LOG 35, Day 3

Sunday, August 23

Our first event of the day is the group drive to the summit of Pikes Peak. We had arranged with the city (the Pikes Peak road is operated by Colorado Springs) to be on the mountain before anybody else, so that meant another early rise. We left the hotel at 6:30 in a giant caravan to the North Pole parking lot where we lined up and waited for the Rangers to give us our passes. We pretty much filled their lot. Rangers passed out brochures – these were our tickets in. They did this instead of putting stickers on everybody’s windshield.

IMG_1463s

We passed the dozen or so folks lined up at the gate. It was pretty well known that we wouldn’t be staying within the speed limit, but we were told not to go crazy – if we overstepped we would be shut down. I later learned Clive Chapman led the charge. We were nowhere near the front of the line, but it was certainly the fastest I’ve ever made it to the top.

We got there 40 minutes before the store opened. It was cold and a bit windy and several folks really wanted to use the restrooms but we had to be patient. When they finally opened, the clerks said they weren’t warned so many people would be there; they were overwhelmed. It’s always cold and windy on top of 14ers, so the weather wasn’t unexpected. The smoke was bad again, but not too bad, and we were above it.

IMG_1465_stitch_crop_resize

I assume most people headed out on one of the three scenic drives. We did our drive to Cripple Creek yesterday because I had autocross in the afternoon. Genae isn’t at all interested in standing around in a parking lot for three or four hours so she went to the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo. I headed to PPIR.

We were on the schedule for 2pm. I’d been telling people it would be more like 3 or 3:30 but there was no general announcement. I wish I’d been able to get more people signed up the evening before. It was kind of hectic – I had forms and numbers and a notebook but no where to spread out. The wind was blowing, so everything had to be in the passenger seat of the car. At first I was able to deal with the entrants one by one but before long they were arriving two and three at a time, I eventually had everybody’s forms and had assigned a class and number.

The SCCA guys were great. We had a short meeting then set off to walk the course. Before the cars were let loose, Bill and Jon set the “slow” times in their wheelchairs. I’m pretty sure Bill has done this before – he had a more favorable final drive ratio or better charge in his batteries or both. Skip ran in his Baby 7, a one-third scale Lotus 7 go-kart. Eric and Kelly Dean not only had their Lotus but entered their Tesla as well.

I was working a corner for the first group. Second group was Elise and Exige, first group was everybody else. Nobody ever hit a cone in our sector, but we had several people DNF. The most fun was trying to get Skip to complete the course. The first time, he cut about a quarter of the course off. Each time after that I tried to point him in the right direction.

SCCA said we’d get four runs, I asked for 5 if we could be finished by six. In any event, we’d all miss the track day drivers meeting that somehow got scheduled for 5pm. We did get five runs and were done a few minutes before six so nobody would be late for the Mexican buffet that started at seven back at the hotel.

This was my second autocross. I had four different passengers on my five runs, going out solo only once. My first time was a 58 and I got better each run until the last, when I got sideways. Had I kept it straight, it would have been my fastest run. I’ll admit to being pleased that I was setting pretty good times. At my first autocross, I was about mid-pack among the rookies but only at the top end of the bottom quartile of all competitors. Today, most of our group were rookies or hadn’t done autocross often or recently.

Everybody seemed to have a good time, so I think it was a successful event. I hung around for a few extra minutes to collect the results, which Cynthia and Terry volunteered to collate.

I was back to the hotel just in time to stand in line for the Mexican buffet. After we ate, Ross made some announcements, then I got up and presented the results. People were very gracious and applauded everybody, even me when I said I’d gotten second in the Elise NA class. We all collected our trophies and sat down to watch Ross do a Tonight Show with Johnny Carson routine to chat with the evening’s guests – Clive Chapman, Arnie Johnson, and Dave Bean.

IMG_1476sUnfortunately, I missed much of what was said. Just after it got underway I realized our results didn’t include Phil. He’d been running autocross with SCCA all day, so he already had done his paperwork and gotten a number. I didn’t put him on our entry list, so I never got his results. Turns out he was second in our class, so I gave him my trophy. I felt I couldn’t take the third place trophy from the guy we announced, so Tatiana and Jeremy gave me the 2nd place autocross for the race prepped car class. There were no entrants in that class.

