right
        up behind him and popped to the left.  The tach was at 7000--
        I'd forgotten to shift!  I slammed it into fourth as we hurled
        side-by-side for the finish line.  
           He won by a foot.  I finished twenty-third.

           
    
200.26Keep it up - racing and reportingKETJE::SHASTA::RUTTERI've Been Out SuppingTue Jul 30 1991 13:349
�                       <<< Note 755.31 by SOLVIT::MCOX >>>
    
    Re. Above note, and others.
    
    Great stuff.  I really enjoyed reading your write-ups.
    
    Hope you can fit in some more races and reports.
    
    J.R.
200.27Thanks for the feedback!SOLVIT::MCOXTue Jul 30 1991 15:0111
    Thanks for the encouragement.
    
    I hope you can tell from the stories, each race has an entirely different
    character.  Although the actions are very similar from race to race,
    the emotional side can be very different.  That's the most interesting
    aspect for me, and I hope I'm able to convey that in the write-ups.
    
    
    Mike  
    
    BTW:  Somebody asked what kind of car I drive.  Red '71 BMW 2002. 
200.28Preparation for NHIS on 8/11SOLVIT::MCOXTue Aug 06 1991 11:5139
I put my 'new' (used) transmission in the car over the weekend-- hopefully
the oil leak is thereby cured.  I discovered, once I pulled out the other
gearbox, that the oil plug was missing from the front end of the selector 
rod guide shaft.  Apparently, when the oil got hot, it would slither out
along the shaft into the front of the bell housing, thence onto the entire
underside of the car.  I have never run this new transmission yet, so it may
prove interesting.

I also swapped out rear ends and put the 4.11 back in.  I've done this 
enough times that I've finally gotten the routine down (i.e. no more
swearing).  It takes about an hour to take one out & put the other one in.

Yesterday I installed new air hoses to cool the front brake rotors.  The
left duct had been ripped out at Lime Rock from the tire rubbing against it.
This time I got smart and ran the hose from the airdam up high along the 
back of the wheel well and down near the strut, keeping it away from the tire.

Tonight I'll put the traction treatment on the tires (they need all the help
they can get) and change the motor oil.  Most everything else checks out OK,
so about all that remains is to clean some of the dust & grime off the 
beast.

The race Sunday should prove quite interesting.  It will be 25 laps-- ten
laps longer than my longest race to date.  And NHIS is a killer on brakes!
I'm worried that: a.) I'll use up all of my brake pads (half thick DS11s; I
won't have a chance to bed new pads), b.) I'll boil the brake fluid (I'll
change fluid before qualifying), c.) the engine will use up a quart of oil, 
causing pressure to drop in the tight left-hand corners (I'll overfill it 
half a quart), d.) my tires will give out completely (they're getting tired), 
or, worst of all, e.) all of the above will happen and I'll be lapped twice
and finish ten positions worse than I qualify!  
Oh No!
    
This'll probably be my last race this season-- the tires are pretty well
beat up, and the ol' racing budget is running a deficit.   3^(
    
    Anybody got a set of A008s they want to donate to charity?  ;^)
    
    If you're at the track Sunday, stop by.
200.29come out and work....SASE::J_EVANSTue Aug 06 1991 14:5213
    As Mike alluded to, this weekend has 4 race groups Saturday and 4
    Sunday.
    
    This also means those driving Saturday can stay and be a worker Sunday,
    plus (for drivers....) this also means if you drive Sunday, you
    can work Saturday...
    
    I have all the specialties on line, so no excuse like "I don't know
    what they do....."
    
    See you all at NHIS BOTH DAYS...
    
    jim e  
200.30DECday at NHISSOLVIT::PLATTTue Aug 06 1991 17:497
    Looks like Sunday is DEC-day at NHIS.   Peter's rented a F/A car (Paul
    LeCain's #99) for Race group 2, then we're in Race group 4 with the #40
    Elva.  Hope to see ya all there, and hopefully, with a checker in hand
    after Group 4.  
    
    (Jim, swing by and introduce yourself)
    
200.31SASE::J_EVANSWed Aug 07 1991 09:394
    I'll try and remember to swing by. Then again you can always be at the
    post-race party...
    
    jim e
200.32and T & SBOOKS::GERDECymbal crash 2X only...DTN 237-6302Wed Aug 07 1991 14:596
    ...and, of course, you're ALL welcome at the timing and scoring truck
    over by medical.  And if it's too hot for you, or raining, stop by the
    media building and give Marty a hand with results and the copy machine.
    (We honestly, really, are in need of someone who can just operate the
    copy machine.)
    
200.33Roundy rounding 2 weeks agoNYTP05::JANKOWITZGloom and despairTue Aug 13 1991 09:51127
I was about to agree with my wife. I must have really lost it this
time. It was hard for me to imagine being in a place like this. I had
just pulled into the parking lot of what was supposed to be a 1/2 mile
oval track, Evergreen Raceway, in the hills of Pennsylvania. Every
other "race car" coming in on a trailer was a large American car that
looked like it had been the loser in a demolition derby. The cars were
all bent and dented with bumpers hanging off. And this was before the
so called racing started! More than one car came in on the back of a 
tow truck. The people walking around have their pictures in the
dictionary under Redneck. I was seriously tempted to just turn the
truck around and head home.

This all started when I had gotten an entry form for a Pro-Formula
Ford oval race at the end of August with a free test session on this
particular Saturday night. When I talked to Ricky Rutt who was
organizing the race he told me how these races would bring 2000-3000
spectators and be televised on local cable T.V. Somehow, I had a hard
time believing that. I figured that the free test session would give
me a chance to see what this stuff was really like. So far I was not
impressed. In fact, I was scared of the thought of going out on that
little oval track with guardrail all the way around the outside. My
brother and I took my truck into the paddock. My wife stayed with my
sister-in-law and their kids in his truck. They were afraid to get
out! We were the only Formula Ford there so far and nobody knew
exactly what to do with us. We hung out and watched the first few
warmup sessions as they went out. The cars would go out, run one or
two laps, a car would spin, they would push it off or wait for it to
restart and go run another one or two laps... We both noticed a late 
model decent looking Camaro on the track. When it came by though we 
saw the right side of the car was flattened. Only the left side looked 
decent.

After a while, Ricky showed up with his car. It seemed that we would
be the only ones showing up. By now I was happy that nobody else was
showing up. I was scared at the thought of getting out on that tiny
track with more than one or two other cars. They gave us about 15
minutes notice of when we would go out. I had gotten the car ready
before I had even gotten there so all that was needed was for me to
get into my driving suit. Ricky said he had 12 years of oval track
experience so I was quite content to let him out on the track in front
of me. I had no idea what to expect. I hadn't made any changes to the
car from the last race so it was not set up for the left turn only
oval track. I also had no idea what gears would be needed here. 

I went out on the track and shifted into second. I certainly didn't
need any more gears. They gave us two laps to warm up the tires and
then the green flag came out. I drove trying to feel my way
around without doing anything stupid. I was in an almost constant
turn. The first turn (turns 1 & 2 by their counting) was a double apex
turn. I would hit the brakes with my left foot and try to turn in as
quickly as possible with some trailing throttle. My head was pulled to
the right with a pretty severe force. I would get the car turned in
and ease back on the gas heading for the second apex. I could feel the
back end wanting to brake free even though I wasn't that close to the
limit. I would let the car out to the guardrail coming onto the "back
straight" (50 feet maybe). The other turn (3 & 4 to them) was a single
late apex turn. Here I was letting off the gas early, hitting the
brakes with my left foot, turning in and easing my foot back on the
gas. Back past the start finish line in a whopping 17 seconds! I tried
to stay with Ricky but he was able to pull away a couple of feet each
lap. He was going around in the 16 second range. We got a total of
about 6 laps when the checkered flag came out. I hadn't even gotten my
adrenalin flowing yet and the session was over. Six laps at "1/2
mile", That's shorter than one lap around Watkins Glen! 

They told us that if we waited around till about 8:00pm (it was 6:00pm
now) we would get to go out again during their intermission. My
brother had to leave but my wife said we should stay so I could go out
again. She had been sitting with my sister-in-law in the truck the
whole time and didn't even see when we went out.

Their racing went slowly as there were a lot of cars and a lot of
accidents. It seemed that 6 laps was about all that these people did
for a qualifying session and they rarely did that without any spins or 
accidents.

Around 9:30pm it was time for intermission (our cue). Ricky wanting to
put on a show insisted that I go out in front of him so he could pass
me. I wasn't really interested in running side by side with anyone out
here but he wouldn't move off the grid until I did. By now it was dark
out and the lights were on on the track. It was a pretty weird feeling
sitting in my race car in the dark. I kept thinking I should be
turning on the headlights. Buckled into the car with my helmet on I
looked up and saw the stars out; strange feeling!!!!! By now there
really were 2000-3000 people sitting on the hillside and there was a
truck with a T.V. camera on top of it sitting outside turn 3. On top
of that, Ricky had arranged to have my wife and his girlfriend go up
into the announcers booth for an interview while we were driving. 

We pulled out onto the track and got our 2 laps of warmup again. The
green flag came out. This time I kept the car in first gear. It was
hard to see the tach in that light but it seemed that I wasn't pulling
more than 5500 rpm in the middle of the straight. I started off slowly
knowing that he'd pass me. He came up behind me and I stayed wide
going into turn 3, drove alongside him through part of the turn and
let him by. Now I started to get on the gas though. By staying in 1st
I had a lot more punch coming out of the turns and he could only
barely pull away. He got the car sideways in turn 2 and all I could
picture was him spinning and me right behind with no place to go. I
backed off and gave him a couple of car lengths but then got back on
my pace. We got another 6 laps or so and the checkered flag came out
again. My arms and neck had gotten a good 2 minute workout.

They stopped us at the start finish line and had us get out of the
cars to do interviews in front of the spectators. I had worked harder
this time and when I got out of the car I could feel some adrenalin
flowing. I told them how wonderful it was for them to invite us for
the exhibition and what a great time I had. I lied through my teeth
and told them that I was really looking forward to coming back here
for a race. I knew by then that there was no way you'd get me out
there with 20 other cars. I don't think I'd want to go out there with
6 other cars. 

So, for my 4+ hours of round trip driving and 5 1/2 hours of standing
around I'd gotten 12 whole laps! I did keep the car off the guardrail
and I am pretty sure my times had gotten down into the 16 second range
even though my wife was unable to time me because of her interview
(she got to answer one question while we were doing our 6 laps). It
seemed that some of the other drivers were impressed since the Super
Modifiedes were running 14 second laps.

