Our first race this season was in early
May. The next race close to home was in mid-August. That's a lot of
time between races, so the Fart-hinder Racing troupe decided to take
advantage of several incentives offered by World Racing League and
entered one car for the July race at Raceway Park of the Midlands in
western Iowa. The 2.2 mile track, formerly known as Mid America
Motorplex, is located just off Interstate 29 a few miles south of
Council Bluffs. Towing distance was roughly the same as to Road
America from our northern Minnesota headquarters. Iowa in July can be
hot, very hot, and it seems we managed to pick the hottest weekend of
July to go racing.
We chose to race the Fart-hinder 900
instead of the much faster Fart-kontroll 9-3. The 900 had been geared
lower for quicker launch out of the corners, plus WRL had dropped it
into the GP4 class, the slowest of their classifications. The 900
drivetrain is very stock, though the engine and transmission had been
overhauled with new bearings and seals over the winter. There had
been a few minor issues with the car at the May race which required
work in the paddock, but nothing really major. Those had been
corrected and we figured the 900 was ready to go mechanically. In
addition, it received a new coat of paint to cover the black streaks
left by an encounter with a tire wall. In addition to the Spa Blue
that also graces the 9-3, we chose a deeper green shade for the lower
part of the car. Tim was trying to get it as close to U.S. Forest
Service Green as possible, but it ended up a little darker. Still a
nice shade that compliments the blue. A yellow stripe separates the
main colors, matching the yellow wheels.
We arrived on Friday for registration
to sweltering heat. Air temp was in the high 90s, with a temperature
index of 110 degrees. Some teams that showed up early for a test day
reported they had gone through several cases of water that afternoon.
Just after the Friday evening drivers' meeting and social, a violent
thunderstorm hit the area. High winds wrecked several teams' pop-up
canopies, including ours. On the plus side, the rain dropped the air
temperature into the low 80s.
Tim was the first driver scheduled and
he was on the line and ready to go with the rest of the cars for a
9-hour battle. He hit the starter button... and all of the lights
blinked off. A couple of tries, wiggling the battery wires, and it
finally caught. He took the green flag, but it was quickly evident
that there was a misfire in some corners. He brought the Saab in and
the team opened the battery box to check cables. Sure enough one was
loose again, it was tightened, and Tim went out to play, last in a
class of five cars.
The Saab seemed to be holding up well
and turning consistent laps, quicker than a couple of cars in the
category, but lagging behind a VW GTI and a Miata. Then another
disaster... Mark reported that the exhaust was suddenly very loud. He
came into the pits and the problem was quickly obvious. The exhaust
downpipe had broken at the weld just below the manifold, where two
pipes merge into one. John Stachnik from JAB racing offered to weld
it back together, but a patina of rust and 110 volt power made the
job more difficult. In addition, the crack had to be sealed
completely as it was right next to the inner axle driver. Eventually
it was sealed, though hardly pretty, and we were back on track, an
hour behind the third place Mercury Bobcat (a badge engineered Ford
Pinto). Due to the early transmission failure of the 4-cylinder
Mustang in our group, we had moved up to fourth in the standings.
Though the temperature was not as hot
as on Friday, in the mid-80s and overcast, it was still plenty warm
and we were rapidly consuming the water and Gatorade that our crew, Larry and Cyndi Walter, had picked up for us. They were staying in Council Bluffs and loaded
their Fiat Abarth with as much refreshment and ice as it could hold.
We began to strategize.
As the end of the race approached, if
we were still running last we would bring the car in early and just
head out for the final few laps to be classed as a finisher. If,
however, another car should drop out, we would stay out and collect a
third place trophy.
It was the latter scenario that
developed. The leading VW snapped a rear spindle and lost the wheel,
brakes, everything. JAB, who has suffered the same fate on their VW
more than once, and has since upgraded to more robust components,
offered spare parts so the VW guys could get back on track, but there
wasn't enough time left for such a major repair. The Saab held on to
receive the third place trophy.
Since RPM is in the heart of farm
country, with corn and soybeans growing pretty much everywhere, and
herds of pork and beef in abundance, it only made sense for the team
to visit a steak house. Instead, we went to a Mexican restaurant. We
were, after all, south of the (Minnesota) border.
Another huge storm rumbled through
early Sunday morning, but the forecast indicated that the rain had
passed and there would be no rain during the day's 7-hour race. The
Mustang and VW were DNS, which meant the Saab should be able to be in
the podium group again if the car would last to the checkered flag.
We knew that the Miata was considerably quicker than our steed, and that we
were faster than the Bobcat. Attrition could make the difference. We
also planned to make much quicker pit stops, dumping just one
5-gallon can of fuel at each stop. With four drivers, each would use
up only six or seven gallons in their stint, so the 18-gallon tank
should still have gas at the finish. Our fastest stop, dumping one
fuel jug, making the driver change, and checking tires and under the
hood, was one minute, 45 seconds.
Aidan Hicks, the youngest driver on the
team, was first behind the wheel for Sunday. He went out and drove a
steady pace, eventually setting what would be the fastest lap for the
Saab over the weekend. As the tires wore down and the heat of the day
caused the track to become a bit slippery, lap times dropped a little
throughout the race.
Like many good plans, our strategy blew
up on us. Once again the Saab sputtered and died on the track while
Mark was driving. He was able to get it re-fired and brought it into
the pits where the diagnosis was loose battery cables once again. It
finally dawned on us (after several seasons of racing this car) that
the battery was sliding back and forth in the plastic battery box.
The decision was made to fix the problem once and for all. A spare battery cable was located to replace the rather frayed
positive cable in the car. It took some finesse and about a half
hour, but it did not give us any more trouble all day. On the down
side, we were now many laps behind the Bobcat in third place.
Due to the heat and the odds that we
could not finish higher than third, we offered the chance to take the
Saab to the end to John Stachnik, who had repaired our exhaust, and
who had done his first race driving the day before in the JAB VW. Our
instructions were to go out, have fun, and don't break anything. We
had found out that the Saab did just fine in fourth gear around the
entire track when in survival mode, so the clutch and synchros should
get little abuse.
Sure enough, John drove it under the
waving checkered flag a little after 3:00 PM, and we were presented
with a pair of 3rd place trophies for our weekend's
efforts.
Our next outing is back at our home
track, Brainerd International Raceway, for a 12-hour ChumpCar World
Series race. The 9-3 is the only team car getting prepped for this
race, as we only have a few drivers. The plan is to race on the
original 3-mile Donnybrooke track, which opened in 1968.
Unfortunately that section of the track has been converted nearly
exclusively to drag racing. The surface has a coating of
tractionizing compound that becomes slicker than black ice when wet.
If there is any hint of rain prior to the start, the race will revert
to the 2.5 mile Competition Course. If it were to rain during the
race on the old track, it would have to be immediately red flagged.
Since our front wheel drive Saab loves the rain, we are hoping for
rain in the forecast.
No comments:
Post a Comment