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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

14.0. "PRO Rally Note - 1993 season" by MLTVAX::CFISHER (Deposed peon) Thu Jun 24 1993 16:50

    
                 Susquehannok Trails PRO Rally
                        June 4-6, 1993
                         Wellsboro, PA
    
After a year and a half, I finally had the new turbo motor ready to go,
and although I had not driven in competition in all that time, and had
not had time to get used to the new power and turbo lag, I found myself
signing the liability waiver at registration for one of the most
challenging events in the U.S. series, with rain in the forcast for
Saturday's runs on the predominantly clay roads around Wellsboro.

Saturday morning we all lined our cars up around the Green in the
center of town.  There was some mighty fine equipment on display there.
Most lusted-after was the hot pink European rally-spec AWD Ford
Cosworth Escort of Carl Merrill.  This car was completely radical,
with forged magnesium control arms that wrapped around the halfshafts
to protect them from flying gravel, completely non-DOT-looking bumpers
and front end lighting, and a clean new motor nestled in a reinforced
engine compartment that was so shiny and white it looked like an
expensive medical instrument in a miniature operating room.  It surely
was an expensive instrument.  Also present was Paul Choiniere's pristine
new  Audi S-2 coupe, the fearsome-looking Porsche Carrera 4 of Jeff Zwart,
along with several Subaru Legacies, Diamond Star coupes, Mitsubishi
Galants, Mazda 323 GTXs, a single Acura Integra, and a whole bunch of
other lovely cars I couldn't afford.  In all there were 64 entries, and
as my codriver Ted put it, "You'd never tell there was a recession going
on around here."  They let us put the harvest gold Dodge Omni with the
wrinkled door into slot #45.

They started the event about 2 hours earlier than in previous years,
so we could be finished around 1:30 AM Sunday instead of 3:30 AM.  The
first car left the Green at 10:01 AM Saturday; we left 44 minutes later.

The first stage was Stony Fork, a six-mile stage ending with the cars
crossing the 40-foot-wide creek, a popular spectator point.  I've
spectated this stage before, and one fact that is hard to miss is that
most Omnis don't make it all the way through the creek under their own
power.  Everyone seems to have their own theory about why this is, but we
concentrated on keeping water out of the intake, by turning the airbox
around and fastening a "blast shield" at the opening, and keeping the
plugs dry by using plenty of spray-on wire sealer.

We lined up for the stage start, and I checked the gauges again.
Everything was looking good.  They gave us the go, and I let out the
clutch.  We pulled out strongly, then the turbo boost kicked in.
WWEEEPPP!  Yow!  Shift!  WWEEEPPP!  Shift! WWWWEEEEEEPPP!  Yeehaw!
At 70MPH in 3rd, we were close to redline, but I didn't dare shift again.
The road was smooth and mostly level, with gentle (so far) curves.  Previous
cars had cleared off a "racing line", two strips of hard dirt with loose
gravel on either side.  When the boost came up, the car would pull hard to
the right due to torque steer, and we'd get all loose in the marbles,
drifting sideways as I steered back to the good path.  Frankly, it made me
a little nervous.  But the power was sure fun!  I noticed that the front
end would wash out if full boost came on in a corner.  I made a mental
note:  Don't put the pedal down until you can see where you want to go.

Six miles later, we approached Bergeron's Curve, named after the first
of many competitors to crash there, just a stone's throw from the finish
line in the middle of the creek.  I'd seen two cars go off on this curve
the year I spectated the race, the second one landing upside down on top
of the first.  As a purely precautionary measure, we slowed to around
25MPH.  The curve was no problem at this speed, and it gave us some time
to prepare for the creek crossing.  Still going 25-30, there's the creek,
there's the crowds, here we go, SSPPLLAASSHH, rumblerumble, HEY, WE MADE
IT!  Piece of cake; next time we take it at 60!

After Stage 3 we handed in our time slips and drove back to Wellsboro
for the second Parc Expose.  The organizers provided a free car wash
for the competitors at a local spray-it-yourself place, and we hosed
the car off before checking into the time control at the Green.