It’s a pretty cool trophy, even if it’s not exactly what I won. Tatiana and Jeremy did a fantastic job making these; it’s a pretty neat little memento.

RM Solo Autocross

On Sunday I attended my first autocross. Autocross is a contest to see who can run their car fastest through a course defined with traffic cones on an empty parking lot. This one was SCCA’s event #5 in their 2014/15 winter season, held at Front Range Airport.

I’m the autocross event chair for LOG 35. I needed to meet the guys running the event, have them show me around, soak it all in. My mission was observation, so I didn’t sign up to run. I didn’t take my helmet, or the camera and OBD-II dongle. That was silly of me. Clearly I was never a boy scout.

Front Range is a two runway airport a couple miles southeast of DIA. On the east side of the Front Range facility they have a remote apron next to a fire station. We were at this remote apron rather than the main terminal area of the airport. It’s basically a large parking lot with light poles and marked with big T’s indicating the parking places. Around each T are several re-bar rings embedded in the asphalt, used to secure the aircraft. The airport doesn’t close for this event and twice they had to red flag operations to allow planes to taxi through.

2015-03-15 14.25.53sFacilities are minimal. There is no paddock as such, and we weren’t allowed to park on the grass. Cars were lined up on the access roads. I was parked a couple hundred yards from the grid. No bathrooms, two porta-potties at the far southern corner. There was a concession trailer, I had a breakfast burrito.

I met with Arnie and Lindsay. We talked business for a bit and they showed me around. Before long they asked what class I was running. “I’m just here to watch.” Don’t be stupid, Dave. So they got me signed up, found me a helmet, assigned a grid spot and sent me on my way.

One hundred twenty one drivers were entered. We ran three heats. I was in the third heat. Cars are divided into classes. I had no idea how many different classes there are. I was assigned to SS (Super Street). I had to pick a number, so I took 1 as it’s the easiest one to make out of painters tape. There was another Elise there. He had Hoosiers, so he was SSR. There was only one other car in SS, a 2014 Corvette Z51. He’s only had his car a couple of weeks, but he’s been autocrossing a couple of years.

So I’m really only competing with one other guy. There were 33 classes. Four classes (Classic American Muscle-C, Street Modified, B-Street, and C-Street) made up about a third of the field, Twelve classes had only one or two cars. Twenty five entrants were novices.

We novices had a meeting where we learned about the cones. The course is made of cones. Some are standing up, some are on their sides. Their positions are marked by chalk outlines. The cones on their sides are pointer cones. Knocking a cone over, or moving it out of its outline is a penalty. If you hit a cone but any part of it is still within the outline, no penalty. One guy managed to flip a cone up in the air and land upright and in position. Driving on the wrong side of a cone is a DNF.

After this lesson, we walked the course. Everybody walks the course, but we novices did it as a group.

The course began with a left turn out of the starting box, then into a 360 to the right. It’s not quite a 360, obviously, but it’s close enough. This is the only place the track crosses itself. After a left turn, we’re heading south along the western edge of the lot into a slalom. We have our choice of which way to enter – we can go either left or right. Then a chicane and a couple of 90 degree left turns, a 45 to the right, and into a second slalom. On this one we must enter on the left. Finally, a tight 180 to the right and across the finish line.

After the course walk, we had the drivers meeting, then the first heat. During the first heat, drivers from the third heat work the course. There are four sectors, each with a crew captain, a radio, and a fire extinguisher. Each crew has a scribe and three or four people to reset cones. I was the scribe for sector 1.

I quickly discovered that the scribe is the busiest of the corner workers. It was my duty to record the penalties – the number of cones hit, or DNF. They come out in no particular order: 14 AS, 33 CAM-C, 101 STU, and so on. The first run, I write them down and record the penalty. The list filled the page in two columns. On subsequent runs, I had to find the car in the list. They didn’t go in the same order each run and once a car leaves our sector another is started, which gives me about ten seconds to find the car on the list before then next one was coming.

Everybody got five runs. Because there are four cars in the course, sometimes a driver will catch up to the car in front. That’s pretty much guaranteed if somebody spins. When that happens, it obviously ruins the following car’s time so they get a re-run.

There was one car that made a DNF right out of the start, but there were very few penalties – not more than ten for the entire heat. So guys shagging cones weren’t that busy. The crew chief worked the radio (“Control, sector 1, car 13 AS plus one.”) and helped me with some of the numbers – “Is that 171 BS or 71BS?”. Many cars had two drivers, 171 BS and 71 BS are the same car, different drivers.

2015-03-15 14.56.33s

GBS Zero Lotus 7

I grabbed lunch during the second heat then moved my car to the grid. The tech inspectors came by, gave me a quick once-over and put a sticker on my windshield. Then I was free to wander around. These events are as much a social thing as a competition. You meet all sorts of people, all of whom are interested in cars.

As to the cars, most of the usual suspects were represented: Mustangs, Corvettes, Porsches, BMWs, Audis, Minis, Miatas, Subarus, Acuras, Hondas. There was a Factory Five Cobra and a GBS Zero Lotus 7. I saw a little formula car that was basically a snow mobile. There was even a kart; the driver’s helmet had a pink Mohawk.

P-51 Mustang

P-51 Mustang

One of the Mustangs had quite the livery. It took me a couple seconds to get it, but it should have been obvious. It wasn’t just a Mustang, but a P-51 Mustang, complete with bullet holes. I talked with the guy. I told him I always joke about putting an RAF bullseye on my car along with some small German crosses for “killing” Porsches. He said he wanted to do Japanese flags with Subaru logos, but figured it would look too busy.

I was gridded up between a Honda on A6’s with two drivers and a 600+ hp Mustang GT 500. After each run the guys in the Honda sprayed water on their front tires to cool them off. Across from me was the Z51 Vette in my class, the A8 next to him. Behind them were a Hyndai Veloster and a 30 year old Celica.

2015-03-15 14.25.57sWhile heat two was still running I went off in search of an empty passenger seat. I found John in his mini and he welcomed me to join him. I was surprised by the speed. Not just in the sense that we’re going fifty in a parking lot, but that the 48 seconds is over so fast. John didn’t have the greatest run, he hit two cones. Looking at the results I see that was his worst run.

I didn’t hear any announcements about the start of the third heat, but they started sending us to the starting line. When it’s my turn, the starter motions me to the line. The Honda in front of me leaves the first sector. The starter drops his arm and I go. Instantly I’m through the slight left turn and into second gear. At the entry to the 360 there’s a nasty bump that unsettles the car. My tires sing to me and I get the car a bit sideways. I feather the throttle and straighten the car for the gates before the slalom. I have a moment where I nearly forget which way I wanted to enter the slalom but get it together and go left.

Before that first run I hadn’t had the car running long enough so it wasn’t properly warmed up. Going in to the slalom I got the limiter instead of the second cam. In the two turns before the second slalom, a left then a right, I’m sideways again. Through the second slalom and into the tightest turn on the course. I stayed in second gear every time but the car was pushing here and in retrospect I should have tried downshifting. I go through the timing beam and slow down. I finish in 49.394 seconds.

Back in the grid we await our next runs. A few minutes later, the Honda is rolling again. I was about to follow him until the grid worker told me it was time for the second drivers. It was probably fifteen minutes between runs. Gives you a chance to ask your neighbors what sorts of times they’re getting.

On my five runs, I hit no cones but did manage to mess up the second slalom for a DNF. My fastest run was 48.563 seconds and good enough for 847 points and a class win. Woohoo! The big picture tells the real story, though. In the indexed standings, I was 95th of 121 drivers. I was better compared to novices only – 11th of 25. To arrive at the indexed standings, each time is multiplied by a factor. Each class has a different factor which allows some sort of comparison across the whole group.

We were all done by 3:30 or so. That makes for a long day – a full eight hours – to get about four minutes of “track time”. I had a good time, but at this point I think I prefer going to the track. The track costs about three times as much, but I never get less than thirty laps. Measured by the minute, autocross is about 12 or 15 times the price. I look forward to doing it at the LOG, and perhaps occasionally in the future.

Eiskhana

Georgetown was founded in 1859, during the silver boom. At one time, the population was near 10,000 and there was a local movement to relocate the state capital here from Denver but the bust soon followed. It is now not much more than a small tourist town, where skiers stop on their way home. Interstate 70 runs along the slope on the west side of the deep valley on the eastern approach to the Eisenhower tunnel and the old Loveland pass. Drivers there overlook the town and the reservoir just north of it. Today, many of them stopped to watch people drive their cars through a course laid out with traffic cones on the ice.

