So I finally got it together and on the track this week. I don't have any progress pictures, but I got my SFI roll cage padding mounted, belts in and adjusted, and cage resprayed. A good friend who also rents the garage I work in made an awesome sunroof cover.
The last thing to button up was suspension. I pulled 2.5 RS springs from a junkyard car and a parts car I own, and have the front springs with half a coil cut on the fronts, a full length front spring on the right rear, and a rear RS spring on the left rear with half a coil cut. It gives it a little more ride height in the right rear, and way more rate than stock.
The idea was to keep weight from transferring rearward when I'm on the gas in turns, and by wedging the right rear up, it forces more weight onto the left front. I cut half a coil simply because the ride height was way too high with the gutted chassis. The additional stiffness is also good.
To finish up camber adjustment, I took the stock upper camber bolt and drilled out two heavy washers to fit the fatter cammed sections of the bolt and the smaller threaded portion. I set the camber at 4° with the camber bolt in it's midway position, then welded the washers to the struts. Now can adjust camber about 1.5° either way.
Friday night after work, I planned on bolting tow hooks to the front bumpers and finishing up. When I took the front bumper off, 3 of the bolts brought the threads out with them. After a quick phone call and trip to the good people at Peer's junkyard , I had another bumper. I swapped the covers, drilled some holes, and bolted on tow straps. Other than numbers, the car was ready to go.
Saturday was busy, so another friend stopped by before loading the car up to help with numbers and go over everything one last time. I'm glad he did, because I only put one nut on the right rear strut mount. Duh. We got numbers applied and loaded up!
I was pretty nervous at the track. If you've never been to a dirt track race, here's a rundown of how it goes:
You show up and pay to get into the pits. It was $30 this night, it's typically $25. That covers your race entry fee. You walk up and register, then draw a "pill" (or sticks or tokens... never actually a pill, so I don't know why it's called that). The number you pull on pill draw decides your starting position for the heat race. Heat races are 5 laps and have the field broken down into smaller groups, so our heat had 6 cars. Heat race finishing positions determines starting position for the feature race, or main race. My brother drew a 26, so he was mid pack. I pulled a 1, so I was on pole for the heat race. Great. They do a driver's meeting that doesn't cover much of anything. EVERYONE has a towing company.
After they say something over the PA that you can't hear because dirt cars are loud, you go for "warm ups", AKA practice. 4 cylinders get 4 laps. That meant I had 4 laps in a newly built, unproven and completely oddball car before starting on pole for a race.
Anyway, warm ups went well. My brother and I waited until the last group of cars and got in the back of the pack. I know my brother's car is a front runner, so it gave me a good gauge on how my car would perform around someone I trusted. I let him get a little bit ahead of me, then took off. The track was incredibly rough. The weather was not good leading up to the race, and though the promoter tried everything he could to get the track prepped, it was still pretty bad. The first thing I noticed was how quiet my car was - not from the exhaust, it was loud, but rattles and suspension noises. It was pretty nice. It handles differently than my Cavalier did. It didn't like being thrown sideways, and was generally very neutral feeling. I started catching my brother, and we both passed a few cars. I only got 4 laps on a rough track to get a feel for it, but it felt good. It also seemed that the gearing was right where it needed to be with the 205/55-16s. GPS indicated 86 MPH.
There were a couple fast cars in my heat, and one was starting right behind me. It was a 2.2 Cavalier that wins at Bedford Speedway all the time. I pulled up to grid in the heat and realized that I didn't hear the race director in my receiver toward the end of the race before me. There was a little bit of confusion from the track official at grid, so I assumed there was maybe an issues with the RACEceiver system. They waved us out on track, so I went out, assuming no one could hear the race director. After the first parade lap, the caution lights went out and the flagman had the green flag bundled, indicated we were ready to go. I came around turn 4, almost lined up on the straight, rolled into the throttle and took off. The caution was out before I even got to the first turn. I looked around on the caution lap and didn't see any wrecks, so I assumed they didn't like my start. When I pulled back around T4, a course worker was pointing at the "start" marker in the ground. I then remembered that they got really picky about starts and restarts this year, painted a big tire orange, and set it about 60' out of the turn on the inside edge of the track. That was supposed to be the start location. Next lap around, caution lights went off, I rolled through turn 4, waited for the tire, then got into it. Another car was already around me at the tire (which I cussed into my helmet about), but I threw it down to the inside of T1 and passed him back, then (according to everyone watching) proceeded to gradually pull away from the field. On lap 3, the rough track broke someone's wheel, so there was another caution. Under the caution lap, the T4 course worker was pointing at the orange tire again. I thought to myself how much BS it was that I started at the tire, but someone passed me beforehand. Oh well, I thought, I'm still out front. If they didn't like my start again, they would send me to the back of the pack, and I didn't want that for sure. 2 laps left. Go lap, I came around, rolled up to the tire, got about 50 feet from it, and the guy behind me drives out around me, with the two cars behind him following. I drove the entire front straight thinking they'd call the start back, but when I didn't see the caution lights coming out of T2 I was pretty upset. Lots more cussing into my helmet. I caught the 3rd place guy and got down on the inside of him, but couldn't get around him before the finish. I came off the track heated. Told a track official that the restart was BS, he was as mad as me about it and agreed. I also told the race manager and the guy who started behind me. Oh well.
Anyway, I was really happy with the car. It felt planted and definitely ran good. Even after the completely screwed up starts, I was able to reel the other cars in on the first straight. The car was much easier to drive than my Cavalier, and that was with junkyard struts and 4 year old Douglas all season tires.
I decided not to race the feature. I had a loose RF wheel bearing, the track was a mess, and I would be starting mid-pack in a field of 26 with all the questionable drivers. They ended up cancelling the 4 cylinder race due to running into their curfew, so I have a rain check for next race.
So, the to do list is:
Fix RF wheel bearing
Buy some struts - probably GR2s
Buy some tires
Not bad for a first night out.