We made note of what cars were missing and who needed body work.  The
Porsche was out; apparently they'd done an endo on the first stage.  The
Toyota Corrolla of John Lawless and Phil Barnes had rolled, but it didn't
look too bad and Phil said the car ran fine.  Someone with a Mazda 323
was replacing a rear control arm, and there were a number of empty parking
spots, but otherwise the field looked like it was holding up pretty well.

There was a reseed based on our times on the first two stages, and we
were moved up a few places, to 39th on the road.  I think this was more
due to cars ahead of us that DNFed than any great speed on our part, though;
we had been taking it really easy while I was getting the feel of the car.

It was raining steadily by the time we started Stage 4, and the clay
road surface was unpredictable.  Several times we were cruising along,
feeling like there was lots of grip, then I'd lift for some corner and
we'd go totally sideways.  It was as slick as ice, and we were seeing
cars in ditches all over the place.  We saw our friends Greg Healy and
John McLeod up on a berm, and we would have stopped to help them if they
were holding a tow rope out to us, but Ted said their hood was buckled
from hitting a tree, so we slid on by.

The last few miles of Stage 6 were interesting, since they ran along an
old railroad bed.  The routes indicated this, so we put the hammer down
on the assumption there would be no unexpectedly sharp corners.  It seemed
awfully twisty for a railroad bed, but maybe trains took sharper curves
back in the old days.  I kept it in 4th, which is a real commitment, but
75 or so was all I could handle in terms of speed.  Going that fast around
long bends and through blind esses made me feel like a European rally star;
I had made a leap of faith and was driving faster than I could go just based
on my senses.  If we'd come upon a deer in the road, or another car, we
would have been in big trouble.

Stage 7 was a long one, 13 miles, and the first stage where we caught up
to the car a minute ahead of us.  This we did right in the last mile, so
we crossed the finish line nose to tail.  Stage 8 was only 11 miles long,
but we caught the guy again right near the finish, and he let us pass him
on the transit since we were both due in to the next control in the same
minute.  On Stage 9 we caught the next car up, passing him just after a
spectator point in the middle of the stage.  We saw him leaving just as we
were arriving, and the crowd cheered as we sprayed mud around the hairpin
and took off after him.

Despite the fact that we weren't doing left-foot braking, the pedal was
getting soft before we were halfway through most stages now.  The biggest
test we gave them I blame partly on the speedometer built in to my rally
computer.  Seems Ted noticed it said 86MPH and became so transfixed he
forgot to call out a double caution hairpin until we were just 500 feet
away!  I jumped on the brakes, which oozed dishearteningly towards the
floor, threw it into second, pulled on the E-brake, and basically grabbed
at anything I though might slow us down a little, and we made it around
that corner by the slimmest of margins.  Of course, that's probably how
John Buffum take every corner, but once was enough for me!

At the next service, our service guy Rick looked at the front brakes, and
one of the caliper guide pins basically came off in his hand, the metal
having been annealed so much from the heat that the threads had pulled
out of the caliper.  He replaced the pads and guide pin, and warned us
to take it easy on the brakes, since the caliper might pull off any time.
Okay!

On the next stage we caught and passed yet another car.  The car was still
running great, but our driving lights were giving us some problems.  The
first time we turned them all on, everything went black and the ignition
cut out.  We traced that to a bad battery terminal, but now two of the
driving lights were out, and we pressed on with the remaining two (and the
100W high beams).

We finished the night's runs by around 1:30, and we headed back into
Wellsboro to join the pizza and keg party already in progress.  After an
hour's work scarfing pizza, chicken wings, and cold Genesee beers,
provisional results were posted.  They showed us in 15th place!  Another
round was consumed by the happy team before retiring for the night.

We were up at 8:00 AM for the posting of the official results, and when
they came in we were moved back to 16th place, a Mazda having been found
to have beaten us.  Still a good finish, and we were first in our seed
group, which got us a $100 prize.  It was a great event, and despite the
sometimes tricky conditions, we had kept it on the road.  The new engine
ran flawlessly (except for a demonstrated tendency to blow vacuum hoses
off the intake manifold), and the car handled as well as it ever has.
With another 50 horsepower, it would be even better!

The next planned event is in Bangor, Maine on September 18th.

Carl


P.S.  When official results were mailed about 2 weeks later, they had
      pushed us back another place, to 17th.  Oh well.  We still finished
      in the top 50% of the finishing field, so we move up another seed
      group.
    