I picked Jerry up a few minutes before 6 and we headed up I-70. We got there quite early; were the first to arrive at the designated meeting point, in fact. There was some miscommunication on the schedule. After visiting with some of the other participants, getting registered and signing the usual waivers, we headed off to the lake. It looked to be a fine day, cloudless and crisp. The valley there runs north-south with high mountains on each side, so the sun doesn’t hit the lake this time of year until 9:30 or so. It was quite chilly until then, but by noon was in the mid-40’s. We neglected to bring sun screen and even the brims of our hats didn’t help as the sun reflected off what snow was on the surface of the ice. We all stood on the western shore or the ice along it, so I managed to sunburn the right side of my face.

Thick ice

Thick ice

The email I received about the event said the ice was 12-15 inches thick. It is hard to tell standing on it, but I’d venture it was more like two feet where we were. The ice is criss-crossed with cracks, most of them quite small and not even going all the way from top to bottom. There are also lots of bubbles, often stacked up in columns. Some places the ice was quite smooth and the men, being boys at heart, often ran and slid to see who could slide the farthest. Here and there fishing holes had been drilled, but today all the fishermen were congregated at the southern end of the lake. (Movies and TV show these holes being big enough to drop a body through, but these were only about six inches across.) When we arrived a pickup truck towing a small trailer was navigating the course of traffic cones and many of us found that amusing.

I quickly found out that the battery for my camera was dead. When I checked it last night, it indicated a full charge but such is my luck lately with camera batteries. I took a few with the cell phone, but I find them unsatisfying. I did strike up a conversation with a guy who brought his 600mm lens and tripod. I hope to get copies of any shots he took during my runs. When I get them, I’ll share them in a subsequent post.

We were divided into four groups – two wheel drive Porsche, four wheel drive Porsche, 2wd other, and 4wd other. Did I mention this was a Porsche club event? The first group moved onto the ice and lined up for their runs. Cars were released a bit over a minute apart, depending on how fast the car ahead was going. The faster drivers were managing the course in a bit over two minutes. The slower ones took quite a bit longer, many spinning at the north east corner where the ice was particularly smooth and there was no snow.

I asked one of the event stewards how many cars had registered. He didn’t have the number and said he thought it was about 50, but I think it was more like 75. Chatting with other folks it seems most were, like me, doing this for the first time. Only a few people had studded snow tires. Some had snow or ice tires, most had all-season. I have “ultra high performance summer tires”, meaning I’d have very little traction. A few folks pointed at my tires and laughed. Good naturedly, of course.

So most of the day was spent standing around, waiting our turn. Prestige Imports brought a trailer with propane heaters so we could get warm. I took advantage early in the morning but it wasn’t necessary once the sun climbed over Saxon Mtn. Also in the trailer were free t-shirts, granola bars, and glove warmers.

Other 2WD staged up

Other 2WD staged up

At 11:30 the “other 2wd” group staged on the ice. This group was further split and we were in the second half, so more waiting around. The photo shows most of my group, including all three Lotuses. I didn’t know any of the Porsche folks but was acquainted with quite a few of my group, so while the first half was making their runs I was chatting with those in line and milling around with the rest of my group.The Porsche folks had made their runs in a fairly serious fashion, perhaps actually trying to get good times. Our group was a bit more free spirited. John managed to put his Miata though one gate sideways and the next gate backwards to hearty applause.

Finally, at 1:30, we got to make our first run. I was joking with Jerry, asking what he thought the chances were I’d be able to get through the course on the first run without spinning. He said “Zero!” I surprised everyone by putting together a perfect run, no spins, finishing in 2:30 according to Jerry’s stopwatch. Now, of course, I had to see how much time I could carve off that. I should be able to do better, now that I had some experience, right? On the second run I tried a hand-brake turn where we had all seen everybody have the most difficulty. I learned not to attempt hand-brake turns. I spun twice on that run and once on the third run.

It was a lot of fun, even though we were there something like seven hours and were only actually driving on the ice eight minutes. I’ll gladly try it again next year.