So, this is going to be kind of a weird rambling roundabout post, but it looks like the Spyder will see one autocross this season.
We had a doubleheader autocross event this weekend at Oswego County Airport, which is our primary venue. I registered both days with the XSB Miata, since the Spyder still has a stock sway bar, stock struts, and "just" Conti ExtremeContactSport02s, and that transmission noise I'm concerned about.
Saturday, we started off with five runs in the morning, and near the end my fifth run, the Miata goes from "Damn loud" to "berkeleying loud". I finish the run out, get back to the pits, jack it up, and see this.
The collector flange snapped right off my Racing Beat header. This header was secondhand from someone here on the forum (I think it was moxnix) and had been cracked and welded further up before I got it, which was 5 years ago, when I did the blown 1.8L swap.
I was there and wanted to finish out the day, so I was offered to co-drive the afternoon in a Mini Cooper EV S on Falken RT-615Ks. I had taken this for a spin at the beginning of the season, on stock tires, and knew it was a ton of fun, so I hopped in and somehow managed to get 4th in Pro and 13th overall. Even with 200tw tires that aren't the newest and greatest, it was a riot to drive. It doesn't feel heavy or understeer prone and it accelerates like a rocket. The biggest issue with it is, remembering to flip all of the switches to get it to let you do dumb stuff, and even then it still kicks in if you get to crazy, and the short range. Fully charged it has 116 mile range, so he had to trailer it to and from the event because he lives 70 miles away, and in the afternoon, with the two of us driving, the range went from 75 miles to 35 miles. It was actually one of my better finishes of the year, thanks to G/Street PAX.
That left me wondering what to drive Sunday. I could bring the Spyder, although it's underprepared and I'm a tiny bit nervous about the transmission and didn't want to break 2 out of my 3 cars in one weekend. Another person offered me his diesel Golf hatchback, with the comforting words of "You can codrive the Golf with me, but I wouldn't even codrive this car." (Its horribly uncompetitive.) My friend Lawrence offered me his Spyder (stock shocks, stock sway bar, Falken RT-660s). My friend Mark M. offered me his Spyder (fully setup, I've won an event with it). And my friend Mark B. also offered me his E/Street NB1 Miata (big front bar, Rival S 1.5s). Instead, I decided to hop in my friend Karl's 1987 325is that is classed in STX. I'm not sure of the mechanical specs (I know it doesn't have coilovers or even adjustable shocks, it has front and rear sway bars, the engine has been built,and it has 15x7 TRM wheels with 6 year old RE71Rs.). It's not a competitive car but I've never driven an E30, and this one has been autocrossing for decades. The basic body has over ~230k miles on it, with cooked clearcoat and a bunch of non-structural rust. I remember it being at my first event, when I started autocrossing 8 years ago.
I said afterwards that you don't drive that car, you experience it. The engine is cranky and doesn't like to idle anymore (it gets trailered everywhere anyways) and it has super short gearing, so you need third gear pretty much regardless of course design. It's a handful to drive, because he even admits that the rear bar is too stiff, and I was out of breath halfway through every run as I tried to wrestle it around. I said that I looked like I was swatting bees in the car, because my hands were going everywhere. But it was really fun when you got it right, it just made you work for it. I ended up actually beating the owner (a terrific guy who has been racing for longer than I've been alive and we frequently collaborate on course design) but only managed 5th out of 6 in Pro and 11th overall. Still, it was more about the experience.
So, how does this involve the Spyder? Well, our last event is October 1st. That gives me two weeks to replace the header on the Miata or get it welded up. And it's not a job that I can do in my garage (my garage is useless other than a roof over the head), so I'd need to take it to work. And pulling the header is a job, you have to remove the supercharger and the entire blower drive setup. Plus, even before the car broke, it became apparent to me that the Nankangs on it have been heat-cycled one too many times. They're hard as a rock. I don't feel like spending $960 for a set of Nankangs right now, to run one event, and then park it for the year.
Why not just codrive a car at the next event, like this one? Well, I have some (non-car) friends coming out to the next event and they want to ride along on some runs, and I'd feel weird taking a bunch of people out in a car that isn't my own. So, I've decided to run the Spyder at that event, and take a chance. And if the transmission noise gets worse, then I'll be putting it in winter storage 2 or 3 weeks later anyways.