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comp / comp.sys.mac.advocacy / Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).

SubjectAuthor
* OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).Alan
+- Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).-hh
+* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Alan
|`* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Tom Elam
| `* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Alan
|  `* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Tom Elam
|   `* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Alan
|    +* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Tom Elam
|    |`- Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Alan
|    `* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Tom Elam
|     `- Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).Alan
`* Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).Alan
 `- Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).Alan

1
Subject: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2024 17:16 UTC
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2024 10:16:56 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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Well, it was great to get back on track.

With the help of the son of one of the previous owners of my previous
car, two weekend days of work leading up to this past weekend put the
car almost back together (although that "almost" came back to bite me a
little bit). We went through the car—checked and bled the brakes and
clutch, changed the engine oil and made sure everything was properly
bolted, and when it was all done, we discovered that:

1. We needed new brake pads all around.

No problem! Our local race supplier, (shameless plug for Frank Micucci
of driversedgeautosport.com) promised to have brake pads for me first
thing Saturday morning and changing pads on a formula car such as mine
is normally a 15 minute job at most.

2. The battery needed to be replaced. The car has an alternator, so it
will run if started with a jump battery, but then you need someone to
come to pre-grid to jump you again when the one minute signal is given,
and if you should happen to kill the engine in a spin... ...well, not
having a working battery makes for too many problems.

No problem! After much searching for a less expensive option than the
Odyssey PC545 (now renamed ODS-AGM15L) which really was overkill for a
car that wasn't running a total loss system (thanks to the Honda engine
rule requiring that an alternator be included) and which was out of
stock in the locations that had it for the best price, I found out that
lithium-ion batteries have come down in price a lot, and I could get a
200A (cranking amps) NOCO NLP5 for $127 from Amazon with free 2-day
delivery. 1.5lb vs 11.4lb.

So all was looking good, except:

1. It appears that quality control at Hawk Performance isn't all it used
to be, and when I went to install my new Hawk "Blue" pads into the LD20
calipers... ...they wouldn't fit! At first, I assumed I hadn't retracted
the caliper pistons far enough, but closer inspection showed that it was
the overall width of the backing plate that was just marginally too big.
It appears that the backing plates are punched out of sheet steel and
the punching dies are starting to wear out.

Fortunately, in a racing paddock you have neighbours and my neighbour
(and good friend) Marty Knoll (shameless plug for MK Technologies; maker
of quality pit equipment for racing at almost every level) had a trailer
with both an angle grinder, a vise, and electric power (note to self:
add DeWalt cordless angle grinder to my tool arsenal), and so I was
looking at the depressing prospect of spending perhaps 30-40 minutes
grinding down the width of 8 pads so that they'd fit properly.

Even more fortunately, when I grabbed the first pad of the 8 to fit onto
my car, I by chance grabbed the one that fit the worse of all of them.
So the grinding ended up taking only 15 minutes or so. But still, that's
a 15 minute job that ended up being 30-40 minutes; maybe even a few more
as I discovered I'd run out of the cotter pins that we use to hold the
pads in place and I had to round up some new ones.

2. And I'd forgotten just what a pain it was to get beneath the cover
that reveals both the battery and the car's ECU and actually change the
battery. It was clear that it was worth removing one of the front
suspension's coil-over dampers to gain better access. And then...

....I hadn't reckoned with the fact that the new battery was a lot
shorter from terminal to terminal than the Odyssey I was replacing. The
Odyssey was 5.56" between terminals and the NLP5 from NOCO was only 4.5"
long overall. Fortunately, the NOCO had enough different options for
connecting the main leads that I was able to use the connection from the
side of the battery to make everything fit.

So with both of those jobs running long (and with a 20 minute forced
hiatus in the time before the first session for the drivers meeting), I
ended up missing the practice/qualifying session for the combined open
wheel and sports racers group. Honestly, not a big deal, but it did mean
that I would have to bed my brakes on the pace lap for the first race
(which was pretty easy as I was starting from the back and I wasn't
changing compounds anyway).

So, first race (and all of these sessions are short in vintage racing—15
minutes) I started from the back of the pack, hung back enough that I
could do "lunges" forward followed by hard braking to get enough heat
into the pads and rotors, and when the green flag dropped, I quickly got
by all the Formula Vees, the very slowest of the Formula Fs and worked
my way past Erle and Keith and was hoping that the race would last long
enough that I could close up on the single FC in the field and take the
outright victory (he was a novice, and I'd already noticed on the
practice day Friday that he wasn't yet running good enough lines, so
there was probably a chance). No luck. I don't have times yet, but first
in FF, second overall and I was probably 2-3 seconds faster than the
next fasted FF even running on two year old used tires.

Next race, my best time in Race 1 meant that I was gridded 2nd next to
the FC, so I figured I was in with a chance of winning outright. As the
race started, I found it pretty easy to keep up with him on the first
lap—not really a surprise, but I think it surprised him and so after
keeping pace with him for all of lap 1 and most of lap 2, he eased off a
little in turn 9 of that lap and let me by. Talking to him afterwards,
he confirmed what I thought at the time: he wanted to watch my lines for
a while and figure out how a 1.5l Formula F Honda with maybe 118
horsepower could keep up with his 145hp Pinto-engined FC. And for the
next however-many laps of the race we did that. And he learned that if
you want to be fast, you have to use ALL the road.

I'll post a video shortly and you can see for yourself how much room he
leaves on corner exit.

But for the last 3 laps of the race, he clearly felt that he'd learned
enough, and I sensed that he was going to try and get back past me for
the win. And that's when he learned that being faster and getting past
someone are two very different things.

Unless you have so much greater power and speed on the straights (and
assuming you drive a line that lets you unleash that speed and power at
the corner that exits onto the straight), you're going to have to pass
in a braking zone at the end of the straight. And suddenly, I wasn't
driving a line that used all the width of the track—entering from wide
and exiting from wide. Suddenly, I was braking for each corner where
there was a realistic opportunity to pass from the MIDDLE of the track.
For three laps, I defended each time he was in a position to make a
late-braking pass attempt.

The first time I did it in turn 1 of the ante-penultimate lap, he tried
to late-brake and go around the outside of me, and that is almost never
a winning strategy unless you're trying it in the first of two linked
corners. Then outside becomes inside in the second corner...

....but then of course, you'd defend that differently. 😎

So for three laps, I frustrated all his attempts to get around me, and I
took the outright race win.

Tomorrow would tell a different story, but we'll get to that.

Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
From: -hh
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2024 20:07 UTC
References: 1
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From: recscuba_google@huntzinger.com (-hh)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2024 16:07:15 -0400
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Alan <nuh-uh@nope.com> wrote:
> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>
> With the help of the son of one of the previous owners of my previous
> car, two weekend days of work leading up to this past weekend put the
> car almost back together (although that "almost" came back to bite me a
> little bit). We went through the car—checked and bled the brakes and
> clutch, changed the engine oil and made sure everything was properly
> bolted, and when it was all done, we discovered that:
>
> 1. We needed new brake pads all around.
>
> No problem! Our local race supplier, (shameless plug for Frank Micucci
> of driversedgeautosport.com) promised to have brake pads for me first
> thing Saturday morning and changing pads on a formula car such as mine
> is normally a 15 minute job at most.
>
> 2. The battery needed to be replaced. The car has an alternator, so it
> will run if started with a jump battery, but then you need someone to
> come to pre-grid to jump you again when the one minute signal is given,
> and if you should happen to kill the engine in a spin... ...well, not
> having a working battery makes for too many problems.
>
> No problem! After much searching for a less expensive option than the
> Odyssey PC545 (now renamed ODS-AGM15L) which really was overkill for a
> car that wasn't running a total loss system (thanks to the Honda engine
> rule requiring that an alternator be included) and which was out of
> stock in the locations that had it for the best price, I found out that
> lithium-ion batteries have come down in price a lot, and I could get a
> 200A (cranking amps) NOCO NLP5 for $127 from Amazon with free 2-day
> delivery. 1.5lb vs 11.4lb.
>
> So all was looking good, except:
>
> 1. It appears that quality control at Hawk Performance isn't all it used
> to be, and when I went to install my new Hawk "Blue" pads into the LD20
> calipers... ...they wouldn't fit! At first, I assumed I hadn't retracted
> the caliper pistons far enough, but closer inspection showed that it was
> the overall width of the backing plate that was just marginally too big.
> It appears that the backing plates are punched out of sheet steel and
> the punching dies are starting to wear out.
>
> Fortunately, in a racing paddock you have neighbours and my neighbour
> (and good friend) Marty Knoll (shameless plug for MK Technologies; maker
> of quality pit equipment for racing at almost every level) had a trailer
> with both an angle grinder, a vise, and electric power (note to self:
> add DeWalt cordless angle grinder to my tool arsenal), and so I was
> looking at the depressing prospect of spending perhaps 30-40 minutes
> grinding down the width of 8 pads so that they'd fit properly.
>
> Even more fortunately, when I grabbed the first pad of the 8 to fit onto
> my car, I by chance grabbed the one that fit the worse of all of them.
> So the grinding ended up taking only 15 minutes or so. But still, that's
> a 15 minute job that ended up being 30-40 minutes; maybe even a few more
> as I discovered I'd run out of the cotter pins that we use to hold the
> pads in place and I had to round up some new ones.
>
> 2. And I'd forgotten just what a pain it was to get beneath the cover
> that reveals both the battery and the car's ECU and actually change the
> battery. It was clear that it was worth removing one of the front
> suspension's coil-over dampers to gain better access. And then...
>
> ...I hadn't reckoned with the fact that the new battery was a lot
> shorter from terminal to terminal than the Odyssey I was replacing. The
> Odyssey was 5.56" between terminals and the NLP5 from NOCO was only 4.5"
> long overall. Fortunately, the NOCO had enough different options for
> connecting the main leads that I was able to use the connection from the
> side of the battery to make everything fit.
>
> So with both of those jobs running long (and with a 20 minute forced
> hiatus in the time before the first session for the drivers meeting), I
> ended up missing the practice/qualifying session for the combined open
> wheel and sports racers group. Honestly, not a big deal, but it did mean
> that I would have to bed my brakes on the pace lap for the first race
> (which was pretty easy as I was starting from the back and I wasn't
> changing compounds anyway).
>
> So, first race (and all of these sessions are short in vintage racing—15
> minutes) I started from the back of the pack, hung back enough that I
> could do "lunges" forward followed by hard braking to get enough heat
> into the pads and rotors, and when the green flag dropped, I quickly got
> by all the Formula Vees, the very slowest of the Formula Fs and worked
> my way past Erle and Keith and was hoping that the race would last long
> enough that I could close up on the single FC in the field and take the
> outright victory (he was a novice, and I'd already noticed on the
> practice day Friday that he wasn't yet running good enough lines, so
> there was probably a chance). No luck. I don't have times yet, but first
> in FF, second overall and I was probably 2-3 seconds faster than the
> next fasted FF even running on two year old used tires.
>
> Next race, my best time in Race 1 meant that I was gridded 2nd next to
> the FC, so I figured I was in with a chance of winning outright. As the
> race started, I found it pretty easy to keep up with him on the first
> lap—not really a surprise, but I think it surprised him and so after
> keeping pace with him for all of lap 1 and most of lap 2, he eased off a
> little in turn 9 of that lap and let me by. Talking to him afterwards,
> he confirmed what I thought at the time: he wanted to watch my lines for
> a while and figure out how a 1.5l Formula F Honda with maybe 118
> horsepower could keep up with his 145hp Pinto-engined FC. And for the
> next however-many laps of the race we did that. And he learned that if
> you want to be fast, you have to use ALL the road.
>
> I'll post a video shortly and you can see for yourself how much room he
> leaves on corner exit.
>
> But for the last 3 laps of the race, he clearly felt that he'd learned
> enough, and I sensed that he was going to try and get back past me for
> the win. And that's when he learned that being faster and getting past
> someone are two very different things.
>
> Unless you have so much greater power and speed on the straights (and
> assuming you drive a line that lets you unleash that speed and power at
> the corner that exits onto the straight), you're going to have to pass
> in a braking zone at the end of the straight. And suddenly, I wasn't
> driving a line that used all the width of the track—entering from wide
> and exiting from wide. Suddenly, I was braking for each corner where
> there was a realistic opportunity to pass from the MIDDLE of the track.
> For three laps, I defended each time he was in a position to make a
> late-braking pass attempt.
>
> The first time I did it in turn 1 of the ante-penultimate lap, he tried
> to late-brake and go around the outside of me, and that is almost never
> a winning strategy unless you're trying it in the first of two linked
> corners. Then outside becomes inside in the second corner...
>
> ...but then of course, you'd defend that differently. 😎
>
> So for three laps, I frustrated all his attempts to get around me, and I
> took the outright race win.
>
> Tomorrow would tell a different story, but we'll get to that.
>

Nice to hear that you’ve had the time to get things sorted, even with the
additional surprises.

Just back home this afternoon from my own exploits..will be awhile to sort
things out & get caught back up at home.

-hh

Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Tue, 13 Aug 2024 20:40 UTC
References: 1
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Tue, 13 Aug 2024 13:40:13 -0700
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On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:

> Well, it was great to get back on track.
I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!

Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler temperatures,
cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain. The high for the day
was forecast to be down from too high to something that was at least
bearable. That having been said, it still ended up a day where hydration
was key. I think I drank 2-2.5 litres of water.

I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as we
were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was going to
be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which would dry out
quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain tires...

....I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I needed
to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where the organizers
had added penalty cones for track limits violations, etc), and about the
car (I need to add some rear brake bias.

So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little nitrogen
to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a little—especially the highly
cantilevered rear tires, and so need refilling at least once when the
day begins), give the brake bias knob a couple of turns to "more rear",
and unpack for the day.

But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's more
from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.

I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared crewman, Tom,
noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass of the overflow
tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd never seen any
indication that the overflow tank was full, but it certainly was now
(after we'd changed the engine oil and as all racers do: added enough to
make sure that some would end up in the overflow tank).

No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a catch
pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take out the
small drain plug, and seal it all back up!

Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared to be
an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon buns) that
might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit beneath the drain
hole with the car only up on short stands.

I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that catch
tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we might be
overflowing the available vessel, but...

No problem!

....the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the tray, and
I thought I was in the clear...

....when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a little
more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter puddle of oil
in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later, it was gone.

Let's get to the racing.

First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from the
fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just that; not a
qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was gridded next to him.
This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had clearly learned a lot from
watching me drive (his best lap this race was nearly 2 seconds faster
than his best from Saturday), and there was no way I was going to be
able to keep pace with him. And John, in the Mallock sports racer with a
2 litre tuned Vauxhall engine was going to be my fight, and it ended up
being a fair fight. He could pull away for a while, but only by using
his brakes to the point where they'd overheat and he'd have to moderate
his pace.

So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer 37
seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind John.

Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.

The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with the FC
and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the FC; he still
had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as downforce and Hoosier
tires. The Mallock had problems and so didn't factor.

What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41 Formula 2
car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug (not that Doug;
another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It had much more rubber
than mine and while the engine was a 1.6 litre mill, it was a Cosworth
FVA engine with WAY more horsepower than any Formula F; Ford or Honda.