As far as the 1/2 mile part? A 1/2 mile in 16 seconds means that I
would have to have been averaging well over 100 mph. Redine with my
first gear would have been about 80 mph. Since I was braking
significantly for the turns there is no way I was going 1/2 mile. I
don't know how they measure the track but my guess was no more than
3/8 of a mile. 
200.34Serprise, serprise, serprise!SOLVIT::MCOXTue Aug 13 1991 10:199
    One for the memory book, eh?  Sounds like a much better time in
    retrospect.  Great story!
    
    I always thought oval racing would be very unexciting compared to road
    racing, but since I've run on the oval at NHIS, I love it!  High speed,
    high G-loads, the WALL!  It really keeps your attention!  I certainly 
    feel more secure with fenders.
   
    I applaud your daring! 
200.35ITB/C Race at NHIS, August 11th, 1991SOLVIT::MCOXThu Aug 15 1991 17:42248
	FIFTH RACE:
	SCCA ITB/C REGIONAL RACE AT NEW HAMPSHIRE INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
	AUGUST 11, 1991


   PRACTICE

   I waited for the practice session with high hopes, but a mild uneasiness. 
   I had spent a lot of time preparing the car for this weekend, and it
   was as ready as it could be.  Considering.  Considering the tires were
   getting quite old by contemporary motorsport standards.  Considering
   the flatspots on the tires were getting more numerous than the oil
   spots on my garage floor.  Considering the brake pads were down to half
   their original thickness.  For any other regional race the car would be
   fine; it would survive a twelve lap race.  But this one was
   twenty-five-- I had never driven the car more than fifteen consecutive
   laps before.  After twelve laps the tires would be useless,  the oil
   would be down a quart and the oil pressure would drop in the tight left
   hand turns, and the brake pads would be worn to the metal.  Fine
   prospects.

   I hadn't expected the practice session.  For some reason I thought we'd
   only have qualifying before the race, and I figured I'd turn a couple
   of qualifying laps and bring the car in--save it for the race.   The
   extra practice time was both a blessing and a curse.  It would give me
   a few more laps to get reacquainted with the track, but it would cost
   me tires and brakes I would need for the race.  I considered skipping
   the session.

   Mine was the third car on the track.  The two cars ahead of me were faster
   than mine, and for some reason I wanted to keep up with them.  I always
   want to keep up with the car ahead of me.  Like a dog chases a
   squirrel: reflex.  I followed the car ahead of me for several laps and
   we drew away from the rest of the field.  I quickly found the limit of
   adhesion in the corners, and it was depressingly low.  I had to lighten
   up on the gas into the banked oval turn to control the understeer.  I
   listened in disgust as the tires squalled in protest through turns six,
   nine, ten, and eleven.  I watched the car ahead slip away.

   Each lap I pressed harder.  I pushed the brake points as far as I
   dared.  Under braking for turn nine I locked the front tires and the car 
   skidded straight ahead, toward the dirt and the concrete barriers.  I
   let up on the brakes, got on the gas, and the car scrubbed through the
   turn in a cloud of tire smoke.  The thought of making such a horrendous
   spectacle was worse than the sickening smell of burning rubber.  I
   locked the wheels into eleven; I missed the down shift to second at
   turn three; I drove off into the dirt as I exited turn six.  After
   five laps, I parked the car.

   QUALIFICATIONS

   I arrived fifth on the grid for the qualifying session.  My practice times
   had been dismal.  I was more than a second off my qualifying time for
   the Memorial Day race.  My hopes for a good run this weekend had faded.
   I had spent the time since practice reviewing the track in my mind,
   looking for speed.  The tension in my neck and back was distracting.  I
   had to resort to my "just do what you can" pep talk to keep from taking
   the car back to the trailer.  Small talking with some of the other
   drivers helped the minutes pass.  Soon the track cleared, and we
   climbed into our cars.

   As I left the pits and rounded turn one, I took a deep breath.  The
   routine was familiar now:  short shift up to third, give the engine a
   couple of minutes to warm up; brake early and hard to get some heat
   into the rotors and pads; weave to warm the tires.  Get ready.  Stay
   calm, be smooth.

   Down the front straight, Rick Pocock slipped by on the inside.  I
   watched him motor merrily away through the oval turn.  No sweat.  Into
   turn three I buried the brake pedal at the first pylon and finished
   braking fifty feet before the turn-in point.  Okay, there's some time
   there.  Hard on the gas passing the appex, the rear end slipped left as 
   the drive wheel broke free for an instant.  Plenty of torque.  Up the
   hill I wound it to redline before shifting to third.  Into six, the
   tires squealed lightly under braking.  Over the hilltop I could feel
   the centrifugal force tugging as I rounded the bend, then the nose dove
   sharply as I braked for turn nine.  A squall from the front tires arose
   as I turned the wheel and headed into the left hand bend.  Adding
   power, the tires screeched all the way to the bottom of the hill.  A hard
   jab on the brakes and a flip of the wheel got the back end to the left
   for a quick trip past the tires stacked at the appex at ten.  Four
   thousand RPMs showed on the tachometer at the exit of the turn.  Not
   bad.  At eleven I forced myself to brake sooner, and came out of the
   corner 200 RPMs faster than before.  There's a message there.

   The track was starting to feel familiar: the brake points, the turn-in
   points.  It didn't help me relax.  I caught myself hyperventilating,
   and forced myself to take deep breaths down the straightaways.  I could
   feel my heart beating feverishly.  I glanced at the gauges, checked the
   Starter stand for flags.  The corner workers looked bored.  I braced
   myself every lap as I headed down the back straight for turn three, and
   I forced myself to drive hard those extra twenty feet before braking.

   Ed Funk followed me around turn eleven and I pointed for him to pass me
   on my left as we accelerated down the front straight.  He nipped inside
   me as we turned into the banked oval turn.  I tried to hang with him,
   and followed closely as he reached the braking point for turn three.  I
   stood on the brakes, and the pedal sank to the floor.  At 100 mph,
   something exciting was going to happen real soon.  I was horrified. 
   Ed's car loomed in front of me, and instantly I swerved right to avoid
   clobbering him.  I pumped the pedal in total panic, and the car slowed,
   but I drew alongside the Opel as it decelerated for the turn.  I
   thought for an instant that he saw me and would keep wide and let me
   pass in front of him-- it was his only hope.  He turned in right on
   queue, and I tried desperately to turn inside of him, but I was still
   going too fast.  I watched in horror as the Opel moved in front of me,
   and I thought to myself, "Geez Ed, I'm really sorry about this."  In
   that unimaginably brief instant I tried to think of how I'd appologize
   for ruining the poor guy's weekend.  I stared at the side of his car,
   and watched in my mind as my hood folded back and his right rear fender
   collapsed.  And then he was gone; the track ahead of me was clear.  I
   made the turn as the left tires dropped into the dirt, and I pulled up
   just two feet inside the tire barrier.  I drove into the pits.  I'd
   been spared.  Again.

   THE RACE

   I pulled out onto the track and lined up for the pace lap in a muddle
   of resignation, stubborn determination, and curiosity.  I'd come this
   far, and I had to see this damned thing through.  My expectations had
   been properly adjusted-- I wanted to finish.  Period.

   The weather was absolutely perfect.  The car was ready.  My mind
   was surprisingly clear, and I was acutely aware of everything going on
   around me as the field made its way slowly around the track.  I tried
   to get a sense for the cars ahead of me, to feel the start before it
   happened.  I played with the gas pedal, and my mind grew still as I
   tried to anticipate the exact moment the car ahead of me would take
   off.  I could feel it coming.  NOW!  I mashed the pedal, and closed
   right up on him.  The middle opened up ahead of me, and I surged ahead. 
   I watched  for the Starter, and when I saw the green flag, I floored
   it.  The blue Honda ahead of me on the inside got a bad start,  and I
   squeezed alongside as we approached the first turn.  Dave Patten was on
   my right, and four of us tried for the turn side by side.  The Honda
   dropped back and Dave and I drag raced through the oval door handle to
   door handle.  As we approached the brake point for turn three, the cars
   ahead darted and twitched, and tire smoke billowed.  I decided to drop
   behind Dave and take the inside of the corner, but the instant I
   started to turn, another car screamed up on my right and plowed into
   the back of Dave's orange Datsun.  Stunned, I swerved back, only to
   catch the flash of a blue Honda passing me on the outside, inches away. 
   "HOLY SH*T!  This is it!  My luck has just run out."   The middle of
   turn three looked like a demolition derby.  I waited an eternity for
   Dave to turn, but he kept going straight ahead, right to the outside
   of the pavement.  I drove into the dirt behind the Honda and hugged the
   tire barrier.  I was sure I'd been hit; I couldn't possibly have
   escaped unscathed-- it didn't matter, press on!

   Up the hill, I tried to pinch across to the apex, but was turned back by
   a survivor of the pileup.  Coming out of six, the dust had settled, and we
   followed the leader around to the front straight.  Dave was just ahead
   of me.  I reeled him in and just as I started left to pass him, Michael
   Reece in his white Rabbit blasted by both of us.  I dove inside the
   Datsun into turn one and followed the Rabbit.  Rounding the appex at
   turn three, I spotted Ted Balcezak's Escort parked behind the concrete
   barrier to the right, done for the day.  Tough break, Ted.  

   As the pack strung out, I concentrated on setting a sustainable pace.
   My greatest concern was brakes.  In the qualifying session, I had used
   the brakes so hard that after only eight laps the brake fluid in the 
   calipers boiled, causing the sudden loss of braking force.  My near
   miss with Ed Funk convinced me to soft pedal my way through the race if
   I wanted to finish.  It grieved by spirit to back off.  I checked the
   mirrors down the back straight.  No one behind me.  I got on the brakes
   fifty feet early and pumped the pedal to check for sponginess.  Deep
   breath.  Exhale.