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14.1Maine Forest Rally, Dec 3-4TLE::FISHERKill your televisionFri Dec 10 1993 14:01192
                           Maine Forest Rally
                           December 3-4, 1993
                             Rumford, Maine

    It wasn't shaping up to be a good event for us.  My turbo-ized Dodge
    Omni, which had run so well in June down in Pennsylvania, had developed
    a mysterious engine problem that left it with almost no power, and we
    didn't get that tracked down and fixed until just 4 days before the
    event, which meant that most of my usual pre-race preparation work
    didn't get done.  Then I hit a tree while practicing 2 days before the
    event, smashing 2 of the driving lights and bending the bumper, fender,
    and right front control arm.  It wasn't hard to fix, but now I was even
    further behind, and time was running out.  Some tasks, including
    replacing the broken lights, would have to be skipped, and hopefully
    we'd get by OK without.  I finally got everything all packed and loaded
    onto the trailer by 1:00AM the day of the rally.  As I pulled out of my
    driveway seven hours later, it occurred to me I'd locked myself out of
    my house.

    I picked up Rick, my crew chief, in Concord, NH, and we continued on up
    to Maine. We pulled into the Madison Hotel in Rumford around 1:30PM,
    unloaded our gear, and registered for the event.  Included with our
    competitor's package were 2 beer mugs with nifty PRO Rally graphics on
    them; obviously the organizers knew who they were dealing with!  Plus,
    they were selling copies of Tom Grimshaw's new biography of John Buffum,
    "In Like A Lamb, Out Like A Lion", which looked great, so we picked up a
    couple copies of that.  So even if we didn't finish, we'd still have
    goodies to bring home- would this be our consolation prize, or was our
    luck starting to turn around?

    I'd just barely met the minimum requirements to be ranked as a Seed 3
    driver based on my last two finishes (there are seven seeds, lower seed
    numbers are faster), but I needed to finish 15th overall or better to
    keep that ranking. That can be tough to do when you're putting an
    eight-year-old econobox up against a field filled with expensive 4WD
    cars like Audi Quattros, Porsche Carerra 4s, and Mitsubishi Eclipses,
    not to mention Carl Merrill's $250,000, 400HP Ford Cosworth Escort. 
    Fortunately the field was small, with only 26 entries, so with normal
    attrition numbers, if we didn't finish too far back, it seemed there was
    a reasonable chance we'd make it.  We needed to finish, though, and with
    me feeling as unprepared and accident-prone as I did, I was not feeling
    very confident.  I reminded myself that my best finishes came when I
    drove conservatively, and if there was any correlation there, that was
    good, because I planned to drive VERY conservatively this time.

    We were placed 14th on the road as we headed out of town that evening
    for the logging roads of the Seven Islands Land Company.  The ground was
    bare and the weather had been warm, but puddles were beginning to
    freeze now, and ice on the course seemed likely.  It looked like we were
    doing the smart thing by running the Hakkapeliitta snow tires instead of
    the rally tires we'd brought along in case the roads turned out to be
    mostly hard dirt.

    To my surprise and dismay, the first stage was nearly a solid sheet of
    ice, much worse than I'd expected from driving the (salted) roads
    leading out there. At least we'd made the right tire choice, but still
    the conditions were incredibly slippery! The only places there would
    ever be traction was on open straightaways, where the areas of
    hard-packed dirt would tempt us to build up some real speed, only to
    find ice again when we wanted to slow down, and in the corners beyond.
    The intense turbo boost was making it even harder to keep control, and
    since I was having trouble getting the car to turn in, I drove very
    slowly. Before the short 6.5 mile stage was over, the headlights of the
    car that started a minute behind us were becoming visible in my mirrors. 
    Groan!  I didn't realize I was going THAT slowly!  Ted, my co-driver,
    reminded me that we were running with a faster crowd now than what we
    were used to, and the guys up front here with their high-buck 4WD cars
    weren't governed by fear like the rest of us were.  They didn't care
    that much if they wrecked their cars, because they could afford to
    replace them and chaulk it up to a learning experience.  But my little
    Omni, as modest as it may be, is all I can afford, and if I totaled it,
    it would probably be quite a while before I could race again.  With
    fourteen hours of competition still left to go, I was already having my
    doubts about whether I belonged in Seed 3.

    The second stage was a lot like the first.  Lots of ice and frozen ruts,
    some snow, me driving slowly, and headlights in the mirror before we
    were even close to the finish.  When I saw those damn lights again I
    realized I was driving like a wimp.  I knew that I was supposed to be
    racing, not just going for some drive in the woods, and it occurred to
    me I could probably be going a lot faster.  I stepped on it.  I couldn't
    quite outdistance my pursuer, but he didn't seem able to get any closer
    than about a hundred yards, either. There's nothing like being chased to
    make you get off your duff!  I didn't want to take a lot of crazy
    chances and end up whacking a tree, but we were keeping it on the road
    for the most part, and it felt OK.  I kept up the pace for the next
    stage, and we never saw the headlights.

    The fourth stage was 25 miles long, which is very long for a rally
    stage.  Long stages can be real adventures, not only because there is
    more road to have an accident on, but also because the one minute
    starting intervals between cars become small relative to the variation
    in individual teams' speeds, so there tends to be more interaction
    between competitors in terms of cars catching and passing each other,
    cars getting stuck in the same ditch at the same time, cars stopping to
    help other competitors, and things like that. On most stages you never
    see another competitor except for at the start control, and as you make
    your way down these remote dirt roads at night, it's easy to feel like
    the two of you in the car are the only people around for a hundred
    miles.  It may sound kind of funny, but when you start seeing lots of
    other rally cars on the road, you realize you're all out there in the
    middle of nowhere together, and it brings out a real camaraderie that I
    don't think you find in most other forms of racing.

    Things went real smoothly for us this time, though; we caught and passed
    two cars, and passed a few more broken down on the roadside or resting
    on their roofs.   Of the twenty-five teams that completed this stage, we
    had the seventh fastest time on it.  The last stage of the night was the
    same road as our first, but run in the other direction, and we posted the
    eighth fastest time on that run, a big improvement over being eighteenth
    on the way in.

    The car was running great, and aside from an electrical problem that
    caused the high beams to go out for one-and-a-half stages, all we needed
    at the service stops was to clean the windshield and lights and check
    the oil.  We got back to Rumford a little after midnight and checked the
    car into impound for the night.

    Saturday morning we were up early to check last night's results, and
    they had us listed as 9th overall!  They were also showing us with three
    minutes of penalties, which was wrong, and we got it removed no problem. 
    Without the penalty, they put us FIFTH on the road for the daylight
    stages!  Let me tell you, we never expected anything like this!  As we
    rushed to join the lineup for the restart, Ted directed me to pull in
    in front of a Mitsubishi Eclipse and Carl Merrill's Cosworth Escort.
    The Eclipse driver was NOT pleased with this development.  As we nosed
    in, he lurched forward to try and keep us out. Discrimination against
    American cars!  Ted compared our starting time with theirs, and they
    grudgingly let us ahead of them.  You could really see the red mist
    building in the driver's eyes as he sat in line behind us, looking at
    our plain gold paint job and the "I may be slow, but I'm ahead of you"
    bumper sticker on the rear hatch.  John Buffum was at the starting line,
    and he poked his head in the window at us and said, "OK guys, what's
    your REAL time?"  We said what do you mean, you guys gave us this time,
    so here we are!  We departed on our minute, but we got the feeling that
    Buffum would be personally checking our scores.  We took it as a
    compliment.

    On the transit out to the first stage, Ted checked their math, and it
    looked like our total was actually 2.4 minutes slower than what they
    had us down as, so we really should have been ninth, not fifth.  So we'd
    have at least four drivers behind us who were faster than we were, and
    at least one of them was pissed!

    The first stage Saturday was the only one of the whole weekend that
    wasn't ice covered.  I flogged the little Omni for all it was worth and
    felt great doing it, but we could only manage eleventh fastest on the
    stage.  I was happy not to see the Eclipse come into the finish control
    before we pulled out.

    Then it was back to the ice and snow, and an 11.5 mile stage.  We may
    have been pushing it a little, as we had several near crashes.  Most
    memorable was when we crested a hill at about 60MPH and the road went
    left, but the trees had all been cleared from the downslope straight
    ahead, so we couldn't see that the road turned until we were already
    going off it.  I pitched the car sideways and mashed the gas, but
    although we were basically travelling parallel to the edge of the road
    (while pointed perpendicular to it), the dropoff on the side was getting
    sharper as we slid along, and the driver's side wheels were bouncing off
    the ground.  It was starting to look a lot like the beginning of a
    high-speed rollover when our arcing path intersected the road again and
    we bounced back up top and hammered it on out of there.