The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show Ford
what Cosworth could do before they built the famous Ford-Cosworth DFV.
It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.

The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running the
car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking him a while
to come to grips with it. This led to us having a super-fun dice with
him leading off the start, me passing him for 2nd place, then him
passing me again as he got better and better in the car. Our regular
on-track photographer, Brent Martin...

(shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)

....was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two cars,
separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.

In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much fun to
be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my GoPro mounted
for the race!), and we finished:

1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind Doug.

And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It might
not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.

I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer in his
1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games with myself
by going through corners in one gear too high, or not using all the
throttle down the straight...

....and in the end...

....because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
"Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...

....I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the checkered
flag.

As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final lap,
but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn 2, and I
felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of it. Then I left
the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.

So I did the only thing that seemed right.

All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We saw
some people and cars that don't normally come out, including Ross Bentley...

(shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)

....an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
(occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly sought-after
driving coach.

Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to make all
three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I suspect that with the
points lower (because there will probably be fewer FF drivers out), I
don't think that I can win the club championship.

Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the "Historics"
that I'd still like to see on the track.

Cheers!

Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2024 00:29 UTC
References: 1
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2024 17:29:14 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>

And here's the only video from the weekend:

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVuZ8X978iM>

Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Tom Elam
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2024 20:12 UTC
References: 1 2
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: thomas.e.elam@gmail.com (Tom Elam)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2024 16:12:47 -0400
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On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>
>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>
> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler temperatures,
> cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain. The high for the day
> was forecast to be down from too high to something that was at least
> bearable. That having been said, it still ended up a day where hydration
> was key. I think I drank 2-2.5 litres of water.
>
> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as we
> were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was going to
> be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which would dry out
> quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain tires...
>
> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I needed
> to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where the organizers
> had added penalty cones for track limits violations, etc), and about the
> car (I need to add some rear brake bias.
>
> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little nitrogen
> to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a little—especially the highly
> cantilevered rear tires, and so need refilling at least once when the
> day begins), give the brake bias knob a couple of turns to "more rear",
> and unpack for the day.
>
> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's more
> from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>
> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared crewman, Tom,
> noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass of the overflow
> tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd never seen any
> indication that the overflow tank was full, but it certainly was now
> (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all racers do: added enough to
> make sure that some would end up in the overflow tank).
>
> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a catch
> pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take out the
> small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>
> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared to be
> an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon buns) that
> might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit beneath the drain
> hole with the car only up on short stands.
>
> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that catch
> tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we might be
> overflowing the available vessel, but...
>
> No problem!
>
> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the tray, and
> I thought I was in the clear...
>
> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a little
> more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter puddle of oil
> in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later, it was gone.
>
> Let's get to the racing.
>
> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from the
> fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just that; not a
> qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was gridded next to him.
> This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had clearly learned a lot from
> watching me drive (his best lap this race was nearly 2 seconds faster
> than his best from Saturday), and there was no way I was going to be
> able to keep pace with him. And John, in the Mallock sports racer with a
> 2 litre tuned Vauxhall engine was going to be my fight, and it ended up
> being a fair fight. He could pull away for a while, but only by using
> his brakes to the point where they'd overheat and he'd have to moderate
> his pace.
>
> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer 37
> seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind John.
>
> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>
> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with the FC
> and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the FC; he still
> had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as downforce and Hoosier
> tires. The Mallock had problems and so didn't factor.
>
> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41 Formula 2
> car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug (not that Doug;
> another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It had much more rubber
> than mine and while the engine was a 1.6 litre mill, it was a Cosworth
> FVA engine with WAY more horsepower than any Formula F; Ford or Honda.
>
> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show Ford
> what Cosworth could do before they built the famous Ford-Cosworth DFV.
> It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>
> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running the
> car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking him a while
> to come to grips with it. This led to us having a super-fun dice with
> him leading off the start, me passing him for 2nd place, then him
> passing me again as he got better and better in the car. Our regular
> on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>
> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>
> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two cars,
> separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>
> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much fun to
> be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my GoPro mounted
> for the race!), and we finished:
>
> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind Doug.
>
> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It might
> not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>
> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer in his
> 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games with myself
> by going through corners in one gear too high, or not using all the
> throttle down the straight...
>
> ...and in the end...
>
> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>
> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the checkered
> flag.
>
> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final lap,
> but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn 2, and I
> felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of it. Then I left
> the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>
> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>
> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We saw
> some people and cars that don't normally come out, including Ross
> Bentley...
>
> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>
> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly sought-after
> driving coach.
>
> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to make all
> three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I suspect that with the
> points lower (because there will probably be fewer FF drivers out), I
> don't think that I can win the club championship.
>
> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the "Historics"
> that I'd still like to see on the track.
>
> Cheers!

So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat the
few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in the past.

Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2024 22:13 UTC
References: 1 2 3
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2024 15:13:42 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 2024-08-17 13:12, Tom Elam wrote:
> On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
>> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>>
>>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>>
>> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler
>> temperatures, cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain. The
>> high for the day was forecast to be down from too high to something
>> that was at least bearable. That having been said, it still ended up a
>> day where hydration was key. I think I drank 2-2.5 litres of water.
>>
>> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as we
>> were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was going
>> to be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which would dry
>> out quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain tires...
>>
>> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I needed
>> to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where the
>> organizers had added penalty cones for track limits violations, etc),
>> and about the car (I need to add some rear brake bias.
>>
>> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little nitrogen
>> to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a little—especially the
>> highly cantilevered rear tires, and so need refilling at least once
>> when the day begins), give the brake bias knob a couple of turns to
>> "more rear", and unpack for the day.
>>
>> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
>> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's more
>> from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>>
>> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
>> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared crewman,
>> Tom, noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass of the
>> overflow tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd never seen
>> any indication that the overflow tank was full, but it certainly was
>> now (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all racers do: added
>> enough to make sure that some would end up in the overflow tank).
>>
>> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a catch
>> pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take out the
>> small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>>
>> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared to
>> be an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon buns)
>> that might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit beneath
>> the drain hole with the car only up on short stands.
>>
>> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that catch
>> tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we might be
>> overflowing the available vessel, but...
>>
>> No problem!
>>
>> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the tray,
>> and I thought I was in the clear...
>>
>> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a little
>> more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter puddle of
>> oil in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later, it was gone.
>>
>> Let's get to the racing.
>>
>> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from the
>> fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just that; not
>> a qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was gridded next to
>> him. This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had clearly learned a lot
>> from watching me drive (his best lap this race was nearly 2 seconds
>> faster than his best from Saturday), and there was no way I was going
>> to be able to keep pace with him. And John, in the Mallock sports
>> racer with a 2 litre tuned Vauxhall engine was going to be my fight,
>> and it ended up being a fair fight. He could pull away for a while,
>> but only by using his brakes to the point where they'd overheat and
>> he'd have to moderate his pace.
>>
>> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer 37
>> seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind John.
>>
>> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>>
>> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
>> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with the
>> FC and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the FC; he
>> still had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as downforce and
>> Hoosier tires. The Mallock had problems and so didn't factor.
>>
>> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41 Formula
>> 2 car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug (not that
>> Doug; another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It had much more
>> rubber than mine and while the engine was a 1.6 litre mill, it was a
>> Cosworth FVA engine with WAY more horsepower than any Formula F; Ford
>> or Honda.
>>
>> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show Ford
>> what Cosworth could do before they built the famous Ford-Cosworth DFV.
>> It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>>
>> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running the
>> car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking him a
>> while to come to grips with it. This led to us having a super-fun dice
>> with him leading off the start, me passing him for 2nd place, then him
>> passing me again as he got better and better in the car. Our regular
>> on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>>
>> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>>
>> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two cars,
>> separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>>
>> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much fun
>> to be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my GoPro
>> mounted for the race!), and we finished:
>>
>> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind Doug.
>>
>> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It might
>> not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>>
>> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer in
>> his 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games with
>> myself by going through corners in one gear too high, or not using all
>> the throttle down the straight...
>>
>> ...and in the end...
>>
>> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
>> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>>
>> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the checkered
>> flag.
>>
>> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final lap,
>> but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn 2, and I
>> felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of it. Then I left
>> the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>>
>> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>>
>> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We saw
>> some people and cars that don't normally come out, including Ross
>> Bentley...
>>
>> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>>
>> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
>> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly sought-after
>> driving coach.
>>
>> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to make
>> all three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I suspect that
>> with the points lower (because there will probably be fewer FF drivers
>> out), I don't think that I can win the club championship.
>>
>> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the "Historics"
>> that I'd still like to see on the track.
>>
>> Cheers!
>
> So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat the
> few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in the past.