   In the mirrors I noticed the Fiat X1/9 creeping ever closer.  Time to
   race again.  I botched the exit at turn eleven, and watched as Russ in
   the Fiat drafted up behind me down the front straight.  He moved to the
   inside as we approached turn one, and I decided to see how badly he
   wanted past.  I kept my right foot on the floor and the tires screamed
   as I entered the corner.  I followed the line down the banking right to
   the white line at the apron between one and two.  I watched with some
   relief as the Fiat backed off.  Approaching turn three, I held my
   braking late and pumped the pedal vigorously.  A brown flash streaked
   through my mirrors from left to right, and the Fiat rocketed 
   alongside, deep in the braking zone.  I knew he was in trouble-- he was
   going way too fast.  I turned right toward his left rear fender.  His
   speed carried him across my line, and I nailed the throttle to repass
   him on the inside as he skidded toward the outside edge of the track. 
   REVENGE!  That thought and the smirk on my face vanished instantly as I
   watched the Fiat spin sideways, blocking the track in front of me.  I
   barely had time to gasp.  I stomped on the brake pedal; the Fiat
   twitched back and forth like a three legged spider, then straightened
   out and headed up the hill.  I was livid!  "You've got no right to get
   away with that!  BASTARD!"  No justice.  I set off after him in a
   dither.  As we reached the crest of the hill, he pulled left and I
   passed him easliy.  I laughed to myself an evil laugh: "REVENGE!"  I
   watched with great relish as the Fiat dropped steadily back.

   End racing mode; turn down the turbo boost.

   Five whole laps of peace and quiet.  I was alone on the track.  I
   backed off on the braking.  I listened for the tire squeal in the
   corners.  There was none.  I felt slightly ashamed of myself for
   driving so slowly.  REAL racers don't save their cars!  Look at all the
   crap they give Alain Prost for saving his car.  The squishiness in the
   brake pedal as I approached turn three suggested that prudent racers
   ought to.  I eased off a little more.

   On the front straight, Bob Hasenbein in the sky blue Rabbit creeped
   into my draft.  Road Warrior time.  Approaching turn three, he pulled
   left.  I moved over to discourage any thought he might have of an
   outside pass attempt.  Instantly I knew I'd taken the bait; he darted
   right and tried to outbrake me, now on the inside.  I braked late and
   hard.  My mind flashed: he was beside me, but two feet back.  I was at
   the turn in point, so it was my corner.  Do I slam the door?  Hell,
   everybody has done that to me!  Wait a minute; if I do that and he
   doesn't back off, we both get an all-expenses-paid trip to the body
   shop.  But, if I don't chop him, he'll figure he can do it everytime.  
   I started in to the appex.  He didn't budge.  SH*T!  I stayed wide and 
   we turned the corner side by side.  Wimp.

   End racing mode.

   Each lap I checked the oil light.  Dark.  Engine coolant temperature
   had stabilized.  The sponginess in the brakes had faded, and the pedal
   was firm.  Damn!  I might just finish!  I glanced at the Starter stand. 
   The debris flag was out; must be oil.  I let up just a bit more into
   turn one, and the tires held tight.  Back on the gas.  Up the hill past
   turn four, I looked over to the right and spotted Rick Pocock in the
   red Alfa coming out of turn two.  In a couple of laps he'd catch me.  I
   started watching the mirrors closely.

   The Alfa blew by me down the front straight.  Didn't matter.  I was
   going to finish, that was all I cared about.  From the hill at five, I
   spotted Paul Roane in the red Volvo and Gary Engstrom in the yellow
   2002 duking it out down the back straight.  A couple of laps later Paul
   caught me just before turn one, and I followed the Volvo through the
   banked turn, watching in awe as he drove the car sideways through the
   corner, smoke pouring off the right front tire.  

   Next time around, to my great satisfaction, I lapped my first car.  It
   was very undramatic; I ducked inside into turn one completely without
   resistance.  My spirits began to rise, as I realized the end was near.
   At turn ten I found Michael Reece off in the dirt, out of the race. 
   Heh heh, "gee, that's too bad Michael."  Another position.
    
   The checkered flag greeted me on my next lap, and I could scarely
   contain my joy.  As I motored around the track on my cool-off lap, I
   waved to the corner workers as if I'd won.  God, it felt great!
   I parked at impound and checked the car over.  Not a scratch.  What a
   day!  I shook my head and smiled.

   I'd started sixteenth, finished tenth; my first top ten finish.

    
200.36Fifth and last? race of the seasonNYTP05::JANKOWITZGloom and despairFri Aug 16 1991 10:09166
    Finally, a track I haven't driven on before, Summit Point West
    Virginia. I have been to the track before to help out so I knew
    basically what most of the track looked like. I did know that the track
    was notoriously slippery. Most importantly though I had no idea what
    gears to put in the car. In my case it also probably meant what gears
    to buy for the car as I don't have too many. Bruce McCulley hooked me
    up through internet with Dave Gomberg in the D.C. region. Dave in turn
    asked his "most trusted" Formula Ford driver what gears he used and
    passed them back to me. Using a gear chart program my brother wrote, I
    converted the gears from the transmission with a 9:31 ring and pinion
    to the closest equivalent gears to work with my 10:31 ring and pinion.
    The gears turned out to be close to those I use at Watkins Glen. The
    only problem was that I'd never had the correct 1st gear for the Glen
    and my 2nd gear was giving me problems in the last race. I plunked down
    the money for a new 1st and 2nd gear.

    We managed to find the campground by 12:30 on Friday night and finally
    got to sleep by 1:30 with the alarm set for 5:30. That's the part I
    hate!

    I'm not used to being the second group out on the track. Usually, my
    group is somewhere towards the end. We took the car off the trailer.
    After putting on my driving suit, I remembered that I hadn't gone through
    tech inspection. Usually tech is just inspecting your suit and helmet.
    I ran down there in my suit and got my tech sticker.

    Since my brother was going to be in my race group with his Formula
    Atlantic I asked him to do one slow lap to show me the lines. For a
    Formula Atlantic to go the speed of a Formula Ford that meant one SLOW
    lap for him. At the end of the lap he disappeared. I went down the
    front straight, judged the distance to the first turn and hit the
    brakes. Remember I said the track was notoriously slippery? It is! The
    brakes locked and I slid past the turn in point. I got the car to a
    speed where I expected it would turn and turned the wheel. The car
    understeered towards the outside of the track. When the car stopped
    sliding I pressed the gas and the back end broke free and swung wildly
    from side to side as I tried to hold on. I kept on the track only
    making those people behind me wonder what I was doing. I went through
    the next two turns down the hill into the carousel. I hit the brakes
    and the wheels locked. When the car stopped sliding enough to turn in I
    pressed the gas and the back end broke free in wild oversteer once
    again. With full opposite lock I somehow managed to keep going. The
    next turn was the same way. Slippery was a good description for the
    track. I went through the entire session feeling completely out of
    control. Twice I went off the track in the first turn because I broke
    too late. When you go off at Summit Point there is this red clay which
    covers the tires and cools them off. It took an entire lap to get the
    tires to begin to stick again each time I went off. Everybody passed me
    and just walked away. I couldn't stay with anyone. At the end of the
    session my time of 1:26 was nine seconds off the pole and put me second
    to last on the grid. I was very discouraged.

    I had been running the same set of tires all season. Old tires take
    longer to heat up and on a slippery track it takes a long time to heat
    up good tires. I decided to buy a new set. If I didn't, I thought I'd
    be too dangerous out there. The only problem is that in F.F. you are
    supposed to run all timed sessions and the race on one set of tires or
    be penalized. The Chief Steward said he was going to penalize me 5
    seconds for each tire changed or 20 seconds total off my best
    qualifying time. I managed to talk him into not making a final decision
    until after my second qualifying session.

    I decided that in order to go faster I had to slow down! I had to hit
    the brakes earlier, slow the car down more before turning in and get on
    the gas slower. The first session had allowed me to figure out which
    gears to use in which turns so it wasn't a complete loss. Several
    people gave me suggestions including Dave Gomberg who was flagging in
    turn 10 the turn onto the front straight. He told me that I wasn't
    getting the car all the way in to the apex and that I should use the
    curbing on the inside of the track.

    I went out in the second session and things were looking much better.
    Each lap I'd go a little quicker. I kept the car on the track and by
    the end of the session I had my time down to a 1:21.9, still 11th out
    of 12. Now at least, the car in front of me was only a few tenths of a
    second quicker. I knew that I could still take 2 seconds off my time.
    The F.F. in front of me was Brad in the car that he built himself. He's
    always been quicker than me at the Glen. If he didn't start going much
    quicker I knew I could walk away from him. My wife was skeptical of
    that when I told her. She'd never seen me get close to his times
    before. That is in part due to the fact that Watkins Glen is his home
    track. Brad has also been trying to sell me his car for the last
    several races. I told him that I was going to beat him this weekend. I
    don't think he believed me either. Even if I didn't beat him, I knew
    that we would at least have a good race.

    I went back to the Chief Steward. I told him that I thought paying the
    $500 for the set of tires was penalty enough. He decided to only add
    .25 seconds per tire to my qualifying time. That left me in the same
    starting, position 2nd to last on the grid.

    The tire temperatures from the last session were pretty good so I just
    added and subtracted about a 1/2 pound in two of the tires. I was going
    to adjust the brake bias a little towards the rear but never actually
    did. The fronts were barely locking under heavy braking in two of the
    turns but if you put too much brake in the rear the car will spin. The
    car felt pretty good and I didn't want to mess it up right now.

    I lined up for the start and found that there was a Formula Continental
    between me and Brad. When we came onto the front straight the starter
    waved the green flag. That's now two races in a row that we've gotten
    the green flag on the first try! I'm not sure exactly what happened but
    the cars were about 6 wide down the front straight. There was a cloud
    of dust obscuring the track. I went to the right side of the track to
    avoid whatever happened. I must have passed two of the other FFs right
    then but I was too busy trying to figure out where it was safe to
    drive. I think there was some wheel banging and spinning but there was
    so much dust and so many cars weaving left and right that I don't
    actually know.  I hoped that the FC that started in front of me wouldn't
    get in my way. He did! As we went around on the first lap I was stuck
    behind him and watched as Brad started to pull away. One more lap
    and Brad was away even farther. Coming through the right hand turn onto
    the front straight I stuck my nose right under the FCs rear wing and let
    him tow me down the front straight. At the end of the straight I pulled
    right to the inside and went by underneath him. Exiting turn 1 Brad was
    now at least a dozen car lengths in front of me. I wound 1st gear to
    7000rpm, 2nd gear to 7000rpm, up to 3rd still hard on the gas. Move to
    the right of the track, a quick jab of the brakes, drop to 2nd gear and
    chuck the car through the left turn. Foot back on the floor and head
    down the hill. The next turn is a fast down hill third gear right. The
    next lap I'd go flat through it. This lap I give a half lift and then
    put my foot back down. Exiting that turn leaves just enough room to
    gather the car up, stand on the brakes and get back into 1st gear.
    There isn't even time to get the car to the right for what is the
    slowest turn on the track, the left hander into the carousel. After the
    car is pointed in you step on the gas and the back end kicks out. I
    counter steer and keep my foot on the floor. The car slides to the
    right and then I pull it back to the left. Just as I get to the left I
    hit the brakes hard and turn slowly into the sweeping right hand 180
    degree turn. Again, once the car has started to turn in, I plant my
    foot on the gas and hang on as the back end hangs out to the left. The
    car slides out to the left and I keep the wheel turned to the right to
    make the next turn a continuation of the last, still with my foot on
    the floor. Just as the car points straight it hits 6500rpm and I shift
    into 2nd, put my foot back down and flick the car left, then right, up
    the hill and up to 3rd then 4th. You climb the hill and go under the
    bridge. A quick tap of the brakes, down to third and the back end wags
    back and forth as I slide through the right hand turn onto the front
    straight again. I've just cut the distance to Brad in half in one lap.

