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From the field...

For What It's Worth...

November 2nd, 2010:
Return to the Basement Project

After a brief hiatus from our basement project to work on larger projects for clients, Christian is going to squeeze some time in to work on hanging the ceiling and install the trim and doors in our basement. Once this is complete, we’ll be able to apply the final coats of paint, install the overhead can lighting, and get the carpet installed. If each remaining part of the project takes a week (or weekend), we should be able to schedule our projector and screen installation by the end of the year! (Pics of the project here.)

Basement Floorplan

- Duane

October 3rd, 2010:
Camaro back in storage, theater progress, end of the race season, old racecar sold.

Today I finished preparing my Camaro for storage. After a thorough cleaning and hooking up the battery tender, it’s back under its cover: safe and sound. It served me well on my 50-mile-each-way commute to work… though we had a bit of a scare last week in the rain. Sideways changing lanes in traffic is a good way to make sure you’re awake in the morning. With new shoes, fresh oil, an alignment, and much needed O2 sensor replacement, my Subaru is back on daily driver duties. After sinking a fat wad of cash into the latest repairs, Gina and I agreed that it will be a good winter car even after I finally get a new daily driver. Gina and I spent many hours cleaning and repainting the theater seat hardware. They’ve been sitting in our basement and guest room for 4 years and they needed a good scrubbing, stripping and paint. I’m happy with how well they turned out. We’ve planned out the last details of our basement finishing and theater project. After doing some research, we’ve selected and are scheduling our ceiling, trim carpentry, and carpet. If all goes well, we’re on track for the theater to be complete by the end of the year. Although I hoped to squeeze 5 race weekends into this year, a long an expensive first race weekend combined with a number of upgrades and repairs to my Spec Racer Ford eliminated a fifth race due to budget constraints. I had a lot of fun and learned a lot this year. With a little more prep on the car and some more seat time next year, I’m hoping to offer a little more competition in the spring. Lastly, Gina and I delivered my first race car (an ITA/Spec Neon) to it’s new owner. Though I set the price exceptionally low to sell it quickly, we were surprised by the quantity and speed of responses from the members of Waterford Hills. It sold in a week to an excited new driver with some quarter midget experience. It should do well as I’ve invested a lot of time and money in the ole’ girl since I purchased it in 2003. Hopefully, he’ll seek out the expertise of Chris Childs at Angry Sheep Motorsports. He certainly knows how to get the most out of the platform as well as just about anything else with 4 wheels and a roll cage. Don’t forget to take care of your car with Auto Parts Canada.  

- Duane

September 7th, 2010:
Racing, Theater Progress, and Detroit…

We’ve been exceptionally busy this summer. Somehow, we’ve managed to mix weddings, racing, home improvements into our already hectic work schedules to make updating my blog (or even posting to Twitter) a luxury. My race season has ended with 4 events in the bag (plus a practice session). I learned a lot about my new race car as well as myself. With some maintenance on the car and a little more seat time, I’m hoping to have an exciting season next year.

In other racing news, Glenn (my father-in-law) had a spectacular “racing incident” last weekend at Mid-Ohio. Another driver spun just ahead of him in a blind uphill corner. Without enough time to avoid the collision, Glenn hit the side of the other car between 60 and 80 mph, casing significant damage to his car, but no injuries (apart from a little soreness). We were very relieved to see him climb out of his car once the corner workers had gotten the remaining cars on track under control.

Christian (my brother) and his drywall crew finished the walls in our basement a few months ago. Since then, we’ve put a coat of paint on the walls (to make it easier to paint after the trim is installed), finished the remaining electrical wiring, routed and installed speaker connections, consulted with Eric at AVIO, tested the speaker locations (awesome) and built our 2nd-row riser. We’re on-track to have our theater finished by the end of the year!

Our company moved to downtown Detroit about 3 weeks ago, doubling my daily drive time. The good news is, that’s my only complaint. Detroit is great… and that’s coming from somebody that gave up on the D when the currently imprisoned mayor was re-elected. I went to school here and grew up on the edges of the city, so it’s nice to re-connect with my hometown. There’s hundreds of restaurants to visit at lunch, traffic in the city itself isn’t bad (compared to Chicago, NYC, etc.), and our new building is simply awesome. Our founder, Dan Gilbert, is trying to get more innovators and entrepreneurs downtown. If that happens, it’s only going to get better down here.