LOL!

And stay with a Formula 2 car with close to double the horsepower.

And beat an FC car with:

More than 20% more horsepower.

Stickier tires

Downforce.


Click here to read the complete article
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 21:09 UTC
References: 1 2
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 14:09:10 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 2024-08-16 17:29, Alan wrote:
> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>
>
> And here's the only video from the weekend:
>
> <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVuZ8X978iM>
>

And here's the car I wish I had video of:

<https://martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com/2024-BC-Historic-Motor-Races-Open-WheelSports-Racers/i-P2mLLDm/buy>

Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 1 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 14:09:10 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 27
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On 2024-08-16 17:29, Alan wrote:
> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>
>
> And here's the only video from the weekend:
>
> <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVuZ8X978iM>
>

And here's the car I wish I had video of:

<https://martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com/2024-BC-Historic-Motor-Races-Open-WheelSports-Racers/i-P2mLLDm/buy>

Simply a beautiful old racer. The driver, Doug, says he's got some video
of our tussle and I'm really looking forward to seeing them.

There's brief video here:

<https://www.instagram.com/p/C-oGidyyqcS/>

But it's marred by the the fact that it's turned the wrong way...

....and there's only a little big of the Lotus and my car in the edited
video.

😎
. Simply a beautiful old racer. The driver, Doug, says he's got some video
of our tussle and I'm really looking forward to seeing them.

There's brief video here:

<https://www.instagram.com/p/C-oGidyyqcS/>

But it's marred by the the fact that it's turned the wrong way...

....and there's only a little big of the Lotus and my car in the edited
video.

😎

Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Tom Elam
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2024 12:25 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: thomas.e.elam@gmail.com (Tom Elam)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2024 08:25:12 -0400
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 8/17/2024 6:13 PM, Alan wrote:
> On 2024-08-17 13:12, Tom Elam wrote:
>> On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
>>> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>>>
>>>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>>>
>>> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler
>>> temperatures, cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain. The
>>> high for the day was forecast to be down from too high to something
>>> that was at least bearable. That having been said, it still ended up
>>> a day where hydration was key. I think I drank 2-2.5 litres of water.
>>>
>>> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as we
>>> were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was going
>>> to be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which would
>>> dry out quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain tires...
>>>
>>> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I
>>> needed to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where the
>>> organizers had added penalty cones for track limits violations, etc),
>>> and about the car (I need to add some rear brake bias.
>>>
>>> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little
>>> nitrogen to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a
>>> little—especially the highly cantilevered rear tires, and so need
>>> refilling at least once when the day begins), give the brake bias
>>> knob a couple of turns to "more rear", and unpack for the day.
>>>
>>> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
>>> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's
>>> more from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>>>
>>> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
>>> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared crewman,
>>> Tom, noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass of the
>>> overflow tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd never
>>> seen any indication that the overflow tank was full, but it certainly
>>> was now (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all racers do:
>>> added enough to make sure that some would end up in the overflow tank).
>>>
>>> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a
>>> catch pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take out
>>> the small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>>>
>>> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared to
>>> be an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon buns)
>>> that might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit beneath
>>> the drain hole with the car only up on short stands.
>>>
>>> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that catch
>>> tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we might be
>>> overflowing the available vessel, but...
>>>
>>> No problem!
>>>
>>> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the tray,
>>> and I thought I was in the clear...
>>>
>>> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a little
>>> more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter puddle of
>>> oil in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later, it was gone.
>>>
>>> Let's get to the racing.
>>>
>>> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from the
>>> fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just that; not
>>> a qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was gridded next to
>>> him. This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had clearly learned a
>>> lot from watching me drive (his best lap this race was nearly 2
>>> seconds faster than his best from Saturday), and there was no way I
>>> was going to be able to keep pace with him. And John, in the Mallock
>>> sports racer with a 2 litre tuned Vauxhall engine was going to be my
>>> fight, and it ended up being a fair fight. He could pull away for a
>>> while, but only by using his brakes to the point where they'd
>>> overheat and he'd have to moderate his pace.
>>>
>>> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer 37
>>> seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind John.
>>>
>>> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>>>
>>> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
>>> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with the
>>> FC and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the FC; he
>>> still had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as downforce and
>>> Hoosier tires. The Mallock had problems and so didn't factor.
>>>
>>> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41 Formula
>>> 2 car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug (not that
>>> Doug; another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It had much
>>> more rubber than mine and while the engine was a 1.6 litre mill, it
>>> was a Cosworth FVA engine with WAY more horsepower than any Formula
>>> F; Ford or Honda.
>>>
>>> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show
>>> Ford what Cosworth could do before they built the famous
>>> Ford-Cosworth DFV. It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>>>
>>> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running the
>>> car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking him a
>>> while to come to grips with it. This led to us having a super-fun
>>> dice with him leading off the start, me passing him for 2nd place,
>>> then him passing me again as he got better and better in the car. Our
>>> regular on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>>>
>>> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>>>
>>> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two
>>> cars, separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>>>
>>> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much fun
>>> to be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my GoPro
>>> mounted for the race!), and we finished:
>>>
>>> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind Doug.
>>>
>>> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It might
>>> not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>>>
>>> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer in
>>> his 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games with
>>> myself by going through corners in one gear too high, or not using
>>> all the throttle down the straight...
>>>
>>> ...and in the end...
>>>
>>> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
>>> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>>>
>>> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the
>>> checkered flag.
>>>
>>> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final lap,
>>> but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn 2, and I
>>> felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of it. Then I
>>> left the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>>>
>>> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>>>
>>> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We saw
>>> some people and cars that don't normally come out, including Ross
>>> Bentley...
>>>
>>> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>>>
>>> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
>>> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly sought-after
>>> driving coach.
>>>
>>> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to make
>>> all three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I suspect that
>>> with the points lower (because there will probably be fewer FF
>>> drivers out), I don't think that I can win the club championship.
>>>
>>> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the "Historics"
>>> that I'd still like to see on the track.
>>>
>>> Cheers!
>>
>> So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat the
>> few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in the past.
>
> LOL!
>
> And stay with a Formula 2 car with close to double the horsepower.
>
> And beat an FC car with:
>
> More than 20% more horsepower.
>
> Stickier tires
>
> Downforce.
>
> All while on two year old tires.
>
> :-)