    At the end of the next lap I'm on his tail as we come onto the front
    straight. I follow him for one lap. The next lap I move to the inside
    at the end of the front straight and go under him. As I slide wide at
    the exit of the turn he tries to pass me back on the inside. I move
    over in front of him, wind the engine back to 7000rpm in 1st and again
    in second. By the end of the lap I've pulled a few feet away. I get a
    good jump on him as we pull onto the front straight and a better one as
    we go through turn one. I open up a small lead and set my sites on
    Dennis in front of me. Brad watches what I'm doing and drops his times
    down to almost the same as mine but he isn't able to catch me. Dennis
    picks up his pace just enough so I can't catch him. We each move a few
    feet closer and then a few feet farther apart as we encounter traffic
    (actually, we were the traffic for the Atlantics and FC's). I end up
    finishing 8th out of 12 and am the first non-Swift FF. My official lap 
    time for the race is a 1:19.5, seven seconds quicker than my first
    qualifying session. I was hoping to get into the 1:18s but after that
    first session you won't find me complaining too much.

    Now I have an almost new set of tires on the car and this was going to
    be my last race for the season. I hate the thought of having the tires
    dry out over the winter with only one race on them. My wife has a swim
    race in Atlantic City the same weekend as the race at Mosport in
    Canada. I really want to go to her race though. Maybe I'll do a
    regional race. Maybe I should just start getting the car ready for next
    year before I spend any more money on this season. Decisions,
    decisions, decisions...
200.37Last race of the season: NHIS, 10/20/91SOLVIT::MCOXTue Oct 29 1991 10:45446
    RACE 6:  
    SCCA REGIONAL RACE AT 
    NEW HAMPSHIRE INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY, LOUDON, NH  
    20 OCTOBER, 1991  
    RACE GROUP 3: ITS,A,B,C


    Things were going so well it made me nervous.  I'd gotten the car
    loaded on the trailer by 5:50am, my crew arrived right on
    schedule, and we hit the road for Loudon at 6:00am, just as dawn
    painted a rosy glow on the eastern horizon.  We pulled up to the
    track registration building at 7:15am, signed in, and the trouble 
    began.  

    Once inside the paddock, Ray Blethen pointed out that my race
    group, group 3, had been merged with the faster cars in group 1, a
    result of the unusually light turnout of IT competitors.  Great. 
    Another demoralizing race at the back of the pack.  On top of
    that, we'd be the first group on the track, which meant my crew
    and I had no time to check over the car before the qualifying
    session, the track and tires would be very cold and probably
    slick, and the shadows across the track would be very long and
    very dark.  Perfect.

    I had really been looking forward to this race.  I'd come by a
    good set of A008 RTUs from my Bimmer buddy Bjorn.  I'd fixed the
    broken header and transmission shift linkage, and the car was in
    the best shape of the season.  I had been hoping to shave a second or
    more off my best lap times from the Memorial Day race.  On the
    cold track, that would be tough.  And even if I managed to improve
    my lap times, it wouldn't matter.  Racing against the ITA and ITS 
    cars, I'd still end up finishing 20th.  Exciting prospects,
    indeed.

    We rolled the car off the trailer, and I started it up to park it
    next to the van.  Rather, I tried to start it up.  When it refused
    my prompts with the gas pedal, we had to resort to the spray can
    of starting fluid to bring the cold engine to life.  Once we
    got it going, I hopped in, nailed the gas to spin the car around in
    the wet grass (not exactly the brightest of ideas, since it was still
    legally too early to start race engines), and the throttle stuck
    open, creating an embarrassing racket that reverberated across the
    entire track.  I got the engine back to idle, then noticed the
    brake warning light shining on the instrument panel.  "Oh Sh*t! 
    What is wrong with the brakes?!!!  The master cylinder, it must
    be a bad master cylinder," I thought.  I really had no idea.  
    I sat there hoping the friggin' light would go out, and that
    everything was really okay.  It didn't.  We pried open the hood,
    and a quick inspection revealed that the dunderhead who'd bled the
    brakes the night before had forgotten to screw down the brake
    fluid reservoir lid.  Not a good omen.  I heaved an enormous sigh
    of relief, and color slowly returned to my face.
    
    While Bjorn installed the G-Analyst in the passenger's seat, I 
    trucked off to the tech building to get my suit inspected.  When I
    reached the head of the line, I handed my tech form, which I'd
    filled out at home the night before, to the inspector.  Astutely,
    she noticed immediately that my tech form was the wrong color. 
    With a look of consternation, she tracked down the senior
    inspector for advice.  Moments later she returned to inform me
    that I had to submit the correct color form, which had been given
    to me at registration.  It meant a half mile round trip walk back
    to my van.  Exasperated, I protested, and fortune smiled a weak
    smile for me; she relented and accepted my form.  With inspection
    sticker in hand, I jogged back to the van and pulled on my driving
    suit.

    After the driver's meeting, which was held in front of the tech
    building, I had but a couple of minutes to run back, get the car
    started, and drive to the false grid, which was formed along pit 
    lane.  Breathless, I motored briskly throught the paddock, incurring 
    the ire of the track guard, who motioned vigorously for me to cool
    it.

    As soon as I'd parked on the false grid, I learned that we'd been
    given the one minute warning.  Frantically, I pulled on my
    harness, helmet, and gloves.  I buckled the window net in place,
    pulled the safety pin from the fire bottle release handle, and
    powered up the G-Analyst.  I restarted the engine.  When the RX7
    next to me pulled away, I let out the clutch.

    As we entered the track, I worked the wheel back and forth to
    scrub some heat into the tires.  Slowly I reved up the engine as I
    motored down the back straight.  I braked early as I approached
    turn 3, wary of the cold brakes and tires.  Up the hill past
    station 5, the shadows cast by the tall pines obscured the track. 
    At turn 6, the deep shade and my dark tinted visor made it
    difficult finding my way down to the apex of the turn.  I had to
    crank the wheel sharply left at the exit of the turn to keep from
    driving off into the dirt.  "This is not a good start."

    By the time I reached the Start-Finish line, I had collected my
    thoughts, and I was ready to rumba.  I held the gas pedal to the
    floor as I steered left into turn 1, and watched with all my
    senses for the car's response.  At the apex, I could feel
    the front tires slipping out away from the corner.  An almost
    imperceptible lift of my right foot halted the mild understeer. 
    At turn 3, I stood on the brakes as I passed the first marker
    pylon, dropped into third, dropped into second, and noted my
    distance to the turn-in point for the corner, still twenty yards
    away.  Into turn 6, again I climbed hard on the brakes.  A sharp
    left flick of the wheel turned the car in toward the apex.  Hard
    on the power, I realized my line would take me into the dirt as I
    exited the turn.  Gently, I eased back to an even throttle as the
    right front tire left the pavement.  As the rear tire followed,
    the car twitched instantly toward a counterclock-wise spin.  A 
    quick right flick of the wheel countered the power oversteer, and
    the car reentered the track.  "Hey pal, it's a little early in the
    day for that kind of crap..."  Cresting the hill at station 8, I
    pulled the car through a gentle righthand bend, clipped the curb
    on the right, then darted across to the curb on the left as I
    braked for turn 9.  As I rounded the bend and started down the hill
    to turn 10, I spotted a nice target to shoot at, just ahead.  I
    was gaining on a juicy Ford Fiesta.  "Hey, that's Dunklee Junior's
    car!... He's a fast dude."  I wanted him.  Suddenly, I caught
    sight of a vigorously waving yellow flag in the hands of one of
    the station 10 corner workers.  Ahead, at the exit of 10, a yellow
    Rabbit sat facing me with its nose sticking three feet into the
    track.  As I reached the bottom of the hill, my right foot
    lingered momentarily on the brake pedal  until I was sure I'd
    clear the impromptu obstacle.  As I headed toward turn 11, A quick
    glance at the tachometer took me by surprise.  4500 RPM.  "My tach
    must be off.  I've never taken that corner that fast."
    
    Into turn 3 at the end of the back straight, I closed right up
    behind the Fiesta under braking.  I knew I had him.  I jumped on
    the gas as I turned the tight righthand corner, and carefully
    squeezed on the power--too much too soon and I'd loop it around
    like I'd done a couple of time before.  I could feel the back end
    slipping to the left ever so slightly as I rounded the bend and
    started up the hill toward station 4-- just right.  The Fiesta
    drew closer.  Over the crest of the hill at 5, I pulled up on his
    left, and as we headed down toward 6, I tucked infront of him as
    we reached the braking zone for the steeply banked lefthand turn. 
    I stiffled a silent cheer as I rolled through the corner and
    headed up toward 7, firmly ahead.

    After another lap, I realized that my steering was horribly erratic. 
    The combination of deep shadows and a fogging visor made it
    difficult to concentrate on my turn-in points, difficult to pick
    the proper radius for the corners.  Through the high-speed banked 
    oval turn, I could feel the rear end slipping out as the car
    twitched, the product of an uncertain line--too much steering.  At
    95 MPH, the last thing I wanted to be doing was thrashing around
    with the steering wheel.  "You've got to cut that out."