    With only two stages left in the event, we agreed to back off a bit to
    make sure we finished.  Even if we lost a few places, we would still
    have a Top 10 finish, which was better than we had dreamed of, so it
    made sense to save the car and be still be smiling at the awards
    banquet.  This we did, but others must have had the same idea, because
    we still came in tenth fastest on each of the final two stages.  We
    checked in on time to the final control, drove back to the hotel, and I
    started mentally preparing my victory speech.

    When official results were posted, we were eighth overall and third in
    Open class for the National event, second overall and second in class
    for the Divisional event that ran concurrently with the National on
    Friday night, and fourth overall and second in class for the Divisional
    that ran Saturday. (We missed third place on Saturday by three seconds!) 
    There wasn't much in the way of money or trophies for us or for anyone,
    and they didn't put us in front of a microphone, but we did get plaques
    for our second place in Friday night's Divisional.  Then I won a
    certificate for 4 free Michelin passenger tires (not rally tires -rats!-
    any size for 13, 14, or 15 inch rims) as a door prize, so it was an
    excellent event in terms of how many goodies we walked away with.  Oh,
    and John Buffum autographed our books for us!

    So even though I really can't say I enjoyed the racing itself, with what
    I thought were just about the trickiest conditions possible, we did come
    away with a great finish and some great stories!

    Carl

    P.S. I even got back into my house without breaking anything.
14.2a worker's view of the rallyPROXY::J_EVANSTue Dec 14 1993 12:31276
MAINE FOREST RALLY
December 3-4, 1993
Radio Support -- A first year report

Mike, N1DKZ, and I (Scotti, N1PUI) first heard about the Maine 
Forest Rally in September when we did our first public service work 
since I'd gotten my ticket in July at the Cycle to the Clouds bicycle 
race up the Mt. Washington auto road.  There was a sign-up sheet for 
later events and the next one was this auto rally.  It would begin in 
Rumford, Maine and take place on the logging roads and public highways 
around the Rangeley Lakes area beginning about 6 PM on December 3 and 
ending with a banquet back in Rumford on the evening of December 4.  
Spending the weekend in the back woods of Maine in December sounded like 
fun so we signed up.  

Over the next couple of months, we made contact with Ian MacLennan 
AF1R, the amateur radio coordinator for the rally, and Erik Piip, KA1RV, 
who had been there last year, to get information on exactly where and 
when the rally would take place.  We also got much helpful information 
on what we needed to take with us -- essentially enough clothing and 
food to survive 24 hours in cold and snow if necessary.  It was decided 
that we'd meet Erik for breakfast on Friday morning and caravan up to 
Rumford with him.

Ian suggested that we make reservations at Oquossoc's Own Bed & 
Breakfast in Oquossoc, Maine, since it would save us about an hour's 
worth of driving after our chores were done Friday night.  It seems that 
the owner, Joanne Koob, had allowed him to set up his radio net control 
on her dining room table for the past three years.  We called there 
right away, and it was a good thing we did, as there was only one double 
bed left.  It turns out there are 5 rooms, with varying numbers of beds 
in them.  We got the only one with just one double bed.

For a week before leaving we were packing the car.  Storm coats 
for each of us, felt lined rubber boots, insulated coveralls (found in 
the attic and they fit), electric cooler with juice, water, oranges, 
tunafish, peanut butter and jelly, and a dozen bagels, turtlenecks, 
sweaters, jeans, sweatpants, wind pants, long johns, waterproof wind 
jackets, snow boots, street shoes, hats, gloves, scarves, ear muffs, and 
general essential clothing.  We had two of most things so that if we got 
wet, we had dry clothes to change into.  We made arrangements with Jim 
N1HTS and our next door neighbor to get our animals fed while we were 
away.

Finally, Friday morning arrived.  About 7:00, we headed for The 
Ground Round in Chelmsford to meet Erik and Jim, who had gotten me 
involved in public service right after I got my ticket.  Our first radio 
contact of the morning was Erik telling us he was running about 20 
minutes late and please order him coffee and whatever we were having for 
breakfast.  We ordered him the coffee.

