mazdeuce wrote:
That was the planned change I referred to earlier. That spot needed to be fixed. However, the CRX was just about to flop on it's roof when it passed that point with both tires two feet inside the cone. He knocked the cone over with his roof.
Okay, that I did not see. I was perusing the cookie box (MMM, SUGAR!) when I heard metal being rent asunder and saw the CRX being all "Do a barrel roll!" right before the finish. So, yes, I did not see the start of the roll, just that it happened in a corner that, quite frankly, I wouldn't have passed if I were a safety steward. (Which I'm not, because I keep forgetting to submit the paperwork)
There were so many bad parts of all of the courses, both by design and because things fell apart. I was certain we were going to lose a car where Wae (it was you right?) went up high on two wheels.
Twice. The first time was in the middle of a corner, and since it was the left side that came up, I assume that the vaccum from butt-pucker sucked the car back down again. The part that I don't quite understand is how he did it again 50 feet later, in a straight section. Must be them Duke Boys genes in the car.
I voiced my concerns several times during the session and could only get a small move. Frankly there was no way to fix it, you were turing on an off camber part of the track. It was like getting the first 10 degrees of your roll for free.
Ex-actly. More after the jump.
Being a safety steward was the worst part of the weekend for me. You guys were trusting me to have a safe course and I couldn't do that.
The Stock class snafu that happened on Saturday's PM course (that resulted in the now-infamous "We have cars to run" radio call) was MY call. I saw two cars catch a lip on the "outside" of the entry of an off camber corner and get very squirrely and bicycley. One car was a fluke. Second time defined the issue. A safety steward was at the next corner station, so I called him over to observe. After observing two cars go by, he agreed that it was a roll waiting to happen and did his job and stopped runs before anything bad happened.
When I was acting/training safety steward, when I have worked in capacity as "roving n00b trainer/unofficial safety", I would go to every corner station and tell them that I cannot be everywhere at once, and part of the duty of working course is to observe the cars going by and identify if a safety issue is rearing. I've been doing this long enough that I can spot potential issues before they start, so I use that as a guide: "Pay attention to (whatever) and make sure it doesn't get to where people start popping up, but if you see anything that might be an issue, call me on the radio."
We're here to have fun. Yes, there's money involved, but in truth the contingency awards for the few who qualify probably won't even cover their tow bills. (I know I blew through my contingency just in driving TO the event. I spent nearly $1500 to be at Nationals, all told. The $250 from Mazda will be nice but it's a drop in the bucket) You know what is not fun? Totalling your car that you just bought, or spent a lot of time and effort building and painting and prepping. The cars that were rolled were NOT "beaters". Leon Drake's car was a beautifully turned out 16V conversion that has seen a lot of paintwork and prep since its debut last season in mostly-stock form, and while I'm not familiar with the CRX that rolled, it looked very well done and had either a wrap or very nice paintwork. (As well as a nearly identical twin that had been running in PF) And the WRX was a clean unmolested Stock-legal car, and a rare one at that. At least THAT one looked, from my vantage point, like it may be an easy fix.