    By the fifth lap I settled into a rhythm.  I was gaining on the
    red and white VW GTI ahead, and I was spurred on by the
    realization that it was an ITA car that I was catching. 
    "Blumenfeld!  I'm catching Blumenfeld!"  As I dove into turn 1 on
    my seventh lap, Blumenfeld was right in front of me.  "I'm gonna
    get him, I'm gonna get him!" I thought to myself with glee.  As we
    reached the braking zone for turn 3, I darted right and pulled
    alongside him as we headed for the turn-in point, both of us hard
    on the binders.  As we reached the corner, I knew I had fallen
    short, and he was going to chop across in front of me.  As I
    cleared the concrete barrier, I cranked the wheel sharply to the
    right and nailed the gas hard.  "YeeeeeeHaaaa!"   He'd taken the
    corner a couple of feet wide, and we rounded the bend side by
    side.  We clawed our way up the hill, each praying for just a
    couple of extra foot-pounds of torque.  As we reached station 4,
    he hauled the car right and dared me to trade paint as he drifted
    in to the apex.  I backed out ever so slightly and dropped behind
    him.  Over the hill, I followed right on his tailpipe.  The
    instant he touched the brakes for turn 6, I darted left and
    climbed in his face as he turned in.  Refusing to yield, he pinned
    me to the apex, as he rounded 6 and 7 right alongside me.  As we
    approached 8, I knew I was on the wrong side of the track, and as
    we neared the braking zone for 9, I tucked in behind him as he
    slashed across from right to left into the corner.  At the turn-in
    for 10, I was close enough to read his tach.  I followed him
    through 11 and down the front straight like an extra coat of
    paint.  Down the back straight, we came upon a pair of Porsche
    914s duking it out.  Jim lined up behind the black one, in the
    usual braking zone.  The Yellow 914 was inside, trying to out-
    brake, so I dove in behind.  As I reached the turn, Blumenfeld
    decided enough was enough, and he slammed the door on me GOOD, in
    the grand IT tradition.  I swerved right and braked nearly to a
    stop, missing his right rear fender by inches, as he knifed across
    my line.  "Whew!"  Undaunted, I floored my battlewagon and set off
    to find more trouble.  Nosing up behind the Veedub at turn 10, I
    realized that if I was to have any chance of getting around him,
    I'd have to lay back going into 11 and get a good run at him
    through the turn, which would give me enough of a speed advantage
    down the front straight to pass him before turn 1.  I held back on
    the gas, and the 914s pulled a few car lengths further ahead, with
    Blumenfeld hot on their trail.  As I approached 11, the Conga line
    was far enough ahead that I could drive deep, jab the brakes, and
    drift, twist, and squiggle through the corner unimpeded.  Exiting
    the tight lefthand bend, I drew quickly up behind the trio, who
    were jockeying fiercely for an advantage down the straightaway. 
    As we crossed the threshhold from the infield section to the front
    straight, Blumenfeld took a wide line to the right behind the
    black Porsche; the yellow 914 took the middle of the track,
    alongside her twin.  I held a tight line through turn 12, just
    missing the end of the pit wall, and grabbed the opening on the
    left.  In an instant I was past Blumenfeld and the black 914.  The
    yellow Porsche held the lead as we crossed the Start-Finish line,
    but I inched ever closer.  As we reached turn 1, I kept my foot to
    the floor and dove low into the corner with the Porsche right
    alongside.  At the apex, I glanced in my rightside mirror to see
    my challenger drifting back.  "YAAAAAAAAHHHHOOOOOOOO!!!!  I PASSED
    THREE CARS ON THE FRONT STRAIGHT!!!!  HOT DAMMMM!!!  Park the car,
    call it a season;  that's good enough for me!"
    
    Blumenfeld had sliced past the pair of targa-tops, and had clearly
    picked up my gauntlet.  He loomed in my leftside mirror as I
    approached the braking zone for turn 3.  I knew he'd go for the
    inside if I gave him the chance.  Haunting memories of the clever
    ploy used by Bob Hassenbein in the August 11 race to lure me to
    the outside came to mind, and I held my line right down the middle
    of the track.  Brake hard, check the mirrors, down-shift, check
    the mirrors, down-shift.  He never made a move. I snapped the
    wheel right, swerved into the corner, and booked.   I never looked
    back.  

    When the checkered flag fell, I smiled.  The moment was blessed
    with just a small taste of that unspeakably delicious ecstasy that
    comes from fulfilling an impossible dream.  "I'm getting there...
    I'm really getting there."

    Back in the paddock, I shut off the motor and climbed out.  Mike
    Jones, my faithful pit crew, was there with the stop watch.  I
    knew it had been a good session, but I wasn't prepared for the
    news.  1:23.36!  My fast lap was 2.2 seconds faster than my
    previous best lap!  4.1 seconds faster than last year!  Every
    single lap was faster than my previous best.  My official
    qualifying time was even faster: 1:23.167.  I'd hoped the new
    tires would give me a one second improvement-- this was incredible.  
    I casually walked over to see how Ray had done.  A**hole.  Turned 
    a 1:22.2.  "Damn!  I'll never beat that S.O.B."  As I reviewed the
    official results, I was both excited and disheartened.  I'd
    qualified sixth in my class-- my best starting position ever.  But I
    was 13th out of 25 overall.  "Another race mired in the back of
    the pack."  Admittedly, I was now only 3 seconds off of the pole
    time, but twelve cars still separated me from my dream.  Oh well...

    				* * *

    As I sat there in the cold drafty personal hygiene facilities, a
    disturbing thought pierced my consciousness.  I had forgotten the
    gas!  We'd stopped just a couple of miles from the track on the
    drive up that morning, to splash a couple of gallons in the car
    and fill the five gallon gas can.  I'd paid the woman at the
    counter $10.88 for eight gallons of gas, and I forgot to put it in
    the car!  "Listen chum, you are losing it," I thought to myself.  
    I shook my head.  After the qualifying session, the car probably 
    had less than a gallon of gas in it.

    After a few agonizing moments of consternation and disbelief, I
    mapped out a recovery plan.  "Jonesy brought his car; I'll
    just send him back with the gas can..."  The other shoe dropped. 
    "YOU IDIOT!!!  You left the freakin' gas can at the filling
    station!"  I couldn't believe it.  I replayed the absurd sequence
    of events in my mind.  I climbed out of the van, put the gas can
    next to the pump, went inside, paid for the gas, bought a cup of
    coffee, talked with Mike, walked back to the van, and drove away! 
    
    It took me a few minutes to calm down.  I tried to identify my
    options.  "Let's see,... I could motor over and buy gas from Ted
    (the track superintendent)."  At four bucks a gallon, I could only
    afford a couple of gallons.  "I could siphon gas out of the van...
    No, that won't work, I don't have a gas can... Maybe we can back
    the car up next to the van... We can borrow a gas can from
    somebody... Maybe I can talk Jonesy into going back to the gas
    station... Let's see... 'We stopped in here earlier this morning
    and paid ten dollars and eighty-eight cents for eight gallons of
    gas, but we didn't get any gas, and we left our five gallon gas
    can.'  That'll go over great.  I'm sure people do that sort of
    thing all the time." 

    After Mike left for the gas station, I wandered around the car
    mentally kicking myself for my stupidity.  I considered it devine
    intervention that I'd remembered the gas while we still had time 
    before the race.  I noticed the bright orange tech sticker on the
    rollbar inside the driver's door.  Something clicked inside my
    head.  The tech stickers for this race were green!  I'd forgotten
    to put the new tech sticker on the car before I went out to
    qualify!  If I hadn't caught it before the race, I might have been
    black-flagged, ruining my whole weekend.  God, it seemed, was 
    watching out for me, and I found that thought comforting; it was 
    pretty clear that I wasn't in control.
    
    As lunch break wound down, my anxiety grew.  I was in the first
    race group after chow.  Mike came back with the gas can full
    of 93 octane, and we juiced up the car.  I paced quietly, and
    tried to dispell the gnawing fear.  Last race of the season. 
    Five races with no crashes, no dents.  I'd been very lucky, so
    far.  Would this be the day my luck gave out?  Would I be the
    next one to haul my car to the junkyard?  If I crashed, the good
    times would be over.  I wasn't afraid of getting hurt.  I was 
    afraid the party would be over before I was ready--just when I 
    was starting to have fun.  Alot of free time before the race was 
    the last thing I needed.

    After what seemed an eternity, the call came over the P.A. for
    driver's to line up on the false grid.  I breathed a sigh of
    relief, climbed in the car and headed for the pit area.  Once I'd
    found my position in line, I climbed out, and made a slow pass up
    and down the grid.  It was a beautiful afternoon, clear and crisp,
    but I hardly noticed.  

    The five minute warning came, and we all scrambled back to our
    machines, belted in, and started up the engines.  As I sat there,
    watching the grid marshalls wander past, watching the tach needle
    hover and twitch, smelling the high octane exhaust from the cars
    upwind, I felt my mind slipping into that now familiar quiet pool of
    thoughtless awareness, a different plane of consciousness, the
    domain of pure instinct, reflex.  The fear vanished.  I was ready.

    The yellow flag in the grid marshall's hand pointed at me, and I
    pulled out and motored down to the first turn, lining up on the
    right behind Mike Dimond in the dark blue Rabbit.  Quickly the
    field formed, and the pace car pulled away.  I warmed the tires
    down the back straight, over the hill to turn 6, and up to turn 9.
    At 10, I nailed the gas, and the car shot ahead.  The pole sitter
    slowed the pack.  I nosed up right behind the Rabbit.  Through 11
    the cars were bunched tightly, and I knew it would be difficult to
    get a good charge at the flag.  I picked up the throttle as the
    cars ahead accelerated.  The green flag flew, and I knew I was
    going nowhere; everyone around me moved in perfect formation--
    everyone except Ed Funk.  Just as I started to move down to the 
    middle of the track, I caught a glimps of the tan Opel charging
    alongside.  In an instant he was gone, passing me and three cars
    ahead of me before turn 1.  Bob Hassenbein, who started alongside
    me, held the inside line through 1 and 2, so I tried to hang on to
    him on the high side of the track.  As we approached turn 3, I
    was perfectly positioned to block his turn-in and pick up
    a position.  We hit the braking zone side by side.  I waited an
    extra split second, then hammered the brakes.  Just ahead to the 
    left, a metallic blue Honda Civic screeched sideways down the track 
    in a cloud of tire smoke.  The yellow Porsche 914 lit up the tires
    in a panic to miss it.  Hassenbein was right behind the Porsche,
    and I knew if I survived, I'd have him.  Suddenly, the 914 darted
    right across in front of me into the corner, and I narrowly missed 
    him.  Hassenbein charged past me, and I found myself blinking in
    disbelief.  "What the hell happened?"  Quickly, I regrouped and 
    set off in pursuit.  Into turn 6, the black ITC Datsun 510 behind 
    me peeked inside under braking, so I slide down and took a tight 
    line into the corner.  Ahead, Hassenbein snuck past the Porsche. 
    Blumenfeld, in the white VW GTI latched onto my rear bumper as we
    climbed the hill toward 8.  I groped for the line through 8 and
    9-- the cars ahead completely obscured the track.  I feverishly
    checked the mirrors.  Through 10 I pulled up right behind Gary
    Edwards in the Porsche.  Cars ahead weaved left and right as
    drivers jockeyed for position.  Through 11 the car twitched and
    slithered as I pushed for that extra minuscule bit of
    acceleration.  Edwards held his ground down the front straight
    and into turn 3.  Behind me, Blumenfeld filled my mirrors, then
    dove right, in a bid to pass me into 3.  I cut him off, but he
    pulled alongside as we passed the apex at 4.  Over the hilltop, I
    inched ahead, and slipped infront of him at the turn-in for 6. 
    Edwards edged inside Hassenbein, but the scrappy Wabbit repassed
    him before 7.