8:30, breakfast over, we said good bye to Jim, picked out a 
simplex frequency, and pointed our noses north.  Erik needed to find a 
hat so we stopped in Kittery at the Trading Post and at Eddie Bauer.  No 
hats.  Headed north once more.  Got to Rumford by about 12:30 so we had 
plenty of time to find a place for lunch before the 2:15 meeting.  The 
next problem was FINDING the lunch place.  About a half mile from the 
Madison Motel where the meeting was to be held we found a Chinese 
restaurant serving a lunch buffet.  Once again, we overate somewhat.  
But, after all, we were going to spend the better part of the night in 
the woods.  Who knew when we'd get to eat again.

Arrived at the Madison in time for the meeting, got registered and 
got our wrist bands, maps, and VERY pink "Emergency Radio Support" signs 
for the car windows, and the list of frequencies we'd be using.  These 
included four simplex frequencies for the four teams of hams, a cross-
band repeater frequency to contact Ian, and a local repeater which we 
had permission to use in case we couldn't make direct contact.  There 
was also one lone ham sitting on top of a hill somewhere manning the 
cross-band repeater and calling out the ID every ten minutes.  Ian also 
told us that there would be a banquet in Rumford on Saturday night but 
that he really recommended that we stay in Oquossoc since the food was 
better and it really wasn't worth the 45 minute drive down and back just 
for dinner.  We took him at his word and planned not to attend the 
banquet.  

Each group of hams -- there were about 20 of us total -- met with 
their corresponding SCCA group to decide who would be at the start, 
middle, and finish of each stage.  For about 30 cars, there was total of 
nearly 200 people -- drivers; navigators; support/rescue; SCCA starters, 
checkers, and timers; and the hams.  

The various planning meetings over, we were assigned our position 
-- flying finish of Stage 4 for Mike and me -- and caravaned up to 
Oquossoc.  We had some time so we went over to the B&B and met Joanne 
(the owner) and got registered.  Took our indoor clothing up to our room 
and headed back to the general store to meet the rest of the finish-line 
team and headed up to the end of Stage 4 so we'd be ready for the 
expected 9:00 PM start to the stage.  Erik and the Stage 4 Start and 
middle teams had gone up the other way with the Stage 3 team because 
Stage 4 was the longest one of the rally (25 miles of logging roads).  

Let me explain here a little of what this rally is all about.  It 
is an SCCA Pro Rally, the last in the 8-event 1993 Subaru Championship 
series.  A field of about 32 or so specially modified Audis, Fords, 
Porsches, Sirroccos, etc. run timed courses over sections of Boise-
Cascade logging roads, interspersed with sections run over public 
highways which must be kept within the legal speed limits.  At the start 
of each "Stage" or section done on the logging roads, the cars are 
checked in, drivers and navigators make sure they have their "clue list" 
(my term), and then they are sent out at approximately 2 minute 
intervals.  As each car leaves the start, the ham operator radios the 
car number to the ham operator at the finish, sometimes with the help of 
someone in the middle to relay the transmission.  Then, as the cars 
cross the finish line for the stage, the radio operator there checks off 
the number.  If a car has been reported as starting but not reported at 
the finish, a safety team goes out and tries to find them.  After all 
the cars have left the start, an official with radio contact with state 
police, EMTs, fire, etc, goes out to make sure all cars and their 
occupants are found.

About a mile in on the logging road, our little caravan of about 
10 cars stopped.  We thought we had arrived at our point, but were told 
that no, this wasn't the finish, someone had had a flat and we'd be 
moving again in a minute.  Sure enough, about 2 minutes later, we were 
moving again.  AAA should take lessons in tire changing!  Just as we 
finally arrived at our assigned point, Erik came on the air to say their 
end of the Stage set-up was slightly delayed.  One of the workers in 
their caravan had hit a moose and had had to be taken back to Rumford.  
We found out the next day, her truck had just about been totalled, the 
moose had had to be destroyed, and she'd suffered cartiledge and 
ligament damage to her thumb.  A somewhat ominous start to the evening's 
activities, I thought.  