Click here to read the complete article
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2024 16:51 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2024 09:51:11 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 190
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<v9r07v$21f3n$1@dont-email.me> <v9r7am$22h23$1@dont-email.me>
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On 2024-08-30 05:25, Tom Elam wrote:
> On 8/17/2024 6:13 PM, Alan wrote:
>> On 2024-08-17 13:12, Tom Elam wrote:
>>> On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>>> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>>>>
>>>> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler
>>>> temperatures, cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain. The
>>>> high for the day was forecast to be down from too high to something
>>>> that was at least bearable. That having been said, it still ended up
>>>> a day where hydration was key. I think I drank 2-2.5 litres of water.
>>>>
>>>> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as we
>>>> were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was
>>>> going to be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which
>>>> would dry out quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain tires...
>>>>
>>>> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I
>>>> needed to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where the
>>>> organizers had added penalty cones for track limits violations,
>>>> etc), and about the car (I need to add some rear brake bias.
>>>>
>>>> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little
>>>> nitrogen to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a
>>>> little—especially the highly cantilevered rear tires, and so need
>>>> refilling at least once when the day begins), give the brake bias
>>>> knob a couple of turns to "more rear", and unpack for the day.
>>>>
>>>> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
>>>> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's
>>>> more from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>>>>
>>>> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
>>>> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared crewman,
>>>> Tom, noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass of the
>>>> overflow tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd never
>>>> seen any indication that the overflow tank was full, but it
>>>> certainly was now (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all
>>>> racers do: added enough to make sure that some would end up in the
>>>> overflow tank).
>>>>
>>>> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a
>>>> catch pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take
>>>> out the small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>>>>
>>>> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared
>>>> to be an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon
>>>> buns) that might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit
>>>> beneath the drain hole with the car only up on short stands.
>>>>
>>>> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that
>>>> catch tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we might
>>>> be overflowing the available vessel, but...
>>>>
>>>> No problem!
>>>>
>>>> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the tray,
>>>> and I thought I was in the clear...
>>>>
>>>> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a
>>>> little more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter
>>>> puddle of oil in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later, it
>>>> was gone.
>>>>
>>>> Let's get to the racing.
>>>>
>>>> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from the
>>>> fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just that;
>>>> not a qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was gridded
>>>> next to him. This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had clearly
>>>> learned a lot from watching me drive (his best lap this race was
>>>> nearly 2 seconds faster than his best from Saturday), and there was
>>>> no way I was going to be able to keep pace with him. And John, in
>>>> the Mallock sports racer with a 2 litre tuned Vauxhall engine was
>>>> going to be my fight, and it ended up being a fair fight. He could
>>>> pull away for a while, but only by using his brakes to the point
>>>> where they'd overheat and he'd have to moderate his pace.
>>>>
>>>> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer
>>>> 37 seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind
>>>> John.
>>>>
>>>> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>>>>
>>>> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
>>>> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with the
>>>> FC and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the FC; he
>>>> still had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as downforce and
>>>> Hoosier tires. The Mallock had problems and so didn't factor.
>>>>
>>>> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41
>>>> Formula 2 car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug (not
>>>> that Doug; another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It had
>>>> much more rubber than mine and while the engine was a 1.6 litre
>>>> mill, it was a Cosworth FVA engine with WAY more horsepower than any
>>>> Formula F; Ford or Honda.
>>>>
>>>> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show
>>>> Ford what Cosworth could do before they built the famous
>>>> Ford-Cosworth DFV. It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>>>>
>>>> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running
>>>> the car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking him
>>>> a while to come to grips with it. This led to us having a super-fun
>>>> dice with him leading off the start, me passing him for 2nd place,
>>>> then him passing me again as he got better and better in the car.
>>>> Our regular on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>>>>
>>>> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>>>>
>>>> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two
>>>> cars, separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>>>>
>>>> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much
>>>> fun to be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my GoPro
>>>> mounted for the race!), and we finished:
>>>>
>>>> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind Doug.
>>>>
>>>> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It
>>>> might not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>>>>
>>>> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer in
>>>> his 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games with
>>>> myself by going through corners in one gear too high, or not using
>>>> all the throttle down the straight...
>>>>
>>>> ...and in the end...
>>>>
>>>> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
>>>> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>>>>
>>>> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the
>>>> checkered flag.
>>>>
>>>> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final
>>>> lap, but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn 2,
>>>> and I felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of it.
>>>> Then I left the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>>>>
>>>> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>>>>
>>>> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We
>>>> saw some people and cars that don't normally come out, including
>>>> Ross Bentley...
>>>>
>>>> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>>>>
>>>> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
>>>> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly sought-after
>>>> driving coach.
>>>>
>>>> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to make
>>>> all three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I suspect that
>>>> with the points lower (because there will probably be fewer FF
>>>> drivers out), I don't think that I can win the club championship.
>>>>
>>>> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the
>>>> "Historics" that I'd still like to see on the track.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers!
>>>
>>> So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat the
>>> few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in the
>>> past.
>>
>> LOL!
>>
>> And stay with a Formula 2 car with close to double the horsepower.
>>
>> And beat an FC car with:
>>
>> More than 20% more horsepower.
>>
>> Stickier tires
>>
>> Downforce.
>>
>> All while on two year old tires.
>>
>> :-)
>
> Doug and Alan likely could have too.


Click here to read the complete article
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Tom Elam
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2024 13:04 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: thomas.e.elam@gmail.com (Tom Elam)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2024 09:04:56 -0400
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 8/30/2024 12:51 PM, Alan wrote:
> On 2024-08-30 05:25, Tom Elam wrote:
>> On 8/17/2024 6:13 PM, Alan wrote:
>>> On 2024-08-17 13:12, Tom Elam wrote:
>>>> On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>>> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>>>> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>>>>>
>>>>> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler
>>>>> temperatures, cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain.
>>>>> The high for the day was forecast to be down from too high to
>>>>> something that was at least bearable. That having been said, it
>>>>> still ended up a day where hydration was key. I think I drank 2-2.5
>>>>> litres of water.
>>>>>
>>>>> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as
>>>>> we were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was
>>>>> going to be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which
>>>>> would dry out quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain
>>>>> tires...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I
>>>>> needed to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where
>>>>> the organizers had added penalty cones for track limits violations,
>>>>> etc), and about the car (I need to add some rear brake bias.
>>>>>
>>>>> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little
>>>>> nitrogen to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a
>>>>> little—especially the highly cantilevered rear tires, and so need
>>>>> refilling at least once when the day begins), give the brake bias
>>>>> knob a couple of turns to "more rear", and unpack for the day.
>>>>>
>>>>> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
>>>>> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's
>>>>> more from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>>>>>
>>>>> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
>>>>> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared crewman,
>>>>> Tom, noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass of the
>>>>> overflow tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd never
>>>>> seen any indication that the overflow tank was full, but it
>>>>> certainly was now (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all
>>>>> racers do: added enough to make sure that some would end up in the
>>>>> overflow tank).
>>>>>
>>>>> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a
>>>>> catch pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take
>>>>> out the small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>>>>>
>>>>> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared
>>>>> to be an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon
>>>>> buns) that might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit
>>>>> beneath the drain hole with the car only up on short stands.
>>>>>
>>>>> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that
>>>>> catch tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we might
>>>>> be overflowing the available vessel, but...
>>>>>
>>>>> No problem!
>>>>>
>>>>> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the
>>>>> tray, and I thought I was in the clear...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a
>>>>> little more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter
>>>>> puddle of oil in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later, it
>>>>> was gone.
>>>>>
>>>>> Let's get to the racing.
>>>>>
>>>>> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from the
>>>>> fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just that;
>>>>> not a qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was gridded
>>>>> next to him. This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had clearly
>>>>> learned a lot from watching me drive (his best lap this race was
>>>>> nearly 2 seconds faster than his best from Saturday), and there was
>>>>> no way I was going to be able to keep pace with him. And John, in
>>>>> the Mallock sports racer with a 2 litre tuned Vauxhall engine was
>>>>> going to be my fight, and it ended up being a fair fight. He could
>>>>> pull away for a while, but only by using his brakes to the point
>>>>> where they'd overheat and he'd have to moderate his pace.
>>>>>
>>>>> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer
>>>>> 37 seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind
>>>>> John.
>>>>>
>>>>> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>>>>>
>>>>> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
>>>>> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with
>>>>> the FC and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the FC;
>>>>> he still had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as downforce
>>>>> and Hoosier tires. The Mallock had problems and so didn't factor.
>>>>>
>>>>> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41
>>>>> Formula 2 car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug
>>>>> (not that Doug; another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It
>>>>> had much more rubber than mine and while the engine was a 1.6 litre
>>>>> mill, it was a Cosworth FVA engine with WAY more horsepower than
>>>>> any Formula F; Ford or Honda.
>>>>>
>>>>> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show
>>>>> Ford what Cosworth could do before they built the famous
>>>>> Ford-Cosworth DFV. It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>>>>>
>>>>> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running
>>>>> the car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking
>>>>> him a while to come to grips with it. This led to us having a
>>>>> super-fun dice with him leading off the start, me passing him for
>>>>> 2nd place, then him passing me again as he got better and better in
>>>>> the car. Our regular on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>>>>>
>>>>> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>>>>>
>>>>> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two
>>>>> cars, separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>>>>>
>>>>> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much
>>>>> fun to be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my
>>>>> GoPro mounted for the race!), and we finished:
>>>>>
>>>>> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind
>>>>> Doug.
>>>>>
>>>>> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It
>>>>> might not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>>>>>
>>>>> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer in
>>>>> his 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games
>>>>> with myself by going through corners in one gear too high, or not
>>>>> using all the throttle down the straight...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...and in the end...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
>>>>> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the
>>>>> checkered flag.
>>>>>
>>>>> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final
>>>>> lap, but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn 2,
>>>>> and I felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of it.
>>>>> Then I left the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>>>>>
>>>>> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>>>>>
>>>>> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We
>>>>> saw some people and cars that don't normally come out, including
>>>>> Ross Bentley...
>>>>>
>>>>> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>>>>>
>>>>> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
>>>>> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly sought-after
>>>>> driving coach.
>>>>>
>>>>> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to
>>>>> make all three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I suspect
>>>>> that with the points lower (because there will probably be fewer FF
>>>>> drivers out), I don't think that I can win the club championship.
>>>>>
>>>>> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the
>>>>> "Historics" that I'd still like to see on the track.
>>>>>
>>>>> Cheers!
>>>>
>>>> So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat
>>>> the few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in
>>>> the past.
>>>
>>> LOL!
>>>
>>> And stay with a Formula 2 car with close to double the horsepower.
>>>
>>> And beat an FC car with:
>>>
>>> More than 20% more horsepower.
>>>
>>> Stickier tires
>>>
>>> Downforce.
>>>
>>> All while on two year old tires.
>>>
>>> :-)
>>
>> Doug and Alan likely could have too.
>
> Yup.
>
> So?


Click here to read the complete article
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2024 16:19 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2024 09:19:00 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 2024-09-02 06:04, Tom Elam wrote:
> On 8/30/2024 12:51 PM, Alan wrote:
>> On 2024-08-30 05:25, Tom Elam wrote:
>>> On 8/17/2024 6:13 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>> On 2024-08-17 13:12, Tom Elam wrote:
>>>>> On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>>>> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>>>>> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler
>>>>>> temperatures, cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain.
>>>>>> The high for the day was forecast to be down from too high to
>>>>>> something that was at least bearable. That having been said, it
>>>>>> still ended up a day where hydration was key. I think I drank
>>>>>> 2-2.5 litres of water.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as
>>>>>> we were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was
>>>>>> going to be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which
>>>>>> would dry out quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain
>>>>>> tires...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I
>>>>>> needed to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where
>>>>>> the organizers had added penalty cones for track limits
>>>>>> violations, etc), and about the car (I need to add some rear brake
>>>>>> bias.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little
>>>>>> nitrogen to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a
>>>>>> little—especially the highly cantilevered rear tires, and so need
>>>>>> refilling at least once when the day begins), give the brake bias
>>>>>> knob a couple of turns to "more rear", and unpack for the day.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
>>>>>> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's
>>>>>> more from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
>>>>>> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared
>>>>>> crewman, Tom, noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass
>>>>>> of the overflow tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd
>>>>>> never seen any indication that the overflow tank was full, but it
>>>>>> certainly was now (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all
>>>>>> racers do: added enough to make sure that some would end up in the
>>>>>> overflow tank).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a
>>>>>> catch pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take
>>>>>> out the small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared
>>>>>> to be an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon
>>>>>> buns) that might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit
>>>>>> beneath the drain hole with the car only up on short stands.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that
>>>>>> catch tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we
>>>>>> might be overflowing the available vessel, but...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> No problem!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the
>>>>>> tray, and I thought I was in the clear...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a
>>>>>> little more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter
>>>>>> puddle of oil in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later,
>>>>>> it was gone.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Let's get to the racing.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from
>>>>>> the fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just
>>>>>> that; not a qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was
>>>>>> gridded next to him. This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had
>>>>>> clearly learned a lot from watching me drive (his best lap this
>>>>>> race was nearly 2 seconds faster than his best from Saturday), and
>>>>>> there was no way I was going to be able to keep pace with him. And
>>>>>> John, in the Mallock sports racer with a 2 litre tuned Vauxhall
>>>>>> engine was going to be my fight, and it ended up being a fair
>>>>>> fight. He could pull away for a while, but only by using his
>>>>>> brakes to the point where they'd overheat and he'd have to
>>>>>> moderate his pace.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer
>>>>>> 37 seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind
>>>>>> John.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
>>>>>> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with
>>>>>> the FC and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the
>>>>>> FC; he still had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as
>>>>>> downforce and Hoosier tires. The Mallock had problems and so
>>>>>> didn't factor.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41
>>>>>> Formula 2 car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug
>>>>>> (not that Doug; another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It
>>>>>> had much more rubber than mine and while the engine was a 1.6
>>>>>> litre mill, it was a Cosworth FVA engine with WAY more horsepower
>>>>>> than any Formula F; Ford or Honda.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show
>>>>>> Ford what Cosworth could do before they built the famous
>>>>>> Ford-Cosworth DFV. It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running
>>>>>> the car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking
>>>>>> him a while to come to grips with it. This led to us having a
>>>>>> super-fun dice with him leading off the start, me passing him for
>>>>>> 2nd place, then him passing me again as he got better and better
>>>>>> in the car. Our regular on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two
>>>>>> cars, separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much
>>>>>> fun to be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my
>>>>>> GoPro mounted for the race!), and we finished:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind
>>>>>> Doug.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It
>>>>>> might not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer
>>>>>> in his 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games
>>>>>> with myself by going through corners in one gear too high, or not
>>>>>> using all the throttle down the straight...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...and in the end...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
>>>>>> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the
>>>>>> checkered flag.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final
>>>>>> lap, but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn
>>>>>> 2, and I felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of
>>>>>> it. Then I left the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We
>>>>>> saw some people and cars that don't normally come out, including
>>>>>> Ross Bentley...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
>>>>>> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly
>>>>>> sought-after driving coach.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to
>>>>>> make all three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I
>>>>>> suspect that with the points lower (because there will probably be
>>>>>> fewer FF drivers out), I don't think that I can win the club
>>>>>> championship.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the
>>>>>> "Historics" that I'd still like to see on the track.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Cheers!
>>>>>
>>>>> So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat
>>>>> the few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in
>>>>> the past.
>>>>
>>>> LOL!
>>>>
>>>> And stay with a Formula 2 car with close to double the horsepower.
>>>>
>>>> And beat an FC car with:
>>>>
>>>> More than 20% more horsepower.
>>>>
>>>> Stickier tires
>>>>
>>>> Downforce.
>>>>
>>>> All while on two year old tires.
>>>>
>>>> :-)
>>>
>>> Doug and Alan likely could have too.
>>
>> Yup.
>>
>> So?
>
> As you have pointed out in the past lots of details affect race results.
> What is the Mission Raceway record for these theoretically faster cars?


Click here to read the complete article
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Tom Elam
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 13:29 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: thomas.e.elam@gmail.com (Tom Elam)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 09:29:33 -0400
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 8/30/2024 12:51 PM, Alan wrote:
> On 2024-08-30 05:25, Tom Elam wrote:
>> On 8/17/2024 6:13 PM, Alan wrote:
>>> On 2024-08-17 13:12, Tom Elam wrote:
>>>> On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>>> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>>>> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>>>>>
>>>>> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler
>>>>> temperatures, cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain.
>>>>> The high for the day was forecast to be down from too high to
>>>>> something that was at least bearable. That having been said, it
>>>>> still ended up a day where hydration was key. I think I drank 2-2.5
>>>>> litres of water.
>>>>>
>>>>> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as
>>>>> we were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was
>>>>> going to be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which
>>>>> would dry out quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain
>>>>> tires...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I
>>>>> needed to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where
>>>>> the organizers had added penalty cones for track limits violations,
>>>>> etc), and about the car (I need to add some rear brake bias.
>>>>>
>>>>> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little
>>>>> nitrogen to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a
>>>>> little—especially the highly cantilevered rear tires, and so need
>>>>> refilling at least once when the day begins), give the brake bias
>>>>> knob a couple of turns to "more rear", and unpack for the day.
>>>>>
>>>>> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
>>>>> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's
>>>>> more from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>>>>>
>>>>> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
>>>>> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared crewman,
>>>>> Tom, noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass of the
>>>>> overflow tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd never
>>>>> seen any indication that the overflow tank was full, but it
>>>>> certainly was now (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all
>>>>> racers do: added enough to make sure that some would end up in the
>>>>> overflow tank).
>>>>>
>>>>> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a
>>>>> catch pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take
>>>>> out the small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>>>>>
>>>>> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared
>>>>> to be an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon
>>>>> buns) that might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit
>>>>> beneath the drain hole with the car only up on short stands.
>>>>>
>>>>> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that
>>>>> catch tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we might
>>>>> be overflowing the available vessel, but...
>>>>>
>>>>> No problem!
>>>>>
>>>>> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the
>>>>> tray, and I thought I was in the clear...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a
>>>>> little more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter
>>>>> puddle of oil in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later, it
>>>>> was gone.
>>>>>
>>>>> Let's get to the racing.
>>>>>
>>>>> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from the
>>>>> fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just that;
>>>>> not a qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was gridded
>>>>> next to him. This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had clearly
>>>>> learned a lot from watching me drive (his best lap this race was
>>>>> nearly 2 seconds faster than his best from Saturday), and there was
>>>>> no way I was going to be able to keep pace with him. And John, in
>>>>> the Mallock sports racer with a 2 litre tuned Vauxhall engine was
>>>>> going to be my fight, and it ended up being a fair fight. He could
>>>>> pull away for a while, but only by using his brakes to the point
>>>>> where they'd overheat and he'd have to moderate his pace.
>>>>>
>>>>> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer
>>>>> 37 seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind
>>>>> John.
>>>>>
>>>>> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>>>>>
>>>>> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
>>>>> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with
>>>>> the FC and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the FC;
>>>>> he still had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as downforce
>>>>> and Hoosier tires. The Mallock had problems and so didn't factor.
>>>>>
>>>>> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41
>>>>> Formula 2 car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug
>>>>> (not that Doug; another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It
>>>>> had much more rubber than mine and while the engine was a 1.6 litre
>>>>> mill, it was a Cosworth FVA engine with WAY more horsepower than
>>>>> any Formula F; Ford or Honda.
>>>>>
>>>>> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show
>>>>> Ford what Cosworth could do before they built the famous
>>>>> Ford-Cosworth DFV. It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>>>>>
>>>>> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running
>>>>> the car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking
>>>>> him a while to come to grips with it. This led to us having a
>>>>> super-fun dice with him leading off the start, me passing him for
>>>>> 2nd place, then him passing me again as he got better and better in
>>>>> the car. Our regular on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>>>>>
>>>>> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>>>>>
>>>>> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two
>>>>> cars, separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>>>>>
>>>>> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much
>>>>> fun to be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my
>>>>> GoPro mounted for the race!), and we finished:
>>>>>
>>>>> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind
>>>>> Doug.
>>>>>
>>>>> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It
>>>>> might not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>>>>>
>>>>> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer in
>>>>> his 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games
>>>>> with myself by going through corners in one gear too high, or not
>>>>> using all the throttle down the straight...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...and in the end...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
>>>>> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>>>>>
>>>>> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the
>>>>> checkered flag.
>>>>>
>>>>> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final
>>>>> lap, but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn 2,
>>>>> and I felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of it.
>>>>> Then I left the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>>>>>
>>>>> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>>>>>
>>>>> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We
>>>>> saw some people and cars that don't normally come out, including
>>>>> Ross Bentley...
>>>>>
>>>>> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>>>>>
>>>>> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
>>>>> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly sought-after
>>>>> driving coach.
>>>>>
>>>>> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to
>>>>> make all three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I suspect
>>>>> that with the points lower (because there will probably be fewer FF
>>>>> drivers out), I don't think that I can win the club championship.
>>>>>
>>>>> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the
>>>>> "Historics" that I'd still like to see on the track.
>>>>>
>>>>> Cheers!
>>>>
>>>> So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat
>>>> the few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in
>>>> the past.
>>>
>>> LOL!
>>>
>>> And stay with a Formula 2 car with close to double the horsepower.
>>>
>>> And beat an FC car with:
>>>
>>> More than 20% more horsepower.
>>>
>>> Stickier tires
>>>
>>> Downforce.
>>>
>>> All while on two year old tires.
>>>
>>> :-)
>>
>> Doug and Alan likely could have too.
>
> Yup.
>
> So?


