Bristol Forest Rally 2023
Our first (and perhaps last) rally this year. We had heard great things about this regional event - very turny, kinda rough, and lots of exposure (read: cliffs, huge drops, etc). Sounds like our kind of event, so we were pretty excited. Jim ran it last year codriving for Kevin Brolin and they got on the Limiited 2WD podium (we run in Open 2WD). The turnout this year was about 35 cars, the great majority of which were RWD, with four e30s in attendace - Downey (shooting for the class win), Brolin, ourselves, and Eric Pat (whos car has been in this thread many times going back years). We stayed with the Nonacks, fresh off their podium finish in the previous weeneds McCreary Gravel Rally in Kentucky and shooting for another L2 podium, and Andrew and Julia, doing their first rally in Jon Kramer's much-used (and many wins) old car. Both of those teams have threads on here so I won't steal their thunder with regard to results, go check them out when they post.
We headed down with Brolin and made a stop at some Dutch place for lunch
This was our first full rally writing our own notes on recce (rather than spending $200 on Jemba), and recce went well, we 2-passed most of the stages, and our notes would turn out to be pretty much dead-on, so that's good.
This rally crosses the Applachian trail, and transits are on "the Snake," which is an awesome curvy mountain road searies kind of like Tail of the Dragon. We would end up driving it inthe truck, the rally car, and the tow rig :)
Tech went off without a hitch, as usual
The first night of competition was a 7-mile tarmac stage (the Appalachian Tarmac Rallysprint stage) going both ways. HIgh speed, very smooth, pretty awesome. We used some Koseis from Jim's track e30 with brand-new but 5 years old BFG Rivals (the originals, not the 2s), so too a while to carefully determine if they would actually have grip! The first stage I was pretty tentative having not used this car on paved surfaces for a LONG time, never used these tires, and without any swaybars. But as they warmed up the grip was amazing and I really should have pushed harder. We hit 102mph on the long straight, and then......brakes.....brakes.....BRAKES.....pedal to the floor as we slowly slowed down as the car wiggled through the turn at the end while I got a charlie horse in my calf from pressing so hard (we bled the brakes before the gravel stages and found air in one of the front calipers. Yikes. In any case, not terribly fast compared to the group but the second pass would be better now that I had a hang of the tires. Unfortunately, the turnaround was long (photo in prior post), as a car in the front half of the group caught some leaves on fire so that had to be taken care of .
By the time it was clear, it was totally dark out and they decided to transit the last 10 of us out non-compeitition - probably lucky since my LED bars shorted out and we only had stock headlights (which are terrible).
Day 2 great weather, and we jumped right into the gravel stages. The first loop was two stages run twice each. One about 8 miles, the other 5, I think. Both were full of heavy elevation changes, tight linked turns, huge dropoffs into rivers and valleys, and some very rough sections. The first one we were pretty slow- notes were on-target but I was tentative. Second stage was better, but still not as fast as I'd like. Then the re-run of the two. So for stage 5 we knocked a full 50 seconds off of the first run, as I started finding the groove and Jim's calls were perfect. We were faster than cars I thought we could be faster than, and just a bit slower than Nonacks, who at this point have a LOT more development and experience than we do in a car that's roughly comparable in power/weight/suspension, so that was pretty decent. For the 2nd run of the other stage (6), at the top I noticed coolant temps were sitting around 220 even with the fan on and I could smell coolant. Figured we had a leaky hose clamp or something causing an air bubble, and assumed it would work its way out once we got going. Did I mention these stages have some VERY rough sections?
We got on it and were substantially faster than the first pass and I was really in rhythm. With about a mile to go and really picking up pace, I glanced at the gauges and saw coolant temps.......the needle was flat on the right, off the scale. Crap. With a service after the stage, i figured we'd baby it for the last mile and then maybe a friend could tow us back to service, or we could add a bunch of water or something. So I shifted to 4th and basically just "drove" the final mile (thankfully mostly downhill) at maybe 50% pace with almost no use of throttle, trying to carry speed through turns. We made it to finish and the car cut off as we handed in the car. Resterated it and went down out of the way and it cut off again.
