• Re: OT: My 2024 BCHMR Day 2 (for all my devoted followers).

    From Alan@21:1/5 to Tom Elam on Sat Aug 17 15:13:42 2024
    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.

    :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Alan@21:1/5 to Tom Elam on Sat Sep 7 11:06:21 2024
    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?

    I'm not bragging about the wins, Liarboy.

    If I'm bragging, it's about having fun, and rubbing your nose in it.

    But your base claim is that I'm no good at this. I have no problem
    admitting that Alan and Doug are good. But you have this double-standard
    you've made your stand and you can't give it up.

    Not knowing anything about how road racing works, you've made claim
    after claim, and have been wrong so many times now.

    You believing I'm terrible at this doesn't mean much to me when I know I
    have the respect of my peers.

    A couple of years ago, I had the pleasure of having a few after-race
    beers and BBQ with Kees Nierop. That name probably doesn't mean much to
    you, because--let's face it--you are utterly ignorant about racing in
    general and I doubt you know anything at all about endurance racing. So
    I'll tell you that Kees is a Dutch-Canadian racer who started his racing
    career in 1976 and by 1979 was competing in events like the 24 Hours of
    Daytona and the 12 Hours of Sebring; winning Sebring in 1983.

    Check him out:

    <http://www.keesnierop.com/racing-history>

    And in case you (as usual) fail to read it, along the way, he's also
    raced Formula F at Mission.

    So when we wandered over to Bert's paddock spot for beer and I sat down
    next to Kees, the first thing he said to me was, "I understand you're
    the hot shoe here". To say I was chuffed doesn't begin to describe it.

    But it was in a way no more gratifying than one of my earliest races when—after a race where Keith and I had gone through turn 2 with our
    wheels interlocked (my front right was inside the box of his car's track width)—when I asked him (as still just a rookie) if that was too
    aggressive, Keith replied that he felt comfortable racing that close
    with me "any time".

    That's respect from each of them.

    Talking racing lines and braking techniques with Ross Bentley. A
    world-renowned driving coach who also raced IndyCar when he could.

    And the senior drivers at Mission—the ones who have raced (in some
    cases) for decades and won championships both at Mission and in the US (including Rick Payne who won the SCCA Runoffs in 2015 at Daytona)...

    ...them asking me to join them as an instructor after only 4 seasons of
    racing.

    I have their respect.



    A few other facts. Your car was the only one in the OW field classified
    as "Modern". So technically you were racing against the field
    of...yourself.

    That's just the way that the Vintage club likes to run the race. It has
    no impact on the fun we have. None of the drivers care at all about how
    they divide up the FF class.


    https://www.bchmr.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/BCHMR-2024-Results.pdf

    You admitted pulling the restrictor plate. Cheating and bragging about it.

    1. Not bragging.

    2. This is not a race for points for any championship.

    3. When it would have impacted who won for the one plaque they award
    ("The Abbotsford Trophy Race"), I quite deliberately backed off and made
    sure the legal FF (Erle) won.

    I pulled the restrictor because I was BORED with beating Erle and Keith
    by big margins and wanted to find some new way to have a car to run with.

    And it worked!

    I got to run nose-to-tail with the coolest car in the field!


    The two cars you are bragging about beating seem consist of a guy (John)
    from Washington State with nowhere near your Mission Raceway track
    experience and the local guy (Chris) has not run a SCCBC race since at
    least 2021. Yes, I checked the SBBC Championship rankings. As almost
    always you omit certain facts that would show the whole picture and to
    make you look better.

    Now you can start whining and making excuses.

    LOL!

    John McKoy is a longtime racer at Mission. Sure, he doesn't race every
    weekend, but this is just another example of you not understanding the
    activity about which you are pontificating.

    As a racer, you don't need to run a particular track very often once
    you've learned it in order to be proficient on it. If you know the track...

    ...you know the track!

    You might need the first practice session of the weekend to discover any conditions that have changed, but for an experienced racer, a 15 minute
    session is all you need for that. Hell, a couple of laps are all you need.

    As for Chris Britten, he's a novice, and I said so, Liarboy!

    But bravo you for poring through pages of results to discover less than
    I'd already written.

    This whole thing started because you denigrated an activity you
    basically knew nothing about.

    And you continue to demonstrate you're a know-nothing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Alan@21:1/5 to Tom Elam on Mon Sep 2 09:19:00 2024
    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?

    There isn't one.

    But a Formula 2 car of that era:

    Weighs no more than my car.

    Has a little less than 50% more horsepower (that's WITH the restrictor
    pulled; 135 vs 200)

    And has FAR wider tires.

    So it should be winning on acceleration and top speed even if the tires provided no more grip for higher mid-corner speed.

    But you've never let your lack of understanding about a situation
    prevent you from spouting off, have you?

    :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Alan@21:1/5 to Alan on Tue Aug 13 13:40:13 2024
    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!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Alan@21:1/5 to Tom Elam on Fri Aug 30 09:51:11 2024
    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?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)