- Duane

July 29th, 2010:
Subaru Flat Tire

Today I absolutely needed to leave work at 5:30 to get to a cabinet showroom before it closed (for our basement project). Of course, I got a flat tire as I was driving through our work parking lot. Brad came to the rescue, once again, with an extra jack and air pump to play tire switcheroo. (The spare won’t fit around my upgraded front brakes.) So, we moved a wheel from the rear of the car to the front and put the spare on the rear. I guess it’s time to replace my front struts, get new tires and an alignment finally. Of course this means I have to drive my Camaro for a while. Darn…

- Duane

June 2nd, 2010:
First Race in Spec Racer Ford at Grattan

I’ve never raced a Spec Racer Ford (SRF) before, I’ve never competed in an SCCA National Race, and I’ve never been racing for 4 days straight before. I figured, “What the hell… why not combine them?!” Really though, it sounded like an opportunity for a lot of track time surrounded (or at least behind) a bunch of great drivers. Day 1 was practice: 4, 20-minute sessions. My first impressions of the SRF vs. my (sort of) Improved Touring-A (ITA) Neon were: it turns better, it stops better, it goes better. The SRF is more predictable, but I’m not comfortable with the limits of the car yet. The only thing that will fix that is seat time.

Day 1 of the “Cheap Points Double National” event at Grattan Raceway was an open practice hosted by the track. I got 4 sessions in on a set of generously donated, well-used tires from my father-in-law, Glenn. The course has been compared to a rollercoaster for good reason. The elevation changes and cambered corners are even more enigmatic when approaching them from 16 inches lower than usual. It’s a fun course, but difficult to learn. My times improved throughout the day, but I still have a lot to improve upon.

Day 2 was the first official day of the event. The national event schedule was a little different than the regional routine I was used to. Instead of a qualifying session and race on each day, everything was spread out between 3 days. Additionally, the races were longer: 23 laps instead of the 15-or-so that you get for regional races. First up: practice qualifying. My times were unspectacular, but I focused on getting to know my car. Ambient temps were already approaching 80 degrees and driving the SRF is a workout: manual steering, manual brakes and a whole lot more g-forces than I’m used to. The car feels directly tied to the course… un-buffered.

That afternoon, I got my first experience with brand new Goodyear tires during qualifying. The car was completely different. The limits were extended and it became even more predictable. It was able to hold off-camber turns much more confidently and I was more comfortable exiting corners, aiming the car and flooring the gas pedal. My times continued to improve, qualifying within a couple seconds of a more experience driver and ahead of another driver. After the session, Glenn, Gina and I inspected the steering rack and decided there was a little too much lash in the wheel movement so they helped me replace my steering rack with one of Glenn’s spares. The cockpit of the car is cramped, especially for somebody with my frame: 6′ 2″, 260 lbs. Moving the shifter further outboard helped a bit, but I continued to have trouble toe-heeling the pedals. Moving the gas pedal back a bit helped some, but I made sure to offset it further after I got home. Grattan always has a great dinner at the end of the race day. Though we got to the food a little late, what was left was still pretty tasty.

Day 3, Sunday. My first national race and I was nervous, but not as much as I would have thought. The temperature was peaking in the mid-80s and another driver gave Glenn and I zip-lock bags to fill with ice and place on our chests inside of our suits… and it worked very well. I had a great start and was moving along well during my laps. However, I was trying too hard to stay out of the more experienced drivers instead of staying on the racing line when they approached. Doing this allowed the driver behind me to catch up to me 3/4 through the race and pass me briefly. After I made a clean re-pass, he cut to the inside of a tight, technical corner. Instead of tracking out and recovering on the exit of the turn, he locked up his brakes, turned his wheels hard to the right… and spun out right in front of me. I t-boned his car at low speed… low enough to do no damage to his car, but crush my radiator and front fiberglass. My first race was over. I limped my car back to pit lane, carefully avoiding the racing line in case I was spilling fluid. Glenn and Gina helped me replace the radiator with Glenn’s spare and tape up the fiberglass. Repairs went smoothly and I was back in action for qualifying later that afternoon… though due to a scheduling mix-up I went out on my practice tires… oops…

The final day of the event promised changing weather: lightning, thunder, rain and… surprisingly… sunlight and a dry track in time for our race! Though a few rain drops fell before the end of our race, it was called early because of lightning strikes nearby. My times were o.k., but I was more focused on following the advice of some of the other drivers I spoke to that morning: slow down and figure out the car and track, then gradually speed up. I was spending so much time during the weekend trying to go fast, that I wasn’t thinking about how I was going to get there. While on track, I mentally broke it down into 3 sections and worked on smoothing out the corners in each one. This approach yielded my best times of the weekend as well as a better understanding of how the corners worked together in each section.

I had a great time. It was a lot of work, but just as much fun. We’ll return to Grattan in August. I’ll have a little more experience with the SRF by then and I’m looking forward to seeing what I’m able to do next time.

- Duane

Devtroit