Meanwhile, we'd arrived and were told to back about 20 - 30 feet 
down another logging road so that we could see the cars but not be in 
the way.  It turned out we were manning the "Flying Finish" point.  We 
got backed in along side the official timer and made preliminary radio 
contact with Erik at the start of the stage.  Then the safety team man 
came along and told us to back up another 6 feet or so.  We did.  

Jim N1HTS had loaned us his amp which we hooked up to my DJ-F1T 
hand-held, with the 1/4 wave mag mount on the trunk.  That radio we kept 
on the cross-band repeater to Ian.  My brand-new Yaesu FT-2400, with the 
5/8th wave mag mount on the roof, was kept on the simplex frequency used 
for the stage (we went to HRO the previous week to buy a bracket, and, 
well...but that's another story).  I had more cables, wires, and mike 
chords around me!  Looked like the rat's nest you usually find in your 
shack -- and, after all, my car IS my shack.

At 9:03 PM, Erik came on the air that the first car, Car #1, was 
away.  The Stage had begun!  We still had a half hour wait till we saw 
the first car but were still kept busy logging cars as they started.  A 
little after 9:30 we heard the first car coming and then suddenly he was 
up and around the turn and buzzed in for time at the finish, fishtailing 
all the way.  The next two cars I had logged didn't show up.  The fourth 
car came around the corner and did a 180 degree spin and went through 
the timing point backwards.  He finished his spin so that he got to the 
checkpoint headed in the appropriate direction.  The next car tried to 
widen the turn just a bit and wedged between two trees.  A few 
spectators got him out and he finished the stage.  A few more cars 
fishtailed but managed to hold the road. Then one came along and took 
the turn sideways and slid across the end of the road we were on and 
merely "parked" the car at the edge of the road for a couple of seconds, 
then finished.  Finally, the car who had started second came through, a 
little the worse for wear, but roaring along.  He fishtailed nicely into 
the checkpoint.  In total, only 4 cars didn't finish the leg.  One guy 
managed to get himself out of trouble and drive the car out on his own 
after the stage was closed, the second car had some kind of trouble 
early on in the stage and, we surmised later, because he was so far down 
in the standings he stopped to help out the fourth missing car, the 
third one had to be towed out, and the fourth one had to be righted 
first.  He'd flipped off the side of a bridge and landed on his roof in 
the creek.  Out of all of these accidents, and the ones where the cars 
were merely delayed into the finish, there were no injuries.

We got back to the B&B by about midnight.  Joanne had given up and 
gone to bed.  Ian was still in the dining room directing radio 
operations for Stage 5 which was still in progress.  Erik was still out 
in the woods helping to right the car on its roof and make sure all 
others were out.  We went to bed.  

We found out from Erik later more of the details of Stage 4.  Car 
#17, which was actually a small pick-up truck, had to be pulled out of 
the ditch he'd landed in on about an 80 degree angle.  They replaced a 
flat tire and drove themselves out.  The car on its roof in the creek 
had popped its windshield but the people were out and ok.  The navigator 
was wandering about saying, "This ain't fun no more, second time this 
year in ditch upside down."  The sweep/rescue truck managed to do a spin 
himself -- that's a 22 foot truck on a 23 foot wide road.  They made it.  
Then they had to pull another car out of a ditch.  Found that he had one 
flat and wanted to drive it back to Rumford himself -- about 40 miles on 
a flat.  He didn't do it.  Erik finally made it back to the B&B about 
1:30 in the morning.

Saturday morning we arose to an absolutely spectacular breakfast.  
All home-made, including the bread, and as much as we could eat.  It 
turned out that, in those 5 rooms she had, Joanne had managed to put 
about 15 or so people!  Plus a couple came over from another house where 
they'd been put up when Joanne ran out of room.  At 10:30 AM we headed 
back to the general store to go out to Stage 8.  This time Mike and I 
would be Start.  Erik would be somewhere in the middle, and I never did 
figure out who was at the finish.

We got to the start, which was farther along the same road they'd 
been on the night before.  In fact, as we passed the side road where 
we'd been, I could see the two oblong bare spots where our cars had 
warmed the ice enough to melt it.  We got to Start and got inundated 
with about 25 carloads of spectators and press people.  The majority of 
them were taken up farther along the route to a safe spot to watch Stage 
8 and where they could walk to the end of Stage 9.  We spent the time 
trying to repair radio communications.  We were at the bottom of a hill 
on one side and finish was the bottom on the other side.  It turned out 
we had to move to the Saddleback Mountian repeater frequency along with 
Erik and he could relay to the finish for us.  That was when I found out 
that they could not start the stage until we had communication.  It felt 
kind of good to know that we were considered that important.

All of a sudden, I was told I had 5 minutes to find a convenient 
tree if I needed to because the first car was due.  Sure enough about 5 
minutes later, there it was.  Dirty, slightly banged up, #1 somewhat 
mud-covered but readable.  10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5  "KA1RV this is N1PUI" 4, 3 
"N1PUI KA1RV" 2, 1 "Car #1 is away!"  Every minute or two for the next 
half hour I was busy relaying car numbers as they sped off.  When the 
next-to-last car was waiting to go, we got the word from Ian that we 
were supposed to go to Stage 9 Finish as soon as we had the course 
closing and sweep vehicles out of there.  

OK, we'd follow the ambulance.  Fine.  We followed him along the 
logging road that had been used for Stage 4 in one direction and Stage 8 
in the other; and followed him -- right up to 3 miles from the start of 
Stage 9!  He had no idea where 9 Finish was.  We got turned around and 
headed back to finish.  My car is not sprung for this!  In the meantime, 
another ham filled in so that they could start the stage.  We never did 
get there.  They had started and he was handling it fine.  We decided to 
get out of there before the rally cars started to transit out.  We got 
back to the B&B about 4:00 and listened to the finish in the dining room 
with Ian.  Then he took down his antenna and packed up his gear.  Before 
saying good bye to Joanne, he made reservations for next year.  So did 
Mike and I and so did Erik who had arrived about 5:00.  Ian was going to 
the banquet in Rumford.  The other three of us were not.  

Once all quieted down again, Joanne asked us if we really wanted 
her to cook for us.  She doesn't usually cook for one or two guests and 
sounded really reluctant.  She would if we really wanted to but if not, 
she would probably go over to the local restaurant herself.  The four of 
us went over together.  Just as we were leaving the house it began to 
snow.  We walked over there like the best of friends, not like a hotel 
owner and her guests.  We had an absolutely fantastic dinner.  With all 
the great cooks we ran into in Oquossoc, I don't see how anyone in that 
town keeps their weight down!  We were told at the Four Seasons that 
they'd served 96 lunches that day and I didn't hear how many dinners the 
night before.  The middle of Oquossoc was the service stop for the cars.  

When we left the Four Seasons, there was about an inch of snow on 
the ground and it was coming down fairly steadily.  Not stormy, just 
quiet, beautiful flakes drifting down.  Then Erik, Mike and I just hung 
around the living room watching a movie on the VCR, and Joanne went back 
to her rooms and relaxed.  Mike and I went to bed about 9:00, Erik 
sometime shortly thereafter.  A perfectly relaxing end to the weekend.  
We were very glad we'd decided to stay in Oquossoc.

Sunday morning we found about 5 inches of snow.  It was the type 
that stuck to all the tree branches and turned the whole place into a 
fairyland.  I grabbed my camera and got some pictures of the B&B and the 
Christmas tree that Joanne had put lights on the day before.  After 
another of her unbelieveable breakfasts, we settled up and said good bye 
to Joanne, picked out our simplex frequency, and headed back south.  We 
decided to go down Route 16 through New Hampshire.  Before we got out of 
Maine, I took about 2 rolls of snow pictures.  I just kept looking 
around for Santa's workshop.  It sure looked like the right place for it 
with all those snow-covered Christmas trees.  We came down through Mt. 
Washington valley through more spectacular views.  Erik said good bye 
and headed down Route 111 toward home and Mike and I headed on down to 
Billerica.  We picked up the repeater and said hi to a couple of folks.  
We were pretty tired but had had a really fantastic weekend being very 
useful and having a lot of fun in the process.  I can't wait for next 
year!  Or the next event to come along.  Oh, yes, we read in Sunday's 
paper that Car #1, driven by Paul something had won.  For us, however, 
the winner was not important.  What was important was that no one was 
hurt and everybody had a great time.

Scotti Fuller
N1PUI