    I stretched my car left then right in a desperate bid to hold off
    the hard charging GTI.  I wandered back and forth across the track
    like a drunken duck, protecting my flanks into every braking
    zone.  This was not the car I had run down and passed in the morning
    qualifying session.  He must have turned up the boost.  As I
    entered the front straight, I watched helplessly as Blumenfeld
    motored up behind me, then alongside, as we reached turn 1.  I
    took a high line and he drove past me as we rounded the bend from
    1 to 2.  "Hey, no problem man, you deserve it.  I'll get you at
    turn 3."  I didn't get him.

    I held my braking late into turn 6 to close up on Blumenfeld.
    Suddenly, I spotted the red Volvo limping along the outside of the 
    turn.  As I rounded the apex, I had to lay off the gas to hold a
    tight line through the corner, as I slipped past the obviously
    disabled car.  Blumenfeld inched away.

    At the exit of turn 11 I checked my mirrors.  A black RX7 streaked
    up behind me.  My tach showed 4800 RPM; the fastest I'd ever taken
    the corner.  "What the hell can you do?" I sighed.  As I pulled
    onto the front straight, I caught myself pointing the Mazda by on
    the left.  "What are you doing?" I chastised.  "YOU DON'T POINT 
    PEOPLE BY IN A RACE!  GEEEZZZZ!"

    The Mazda passed Blumenfeld, then Hassenbein.  Blumenfeld passed
    Hassenbein.  I chased Hassenbein.  Exiting turn 3, I pulled up on
    his left.  He steered toward me, and I had to swerve to miss him, 
    but I held my foot to the floor and passed him before we reached the
    braking zone for 6.  As I lined up at the edge of the track to
    brake, the blue Rabbit darted to the inside, and the toad outbraked
    me.  "Damn! You can't do that!  I passed you!  You're supposed to
    stay back there!"  He didn't listen.

    I chased that bastard, I chased him hard.  I summoned every shred
    of courage and skill.  I thought of nothing but getting by him.  
    I closed up on him into turn 9.  He held his ground through 11 and
    down the straightaway.  Ever so slowly I inched up behind him.  I
    tried to catch him under braking at 3.  He'd have none of it.  By
    lap 10 my brakes were turning mushy.  Lap after lap I pursued
    them: Funk, Blumenfeld, Brooks, Hassenbein; less than two car
    lengths seperated one from the other.  The track ahead of me was
    choked with cars.  I knew I could run faster, if I could just get
    past.  Time was running out. 

    I scared myself silly under braking for turn 3.  I mashed the gas,
    and pulled right up on the rear bumper of the blue Rabbit as we
    passed station 5, the top of the hill.  I waited until he touched
    the brakes, then swerved left, and prayed that my own brakes would
    hold up.  I slipped cleanly past on the inside going into 6, but
    my speed carried me wide, as I rounded the tight lefthand bend. 
    Hassenbein tucked inside through the corner as I feathered the
    throttle to keep the car on the track.  I watched in disgust as he
    pulled ahead of me again as we reached turn 7.  "Sh*t!"  

    Once more I chased the train around the track, gaining here,
    losing a bit there.  As I braked for turn 6, I spotted Paul Roane
    in the red Volvo right behind me.  "Eaaaaaagggghhh!  let him
    by," I thought, "He must be leading."  Then I remembered passing
    him earlier.  I quickly lost my hospitality.  "Oh no you don't
    [expletive deleted]!  You're gonna have to work to get by me, 
    Dammit!  I'm not letting anybody else get by!"  I stretched my car
    a little to the left, then a little to the right.

    Down the front straight, I pulled alongside a green ITC Fiesta. 
    I followed Hassenbein by him on the right, then had to slice
    across in front of him as Hassenbein slowed suddenly.  As I
    approached turn 1, I realized that Funk, Blumenfeld, everybody had
    slowed.  "Damn; it's over."
    
                                  * * *

    As I sat on the edge of the trailer reflecting on the struggle
    just concluded, Ray Blethen strolled by grinning.  He asked if I'd
    seen the results.  I admitted that I hadn't, and he told me the
    news.  After a couple of seconds it sank in, and I roared with
    laughter.  Timing and Scoring had posted the final results, and
    had credited me with the fastest lap of the race-- a new ITB track
    record more than 2 seconds faster than the existing record!  The
    absurdity made it delicious.  "Good God!  That'll stand for five
    years!  I'll hold the track record for five years!"  It was
    perfect.  My disappointment at finishing 13th faded into oblivion.



    I finished 6th in my class, right where I started.  Bob Hassenbein
    won in ITC.




    
200.38Sorry if this is embarrasing, but...NEWOA::SAXBYAye. When I were a lad....Tue Oct 29 1991 12:0811
    
    Do you do these reports just for us?
    
    I don't think I've ever read such exciting race reports and I'm sure
    some publication would snap up the chance of printing them.
    
    You really get the reader feeling they're in the car with you!
    
    Keep it up next season.
    
    Mark
200.39Hummmmm; Any suggestions?SOLVIT::MCOXTue Oct 29 1991 13:2610
    Thanks for the great review.  I've thought about sending in the
    manuscripts, but I haven't really researched the auto press to find a
    prospective publisher.  I've sort of written off people like "Car &
    Driver" and "Road & Track";  they seem to focus exclusively on "Iron".
    
    Any suggestions for rags that might be interested in the human side of
    racing?
    
    
    Mike
200.40pittalkOASS::BURDEN_DHe&#039;s no fun, he fell right overTue Oct 29 1991 16:176
Send it to PitTalk for starters and SportsCar as well.  It probably won't
be published in SportsCar unless it gets chopped down into the 3rd person,
but they actually pay $$ for stories they publish.  I've been getting
rally stories published in SportsCar for 2 years now.

Dave
200.41Keep up the good work, on the track and in the notesCRATE::RUTTERThe Joy Of Six(es)Wed Oct 30 1991 09:2114
    I agree with Mark's comments, these write-ups are great.
    
    I really enjoy reading them through, you actually give the reader
    a lot of feel for what it must be like out there on the track.
    
�                         -< Hummmmm; Any suggestions? >-
    
    If you don't get these published in any 'glossy' mags, do you have
    some form of club mag which might print them ?
    
    I hope you have kept copies of all your entries, together they
    will show a good story of your season's activities.
    
    J.R.
200.42ALIEN::MCCULLEYRSX ProWed Oct 30 1991 12:045
    I'd wonder if you might try some non-automotive magazine that might be
    interested in the subjective account for the human interest.
    
    I agree that the writing quality merits wider exposure.  Give it a
    shot, and good luck!
200.43SASE::J_EVANSWed Oct 30 1991 12:496
    Mike,
    
    The workers knew how cold your tires were.. cuz WE were cold...  :-)
    
    jim e
    
200.44How do you remember it all?VANTEN::MITCHELLDNetwork ConsultantThu Oct 31 1991 08:022
 After a race I have difficulty remembering what happened?
some form of chemical erasure....
200.45Well, if you MUST know...SOLVIT::MCOXThu Oct 31 1991 09:1432
    I hate to rat on myself, but...
    
    You're absolutely right.  When the session (qualifying or race) is
    over, my mind is full of images and recollections all scrambled
    together in a vivid but disordered collage.  I can't clearly remember
    whether something happened on lap 2 or lap 6.  I can usually jot down
    the key moments a day or two later, and that is all I need to recall
    the images I need to build the story.  Sometimes it takes an effort to
    recall which car did what, too.  
    
    I decided when I wrote my first story that it would be nice to get 
    all the details precise, but for me it was more important that I 
    capture the essence of the experience, and at least most of the major 
    incidents.  The minor details I sprinkle in with some artistic license
    (e.g.  Glancing at the tach at turn 10 on lap 2.  It may really have
     happened on lap 4 at turn 9.)

    When I'm done, I ask myself: "Is this close enough to carry away with
    me as my lasting memory of the event?"  If it is, I print it.


    Oh, BTW...

    This past race, I had a big advantage.  Bjorn Zetterlund, an occasional
    noter and fellow 2002 pilot, brought his video camera along and filmed
    both the qualifying session and the race.  Seeing the laps unfold made
    it SO much easier to recall what happened, and who was involved.

    Thanks Bjorn.
            

    Mike    (#1 driver for the "Flatspot Racing Team")
200.46NEWOA::SAXBYAye. When I were a lad....Thu Oct 31 1991 09:379
   �  This past race, I had a big advantage.  Bjorn Zetterlund, an occasional
   �  noter and fellow 2002 pilot, brought his video camera along and filmed
   �  both the qualifying session and the race.  Seeing the laps unfold made
   �  it SO much easier to recall what happened, and who was involved.
    
    Of course Welcomequote Video Services could record your races for a 
    suitable fee, Derek! :^)
    
    Mark
200.47JETSAM::WHITNEYThu Oct 31 1991 13:2114
    Mike,
    I also thought that was good and I was there!  You did look good.  I
    try to pay attention to fellow DECies if I can that are racing.  I was
    in 8 all day.  I can vouch for the cold tires.  It was freezing on the 
    hill all day.  One of theses days I'll come down to your pit and
    introduce myself.  Next year.  Maybe we'll have a ride too!  Do they
    let motorcycles on the track?  Only kidding!  
    
    From reading your note that was great.  I watched the race but it was 
    more exciting this time around.  It would be fun listening to you on a 
    radio talking about what you see and hear.  
    