(side note: on that stage, even basically coasting the last mile, we were STILL 7 seconds faster than the first pass and not far behind Nonacks and the other comparable cars....so we were definitely putting down a great pace).
Opened the hood and found coolant all over everything (including up throuh the hood vent on top of the hood). None in the reservoir, none in the hoses, and we could see sheared radiator upper support and a mashed part of the radiator down low by the power steering pulley. So, that was that, all done.
We coasted down the hill to the paved road and found Dan Downey there with a broken e30 (he hit zero-car's broken-off muffler and snapped his tie rod, and also had a major fuel leak that may or may not be related). A shame since Dan was shooting for the overall win possibly and was setting a blistering pace close to cars 10x the cost of his (or more). His car was leaking fuel all over the place so we started filling empty gatorade bottles..
Then we noticed as all the other cars finished the stage, nobody saw Kevin Brolin! Uh oh. About 10 minutes later we see them chugging down the stage and toward us. Car looked okay and was running, but seemed like they were 'out". Then suddenly the front wheel did this as the car veered into the ditch (note the other wheel is straight):
Apparently they had an off and hit something hard that snapped off the BIG inner balljoint for their control arm, causing a bunch of other related carnage as well. They had rigged up some ratchet straps to hold stuff in place to get them past the finish, but they were done as well (though they did rejoin later for the last 2 stages using my spare control arm)
Since we were an hour from service (over the mountain) and our crews were servicing other cars still competing, we sat around on a country road next to a falling-down barn with lots of cows, chickens, junk, and "no tresspassing" signs, hoping the owner would not come out with a shotgun (semi-serious there...)
One by one the trailers showed up and we loaded up and towed over "the snake" back to service
While Dan and Kevin tried to get their cars fixed (Dan = no dice, Kevin did eventually), we were done with no spare radiator and probable engine damage anyhow. So I got packed up and we got to hang out for a few hours while the rest of the field continued on (with many more DNFs).
Only 15 cars finished, so less than half. The last competing e30 (Eric Pat) on the last stage managed to roll it and DNF'd as well. So 0-4 for e30s. Then again, all 4 of Team Hooper's Lexus IS cars DNFd, so it was rough for everyone.
We went across the lot and watched some some of the action on the Bristol Speedway dragstrip for a while (yawn....)
Eventually, Nonacks and Andrew/Julia made it to finish and returned, but I'lll let them tell you about it.
There was an after-party downtown that was fun, and that wrapped the event
Tow home was uneventful (250 miles up I-81 is sooooo boring), though I did run into Marcel (from USRF stuff) while stopping for gas in Staunton, Va., so that was pretty funny.
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Got home, unloaded, and decided to pull the radiator to see the carnage.
Yep, that's a leak....
So, radiator done, and while the engine did not seize, and i turned it on to get the car on/off the trailer, there's oily smoke from the tailpipe, which very likely means a cracked head or other bad things. So I'm going to take some time and consider what the next step is.....try to fix this engine, try to find another M50, upgrade to M52/M54 like Downey, or ??? We'll see. Next rallycross is in 2 weeks and I think I can fill in for Stephen co-driving with Crhis, so it may not be a quick fix. I also may just finish the other e30 project (which is not far from completion) and use it, in all its M42 glory, for rallycross the rest of teh season. I was considering doing another stage rally this year (maybe STPR, maybe AGS if it happens) but now maybe I'll think about doing course car or sweep? IDK, we'll see what happens.
Other random pics. Hopefully action pics to come when the photogs get home.
Bristol in a nutshell, seemingly. This was in a Walmart parking lot at like 1030pm, and I saw this truck 3 more times over the weekend in various places (or clones of it):
Also Bristol in a nutshell. It was cool having the service area right down the road from the raceway
(oops forgot to upload that pic, will do it later)
The money shot: