Last Sunday was the "Fun Race" at East Lansing, a good day to give the ICC its first racing outing. East Lansing adds informal races to the schedule on big days like the Bobby Haun Memorial or the Fun Race. The Mechanics' and Powderpuff races sound silly, but they serve the important purpose of getting spectators into the karts without having to worry about getting in the way of experienced competitors looking for that last 0.05s.
It was time for one of my friends to move up from cars to karts. He'd raced Miatas and light FWD cars in SCCA and NASA, and had a good, analytical approach to driving. Based on where he's from, where he races, who he works for, I'm amazed that he's not already on the GRM forum. Today, he'd help me work on the kart, and would drive in two rounds of practice and the Mechanics' race.
I drove the first session to make sure the machinery was intact and give the engine a good, easy warmup. The first start with the TM is the only difficult one, needing a few yards of pushing after dropping the clutch for it to run and get away. After that, I short-shifted for a lap and a half to avoid overheating the piston as the engine warmed up. The decade-old tires were still totally shot.
First Session
Ogre drove the next session, his first in a racing kart. If you learned to swim in a public pool by being told to jump off the edge into the deep end, then the instruction technique of being pushed down the pitlane and starting in a vehicle with a projected PAX index greater than one (z) makes sense. He thrashed for a bit, looked out of control sometimes and timid other times, and paddled around after a few minutes.
I'd traded two cases of beer for two sets of take-off tires, and it was time to mount them. We removed the wheels, deflated the tires, removed the three bead-lock screws that keep the tire from coming off the rim (zz), then turned to the heavy machinery.
Bead Breaker This machine uses a lever to push a foot against the edge of the tire and with enough force the tire de-beads. I did not take pictures of the Woodrow Advanced Technology tire tools. The tool to remove the tire consists of a sheet of plywood with a 5" hole, sawed in half, with the two halves joined by ropes, placed on a bit of carpet. Place the wheel with de-beaded tire in the hole, press the two halves together, put the assembly on the carpet, stand on the plywood, and then grab the tire and yank it off. Two good Ultimate players in the peak of condition were found to be half the man of an engineer twice their age. The Woodrow Advanced Technology tire-mounting device was then used - a segment of 5" pipe sawed up and mounted on a block to hold the wheel. We shoved the tires onto the rims (I got none, Mike got one, Mr. Woodrow got three), then inserted the beadlocks halfway and inflated them to seat the beads, then sank the beadlocks and set the pressure before mounting them on the kart. This winter I'll buy tire-changing tools and practice.
First heat! I get out of the pits and immediately have more grip and more power. The two warmup laps go well, and I start to circle the oval to form up the grid. Then the left front wheel falls off. There's no positive retention device at all for the hub! It's just clamped around the wheel bearing carrier.
Wheel falls off, followed by discussion of Birel machine design
After some careful cleaning and light lapping to get the hub to stay on the carrier, I went out for the second heat race. This is the Fun Race, so track configurations are unpredictable. Time for an oval race! Twenty laps and probably fewer than four miles. It took me five laps to figure out that I could upshift once on the start-finish straight, then downshift into 1/1S, then upshift on the straight back to 10, then downshift into 10. After that I demonstrated that a massive power advantage is useful even when you can't get it down.
Oval Race
During the intermission, they held the Mechanics' Race. Mike hopped into the kart, I push-started him, then sprinted up to the commentary box to announce the race. Four karts started, the shifter, two TaGs, and a Yamaha. Taking the lead into the first corner, Mike used the immense acceleration off of slow corners to balk the karts behind him in the corners and blast off down the straights. After three laps, he figured out some of the faster corners enough to drive away and pull away by a few seconds. A lap later the 2nd place kart spun and he was clear to drive home to the first victory in Paid Off Racing history.
We took out the 10 mm and 13 mm wrenches, the 5 mm and 6 mm Allen sockets, and the 13/16" for the sparkplug, and carefully checked over the kart for my feature race. The front tires were alternately hooking up and failing to, but the engine was ferocious. It also had a "quadra-bog" worthy of the fastest 403 Firebird in the country. Between those I think I shook the GoPro until it quit. I passed two karts after halfway and finished 2nd.
That meant two trophies for the new kart on its first day, for the cost of $5 worth of fuel line, $15 in gasoline, and $15 in beer traded for tires!
Feature Race
(z) ICC weight in autocross is 425 lbs. Unballasted the kart is 392 with me in it.
(zz) MG tires do not come off the rim unless they are totally flat and strike a curb under maximum load. The only reason the tires go totally flat is because the beadlock screws leaked. I lost the biggest race I ever led because of that. The Margay ran non-beadlock wheels and never had trouble with deflation.