    We'll be there next year.
    Scott
200.48Thanks for a great year!!WILKIE::PLATTWed Nov 06 1991 08:329
    Now that the season has wound to a close, I'd like to take the time to
    thank all the noters (who can pass it along to other folks) who work
    Timing and Scoring, Flagging & Communications, Gridding, et al.  This
    comes from not only me, as crew for EP Elva #40, but also the driver
    Peter Symonds (NERRC EP champ).
    
    
    THANKS FOLKS FOR A GREAT YEAR -- YOU HELPED MAKE OUR CHAMPIONSHIP
    POSSIBLE!!
200.49SASE::J_EVANSWed Nov 06 1991 10:2210
    Barb,
    
    Thanks. If you don't mind, I'll pass that message onto the NER Worker
    Forum next Thursday night.
    
    I'll take this time to say THANKS to the drivers and crew who show up
    at the after-race party, and to those who were able to provide "worker
    goodies" for the worker raffles all year long. We really appreciate it.
    
    jim e
200.50no problemWILKIE::PLATTWed Nov 06 1991 10:574
    Nope, don't mind at all.  In fact, I'd sure appreciate it.  None of you
    folks get the recognition you deserve from the drivers and crews.  If
    Peter and I can help out  in any way -- give us a buzz
    
200.51SASE::J_EVANSThu Nov 07 1991 08:495
    Barb,
    
    Thanks. I'll keep Peter and you in mind.
    
    jim e
200.52Thanks for the supportNYTP11::JANKOWITZReady the lifeboatsThu Nov 07 1991 10:175
You can add my thanks too. I could never take for granted that all of those
people are out there helping me. It's easy to see that if it weren't for
all of the people out there supporting us there would be no racing.

I really appreciate it.
200.53SASE::J_EVANSThu Nov 07 1991 13:104
    Thanks. Will do.
    
    jim e
    
200.54An acceptable start of seasonNYTP05::JANKOWITZTwisty little passages all alikeMon Jun 29 1992 12:50176
   Well, it sure was nice of DEC to give us these notebook computers. If it
   wasn't for that, I wouldn't have  been able to sit in my hotel room last
   night and finish preparing for a demo I had to give this morning. It 
   also would mean that I wouldn't be finishing this story while I sat here
   in my chair, with the sun setting over the mountains off to my left and
   Seneca Lake down in the valley in front of me. This is Watkins Glen and
   I'm here for  the third race of this season. Sorry, but this is the
   write up for the first race which I haven't been able to  finish until
   now. I should be able to catch up by Christmas!

   Finally, the start of a new racing season.I performed the
   annual/semi-annual ritual rebuilding of the  engine. Since there were
   only 2 races since the last rebuild, there wasn't a lot of wear evident.
   Still, it can't  hurt to put new rings and bearings in. Having the
   entire winter to do the rebuild means that it still doesn't  get
   completed until the last minute. It was back together just in time for
   the ritual Lime Rock test day  before the first race.

   The test day went ok. No problems with the car, just a rusty driver. My
   times were slow all day long. It  was a battle to get the times into the
   mid 57 second range. I couldn't figure out where I was going so  slowly
   but figured some more track time would help.

   On to the race. The first practice session went about the same as the
   test day. I was still slow. Again,  fighting to get into the mid 57's.
   Other cars were going much faster so it wasn't in the track. I'd have to 
   work on that. After the first session, I took the fiberglass off and
   cleaned and checked everything.  Everything looked fine.

   Thankfully, the qualifying session was long. I was driving my heart out.
   I'd have the car sliding to the  edge of the track, pushing as hard as I
   thought possible lap after lap. I'd come around and look at my pit 
   board and the times would still be slow. I started to think about each
   turn. How was I braking, turning in  and exiting? I had thought there
   wasn't more than a tenth of a second left out there but I was over a 
   second slower than last year.

   Down the front straight in fourth, ease off the gas, onto the brake,
   turn right toward the first apex in Big  Bend, double clutch downshift
   into 2nd then gently back on the gas as the car slides toward the first
   apex.  As the car slides past the first apex, modulate the gas to get it
   turned back into the second apex. As it  starts to point back in,
   squeeze the gas back to the floor, slide past the apex and out to the
   dirt on the  outside of the track. Foot still on the floor, head back
   3/4 of the way to the right of the track. Brake gently  and turn late
   into the left hander. I can't hold the car out as long as I'd like which
   means I am not going to  be set up well for the next right hander which
   has to be taken flat out. The car slides out to the bumpy  edge of the
   track and it can take some nerve to keep your foot on the floor as the
   car understeers out to the  edge. A quick shift up to third now as the
   engine climbs through 6500 rpm. Up Noname Straight keeping  to the left.
   Hit the brakes, put my foot back on the gas and turn right into the
   Climbing Turn. The car  slides up through the turn and onto the hill. As
   it peaks the crest of the hill, the rear wheels spin and the  car dances
   left and right before straightening out toward the next turn. Even
   though the car is loose at the  top of the hill, there is still a foot
   of track left when the car straightens out. Intimidating as it seems,
   there  is still time to gain here. Now into the right hand turn, West
   Bend. Ease on the brake, back on the gas and  turn right. The tire wall
   grows as I again slide out toward the dirt and the car jumps around on
   the bumps at the edge  of the track. The tires  stop sliding whithin a
   few inches of the edge of the track. The track drops away under the
   bridge and I do  a slow shift up to fourth at 6000 rpm. With my foot on
   the floor, I turn into the right hand turn onto the  front straight. The
   car hits the bottom of the hill with a loud scrape as various pieces of
   aluminum and  bolts scrape themselves on the ground. The car bounces and
   slides accross the bumpy track towards the  dirt and tire walls. Once
   again, the tires catch just as I get to the edge of the track on the
   front straight.   I've done 15 laps, but realize that there is time to
   gain in the Climbing Turn. The next lap, I use less brake  going into
   the turn. In the next 10 laps, I work my way down to just a lift before
   going into the turn. Now  I'm using the whole track and the times show
   it. My qualifying time is a 56.2 which puts me 6th on the  grid for the
   start. It  also gives me my spot as the first non-Swift.

   When I came back in, we noticed that the back of the car was coated with
   trans fluid. I knew that the trans  input seal was bad and had a new one
   in the tool box. Changing the input seal  at the track wasn't my idea 
   of a good time. I spent the evening trying to figure out if it would be
   ok for the race or should I change it.  My race was the last one of the
   day on Saturday so I would have the entire day to do the work.

   Saturday morning, I opened up the trans filler plug and realized that
   there wasn't a lot of fluid left. I didn't  want to chance running the
   trans dry and ruining it during the race. At 9:00am, off comes the
   fiberglass,  disconnect the brake and clutch lines, the shift linkage,
   the rain light. Now remove the dozen or so bolts  holding the rear
   suspension and transmission on and pull it all away from the engine.
   After a couple of  hours, I could use a right angle screwdriver to
   remove the old seal. The new seal is installed and the whole  process is
   reversed. By 3:00pm, the car is just about together. Just bleed the
   clutch and brakes and I'm  ready for my race. No problem. I have an hour
   to spare.

   I line up in 6th place in class and 9th overall. The pole winning
   Continental ran laps 5 seconds quicker  than me. In a 30 lap race that
   means he may lap me 3 times! I'll keep my eyes open. We go around on the 
   pace lap and I work on warming my tires. Since my tires have one race
   from last year and a full test day  on them, I have to do a good job
   warming them up. Everyone else around me has new tires. It seems like 
   everyone else is buying one set per event! As we come down the hill, the
   leader is crawling. I have my left  foot on the clutch and my right foot
   on the gas to keep the engine running. Since I don't use 1st gear here, 
   I've intentionally left the tall first gear from Summit Point in the
   transmission. On the start this should  give me a jump on the field. The
   green flag comes out and I pass the car in front of me on the inside, as 
   we go down the front straight. I'm still not aggresive enough in tight
   traffic and lose a couple of positions  in the next two turns. One car
   would pull to my inside, forcing me wide. Since I'm off line I have to
   go slower. The car behind  the one making the pass goes to the inside
   right behind the car on my inside. I could shut the door like  Alesi did
   to Berger two races ago, but I want to finish the race. I lose two more
   places. On the next lap, someone tries to go to my  inside in the left
   hander. I stay wide which slows me down but keep in front of him. He
   tries again going  into the right hander going onto the back straight.
   I'm frustrated because I know I am quicker than these  people and they
   are going to get in front of me and hold me up. I stay out one car width
   in the right  hander so I don't hit him. Again, this slows me down. He
   comes along side of me and then slides out. I  give him a little more
   room but he ends up sliding out into me. His left rear hits my right
   front with a jolt.  He goes sideways in front of me. I move to the right
   and see him go off the track on the left. The car feels  ok going up the
   back straight but is it really? I don't have time to find out. I start
   driving and work on  catching the cars that got by me.

   I work my way up. There are two cars in from of me now. I sit behind for
   too many laps as  they battle back and forth. A couple of times I think
   they are going to take each other out but they  somehow avoid it. I'm
   quicker than both of them but I'm a little gun shy after my last
   incident. Going  down the front straight, the one car drives down the
   inside of the track so you can't get by. I go to the  outside and inch
   past him but it's not a good line and I can't turn into the first turn.
   I back off and get back  in line. Now, a car loses a wheel in front of
   me going into the Climbing Turn, spins and stops as he hits  the
   guardrailat the edge of the track. I know they aren't going to leave a
   car here! A full course yellow  comes out and the field bunches back
   behind the leaders and the pace car. After a few laps, the car is 
   cleaned up and I expect the race to restart in one or two laps. We come
   around, passed the start/finish line  and I don't see the starter
   motioning that we will restart on the next lap. As we come around the
   next time  though, the green flag comes out. Since I haven't been
   warming my tires on the last lap, I can't get a good  jump at the
   restart. Again, I begin working on the cars in front of me.Every lap,
   the car in front of me  goes down the inside of the front straight to
   keep me from passing. Finally, I drop back a little going down  the hill
   and hold a tighter line onto the front straight. I pull to the inside of
   him running almost on the  grass as he comes over to try to keep me from
   passing. This time I have the inside line into the first turn  and
   there's no way he's going to keep me back. I pull ahead and set my
   sights on the next car up. I quickly  catch him but again, I don't know
   him and am hesitant to pass. I am all over him going into the Climbing 
   Turn but don't feel safe trying to pass him there. We are running laps
   in the 57 second range and I could  easily run 56's right now. I'm
   frustrated that I can't get by. Each lap, I try to get a good jump on
   him down  the hill. I will try to draft him down the front straight and
   out brake him into Big Bend. I'm inches away  as we go down the hill,
   his back end gets wildly loose as we hit the bump at the bottom and I
   think he's  going to lose it and take me out. I back off and lose a
   little ground. I easily catch him again before the  end of the lap. Now,
   I try to stay back and come onto the front straight faster. That isn't
   working either. For the rest of the race, I try different lines but
   can't get enough of a jump to pass him at the end of the front straight.