Click here to read the complete article
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
From: Alan
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 18:06 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: nuh-uh@nope.com (Alan)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
Subject: Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).
Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 11:06:21 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 323
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On 2024-09-07 06:29, Tom Elam wrote:
> On 8/30/2024 12:51 PM, Alan wrote:
>> On 2024-08-30 05:25, Tom Elam wrote:
>>> On 8/17/2024 6:13 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>> On 2024-08-17 13:12, Tom Elam wrote:
>>>>> On 8/13/2024 4:40 PM, Alan wrote:
>>>>>> On 2024-08-12 10:16, Alan wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Well, it was great to get back on track.
>>>>>> I said there'd be a follow up post and here it is!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sunday morning dawned (very, very thankfully) under cooler
>>>>>> temperatures, cloudy skies and even a very small amount of rain.
>>>>>> The high for the day was forecast to be down from too high to
>>>>>> something that was at least bearable. That having been said, it
>>>>>> still ended up a day where hydration was key. I think I drank
>>>>>> 2-2.5 litres of water.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I arrive at the track at about 8am with very little to do, and as
>>>>>> we were going to be the first group out for warm-up, and as it was
>>>>>> going to be a track just damp enough to need rain tires, but which
>>>>>> would dry out quickly enough that you'd then destroy your rain
>>>>>> tires...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...I just decided to give the warm-up a pass. I'd learned all I
>>>>>> needed to learn about the track (where the new bumps were, where
>>>>>> the organizers had added penalty cones for track limits
>>>>>> violations, etc), and about the car (I need to add some rear brake
>>>>>> bias.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So I thought I'd have nothing more to do than to add a little
>>>>>> nitrogen to my tires (American Racers tend to leak a
>>>>>> little—especially the highly cantilevered rear tires, and so need
>>>>>> refilling at least once when the day begins), give the brake bias
>>>>>> knob a couple of turns to "more rear", and unpack for the day.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> But then I noticed a 6" diameter puddle of oil right below the Van
>>>>>> Diemen's combined bell-housing/oil tank/oil overflow tank. What's
>>>>>> more from the colour and odor, it could be gearbox oil.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I was all set to start looking at the bottom of the car for any
>>>>>> indication of where the oil was coming from when my shared
>>>>>> crewman, Tom, noticed the faint trail of oil from the sight glass
>>>>>> of the overflow tank. Since I started running the car in 2018, I'd
>>>>>> never seen any indication that the overflow tank was full, but it
>>>>>> certainly was now (after we'd changed the engine oil and as all
>>>>>> racers do: added enough to make sure that some would end up in the
>>>>>> overflow tank).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> No problem! (Are we sensing a theme, here? 😉). I'll just find a
>>>>>> catch pan (my own having been accidentally left at the shop, take
>>>>>> out the small drain plug, and seal it all back up!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Only no one had one close handy either. But Erle had what appeared
>>>>>> to be an aluminum tray for baked goods (muffins or maybe cinnamon
>>>>>> buns) that might do the job. It was certainly short enough to fit
>>>>>> beneath the drain hole with the car only up on short stands.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I took out the drain plug, and out came the oil, and... ...that
>>>>>> catch tank was pretty big. I started to get concerned that we
>>>>>> might be overflowing the available vessel, but...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> No problem!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...the flow started to slow as it got higher and higher in the
>>>>>> tray, and I thought I was in the clear...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...when it became apparent that there was a hole in the tray a
>>>>>> little more than half way up. And now I had a 3 feet in diameter
>>>>>> puddle of oil in my paddock space. Lots of oil absorbents later,
>>>>>> it was gone.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Let's get to the racing.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> First race of the day, as the day before, the grid was set from
>>>>>> the fastest laps done in the race before that. Warm-up was just
>>>>>> that; not a qualifying session. So the FC was on pole and I was
>>>>>> gridded next to him. This time, when the flag dropped, Chris had
>>>>>> clearly learned a lot from watching me drive (his best lap this
>>>>>> race was nearly 2 seconds faster than his best from Saturday), and
>>>>>> there was no way I was going to be able to keep pace with him. And
>>>>>> John, in the Mallock sports racer with a 2 litre tuned Vauxhall
>>>>>> engine was going to be my fight, and it ended up being a fair
>>>>>> fight. He could pull away for a while, but only by using his
>>>>>> brakes to the point where they'd overheat and he'd have to
>>>>>> moderate his pace.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So the finish was: 1. Chris in the FC; 2. John in the sports racer
>>>>>> 37 seconds back; 3. me in the Van Diemen less than a second behind
>>>>>> John.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Still a pretty good result for running on 2 year old tires.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The next race (race 5 of the event) at the egging-on of my crew, I
>>>>>> pulled the restrictor to see if it might be possible to run with
>>>>>> the FC and beat the Mallock. It wasn't—possible to run with the
>>>>>> FC; he still had about a 12% horsepower advantage as well as
>>>>>> downforce and Hoosier tires. The Mallock had problems and so
>>>>>> didn't factor.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What WAS cool, though, is that there was an original Lotus 41
>>>>>> Formula 2 car from the late 1960s that was being driven by Doug
>>>>>> (not that Doug; another Doug) who normally drove a Dodge Viper. It
>>>>>> had much more rubber than mine and while the engine was a 1.6
>>>>>> litre mill, it was a Cosworth FVA engine with WAY more horsepower
>>>>>> than any Formula F; Ford or Honda.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The Cosworth FVA was a "proof of concept" engine designed to show
>>>>>> Ford what Cosworth could do before they built the famous
>>>>>> Ford-Cosworth DFV. It makes something on the order of 200-225hp.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The only saving grace was that this was Doug's first time running
>>>>>> the car—his first time in any open wheel racer, so it was taking
>>>>>> him a while to come to grips with it. This led to us having a
>>>>>> super-fun dice with him leading off the start, me passing him for
>>>>>> 2nd place, then him passing me again as he got better and better
>>>>>> in the car. Our regular on-track photographer, Brent Martin...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> (shameless plug: martinsactionphotography.smugmug.com)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...was at turn 3 and he must have got dozens of shots of the two
>>>>>> cars, separate by at least 30 years, going through nose to tail.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In the end, Doug got the better of the battle, but it was so much
>>>>>> fun to be a part of (and I wasn't bright enough to have had my
>>>>>> GoPro mounted for the race!), and we finished:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 1. FC; 2. Lotus 41 F2; 3. Me VD RF98-2 FF only 1.2 seconds behind
>>>>>> Doug.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> And for the last race... ...well... ...I was already gassed. It
>>>>>> might not have been as hot as Saturday, but it was hot enough.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I simply decided to relax, and ease off to play with Erle Archer
>>>>>> in his 1979 Tiga. I left the restrictor pulled, but I played games
>>>>>> with myself by going through corners in one gear too high, or not
>>>>>> using all the throttle down the straight...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...and in the end...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...because this was the race for which you get a plaque as the
>>>>>> "Abbotsford Trophy" winner in FF...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...I backed off coming off turn 9 to let a legal FF take the
>>>>>> checkered flag.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> As the race played out, Erle was leading as we started the final
>>>>>> lap, but he left the door too wide open to pass up entering turn
>>>>>> 2, and I felt I needed to get past him once more for the fun of
>>>>>> it. Then I left the door open in turn 3, and he didn't pass.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So I did the only thing that seemed right.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> All-in-all, a great weekend of racing just for fun; no points. We
>>>>>> saw some people and cars that don't normally come out, including
>>>>>> Ross Bentley...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> (shameless plug: speedsecrets.com)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...an alumnus of racing with the SCCBC who went on to drive
>>>>>> (occasionally) in IndyCar, and who has become a highly
>>>>>> sought-after driving coach.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Now, there are three weekends left in the season, and I hope to
>>>>>> make all three. I think I can win all 9 of the races, but I
>>>>>> suspect that with the points lower (because there will probably be
>>>>>> fewer FF drivers out), I don't think that I can win the club
>>>>>> championship.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Still, there are some folks who didn't make it out to the
>>>>>> "Historics" that I'd still like to see on the track.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Cheers!
>>>>>
>>>>> So to sum up, absent Floer, McKay and others, Alan Baker can beat
>>>>> the few FF back-runners left that he has regularly beaten easily in
>>>>> the past.
>>>>
>>>> LOL!
>>>>
>>>> And stay with a Formula 2 car with close to double the horsepower.
>>>>
>>>> And beat an FC car with:
>>>>
>>>> More than 20% more horsepower.
>>>>
>>>> Stickier tires
>>>>
>>>> Downforce.
>>>>
>>>> All while on two year old tires.
>>>>
>>>> :-)
>>>
>>> Doug and Alan likely could have too.
>>
>> Yup.
>>
>> So?
>
> So you admit that a FF driven by the top two in SCCBC FF history could
> also have placed ahead of the 2 cars you are bragging about beating? So
> why the brag?


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