   I finish the race out like this ending up 6th, inches behind him. It
   should have been an easy 5th. I still  have to work on passing and I
   have to be more aggressive at the start. Well, it's something to work on
   at  the next race. Luckily, that bump in the beginning of the race
   didn't do any damage to my suspension.

   I'll have to get to the other write ups later. The sun has gone down
   behind the mountains. All that's  left is an orange hue that's fading
   and taking the warmth with it. I hope that this weekend brings better 
   luck than last. Last week at Summit Point was (of course) a long story
   in itself.

   Glenn
200.55I mean, last years race...NYTP05::JANKOWITZTwisty little passages all alikeTue Aug 17 1993 15:39104
This has been a little quiet for the last year. I actually did write 
up most of my races last year but they are all sitting on my laptop 
and never made it this far. I haven't written anything yet this year 
even though I am most likely done for the season. Anyway, here is what 
I have on my laptop about the second race of last season.


It hasn't been too long since I wrote anything in here has it? Yes, I
am still alive, I do still have a race car and I do still work for 
DEC. Let's see, the last thing I wrote was about the first race of the
season. I did a bunch of other races but it wasn't a very
good season. In fact, it was the worst season I've had since I started
racing. How bad was it?????

My second race was at Summit Point in West Virginia. This was the
second time at that track and I knew that it would be a good place to
have a fresh set of tires. First thing Saturday morning, my brother
and I took the wheels off to bring to the Goodyear man. When I took
the left front wheel off, there was a LARGE crack running completely
through the brake rotor. It is fairly simple to change but since
rotors are heavy parts as opposed to light parts, I don't carry my
spares with me. After asking every single Formula Ford driver and
several other car drivers, I found two that were close to mine.
Neither one was an exact fit. One would need drilling to fit and the
other had alignment holes which were slightly larger than mine. I
borrowed the second one and installed it. I got out for the first
qualifying session and my time was slower than I expected to run. The
temperature was getting warmer though so the afternoon session held
some promise.

After we came in, the person who had lent me the rotor came back. He
had just taken the corner off his car and now needed the rotor back.
We removed the rotor, gave it back and borrowed the other one. After
drilling out the alignment holes on that one, it fit perfectly. I'd
just do a couple of slow laps to make sure it was ok. While we had the
car apart, I noticed a mounting bracket at the back of the car, which
supports the rear body work was broken. It was made out of a piece of
stamped metal so I could just make another one. After I found someone
who had a suitable piece of metal, (I didn't bring any of that
either), a new bracket was fabricated. No problem! 

I went out for the second qualifying session and took a couple of
laps, came in and everything looked fine. I went back out and started
to work on getting my times down. The car wasn't handling great but
there was still plenty of time I could shave off. After a few more
laps, I came down the front straight, 6200 rpm in fourth gear, braked
hard, downshifted to first and turned right into the sweeping 180
degree turn. I hit the apex, foot back on the gas and started drifting
out to the left. I shifted into second still exiting the turn, when I
heard a slight noise. Right then, my right front wheel departed the
car! It hit the side of the car and flew up in the air. I watched it
go just over my right shoulder. It came down hitting the tail of the
car. Being in a right hand turn at the time was pretty handy in this
situation. I eased my foot off the gas and let the car slow down. When
I slowed down enough, I pulled the car off onto the grass on the left
side of the track and slid to a stop. I sat at the flag station and
watched most of the qualifying session go by while I needed to be out
improving my times. My wheel however was nowhere in sight. People were
pointing to different spots in the dense brush and woods where they
thought the tire went flying in.

After the session was over, the flaggers helped me look for the wheel
(and new tire) until the flatbed came. We hadn't found the wheel yet.
I did have a spare wheel at least. I used a nylon strap to hold the
right fron corner off the ground as the car was winched onto the
flatbed. The cable went from the floor of the flatbed up over the tail
of the car to the rollbar. When the car was most of the way on the
truck I looked up to see the cable pulling down on the tail of the
car. The mounting for the fiberglass was torn out of the body. More
work to do. So, why did the wheel come off? When I got back to the
paddock area, I looked at the spindle and noticed that the threads
from the nut were still on the spindle. The nut had just sheard off. 

After all of the qualifying was over for the day, my brother and I
went out and wondered through the trees and pricker bushes hoping to
find the wheel before the sun went down. Everyone said it was
traveling fairly quickly when it went into the woods. We wondered
around for a while before I found it burried in a bush virtually
unscratched.  I put it back and looked over the reset of the car. A
piece of radiator hose had a slice in it. We replaced the hose, added
more fluid and waited for the race the next day. 

The race started with the usual scramble and confusion. My plan was to
get my times down and work on moving up as far as I could. I stayed
with the cars in front of me for the first two laps. Coming out of the
first turn on the third lap, the car three in front of me slid wide
into the grass on the left and then came right accross the track. The
two cars in front of me went to the right to avoid him and I went to
the left. Since the car was going accross the track from left to
right, he ended up directly in front of them and I went by all three
of them. That felt good. But now I'd have to work hard to either stay
there or move up further. After two more laps though it didn't matter.
The car felt like it lost some power as I headed up the short straight
towards the front straight. I glanced down at the guages. The oil and
water temperature guages were both pegged. I switched the engine off
and coasted into the pits, race over! I just hoped I hadn't ruined the
engine by not noticing it sooner. 

After getting home, I looked the car over. The overheating was caused
by not bleeding the radiator when we replaced the hose. There was an
air pocket in the top of the radiator. 

So much for Summit Point. Maybe things would be better at Watkins Glen
in a couple of weeks. 
200.56Now we're talking 2 years old33656::JANKOWITZTwisty little passages all alikeFri Jul 01 1994 10:3890
Today is my last day at Digital. I only have some small cleaning up to 
do so I thought I'd pull this write up off the laptop where it's been 
since I wrote it in September '92!

I went to Watkins Glen two days early. I had a demo to give to a
customer on Thursday in Corning N.Y. which just happens to be a half
hour from the track. I took friday off and told my brother I'd help
him with his Atlantic during the Friday test session.  I was planning
on spending my spare time on Friday changing my gears from the Summit
Point gears which were still in the transmission. 

The Bush Grand National cars were going around the track on Thursday
when I got there so I sat outside the fence and watched them finish up
their afternoon. After they left, I went for a walk around the track
to see the new chicane on the back straight. The chicane didn't look
too wonderful. About 3/4 of the way down the back straight, there is
now a rectangular excursion on the right side of the track. The
curbing was very high all the way around and the exit pointed the cars
right into the guardrail on the outside of the track. From what I was
able to hear, the Grand National drivers didn't like the chicane at
all. Supposedly, there were several big accidents at the chicane 
during their testing. The rumor was that we wouldn't be using it and
that it would be re-designed before the next race. 

I had everything with me to change my gears and thought it would be a
leasurly job in between my brotheres sessions on Friday. My brother's
day didn't go too well though. He put his Atlantic into the guardrail
and took out the right rear suspension in the first session. Ouch! He
didn't have enough spares to put it back together so he began talking
to the other drivers. Since his car had a wide track rear suspension,
nobody else had all of the necessary parts needed to fix it. He made a
quick call to California and ordered the parts for overnite delivery
to the track. Hopefully, he'd get them early enough in the morning so
he wouldn't miss the qualifying sessions on Saturday. In the mean
time, I changed the gears in my transmission and got ready for
Saturday. 

I went out in the first session and the car felt ok at first. I began
working on getting my times down.  After about 10 laps, I was coming
through the left hand turn out of "The Boot" when the car seemed to
lose some power. I wasn't sure if it was in my mind or not, so I tried
to decide whether I should pull into the pits or keep going. Within a
second the car started  missing and there was a clunk in the engine. I
shut the car off and coasted through the next two turns into the pits.

I checked the compression and one cylinder was dead. Hopefully, I
would pull the rocker cover off and find somthing simple broken inside
like a valve spring. Then I'd just have to take the head off and fix
it. No problem. I took the rocker cover off and realized that it
wasn't simple. It appeard that the valve tappet had broken down inside
the engine. If I could find someone that had one, it would mean
spending the whole night taking the engine out and apart to fix it.
After talking to virtually everyone who may have had a tappet which
would fit I figured I was lucky that nobody had the part. 

My brother's suspension parts were delivered by 1:00pm so I helped him
get his car together for the last qualifying session. I decided that
I'd take off that night and spend the next day taking the engine apart
to find the problem. 

When I took the engine apart, it was worse than expected. The tappet
had broken when the thrust bearing had worn into the side of the
crankshaft and created enough of a gap to fall out. It then got stuck
between the case and the tappet and broke the bottom off. The parts
list went from a set of tappets to: 

a set of tappets, a crankshaft, a camshaft and a full set of bearings.
That meant a big dent in my racing budget. There was only one problem.
Nobody had any crankshafts. It seems that Ford Motorsports had run out
of them and they were on back order from England. Every racing supply
source in the U.S. was out of them! I was spared by one of the local
engine builders who had a re-conditioned crankshaft he would sell me.
That also meant I was able to cut a couple of hundred dollars off the
cost, and rebuild the engine for under a thousand dollars. 

Meanwhile, my tires which were new at Summit Point sat virtually
unused on the car. I would see how long it would take to get the car
back together. That would decide what my next race would be. There was
another Lime Rock race the following weekend, another Watkins Glen
race and then a double National race at Pocono. Lime Rock was out of
the question. I went to Lime Rock to help my brother. It also was a
convenient place to pick up my reconditioned crankshaft. 

I had the engine back together in time for the next Watkins Glen race.
After putting the engine back in the car, I noticed another very
upsetting sight. The transmission case was cracked where the lower
rear suspension bolts go through it. Some quick calls around, and I
had a transmission case on order from Texas. I called and cancelled my
entry for the Watkins Glen race. I guess I was going to race at Pocono
this year after all.