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Nelson Ledges | SBMS Racing | Summit School SCCA School in the Snow @ Nelson Ledges Article by: Sebastien Richard (April 18, 2005) Photos by: Marcus of "Loose Moose Race Team"
It all started with some panic and nerves about that damn noisy transmission. I called up Tom Blaney while on my way, and we decided to load up the tranny with some heavier oil to protect it and take it easy for the weekend. I really like that I can call Tom anytime and get in touch with him for advice, help, etc. A six hour drive in the rain later, I got to beautiful, scenic Nelson Ledges race track. Picture a farm with a track in the back field. The track looked quite intimidating. Tire
walls everywhere, no gravel traps, and SLICK pavement. On top of that, I
noticed a BMW driver that I have been seeing this year (he was at VIR in
Feb, and Summit for the
school last month) had planted his car in the tire wall and needed a
new radiator and some sheet metal work So off to the paddock I go. I picked a nice patch of green, soaked grass and called it home. It would soon become a hateful cold and wet mud pit that I came to loathe. I had time to unload the car, the truck, set up the canopy and bleed the brakes before registration and tech opened. So far so good. Wet, cold, but good. Between registration and the class, I had an hour to kill, so I went in search of a local Autozone. It took a while, as there is NOTHING around Nelson. Found one in Warren and got some 20w50 oil for the tranny. Good to go. The class was your typical SCCA class,
although we were freezing our asses off - no heater. After that, it was
off to the armpit of Ohio: Warren. After passing a few "Oriental
Massage Parlor: Open 24 hours a day" The next morning was the big day. It was cold and wet (sense a pattern yet?) and I started changing the tranny oil before the driver meeting. Lesson 1: cold 50 weight oil pours VERY SLOWLY. Jon Marefhka was our group leader.
Very nice guy, and he has the ITA track record on that track. About a
95mph average.
From there it was back to the mud pit. The day proceeded as SCCA schools do: alternating track time with debrief sessions. As I mentioned before, we had 2 sorta dry sessions where I switched to the Toyos. That was some major fun. You can really carry some speed around that track. Lesson 3: bring some water proof shoes/boots. Frozen wet toes suck. Lesson 4: don't leave the helmet in the race car with no windows when it's raining. Cold wet helmets suck even more As the weather was deteriorating, the organizers decided to take us out there for one more session so that we could maximize our track time Saturday, in case the weather got worse on Sunday. Good call. By then, my leather jacket was soaked, along with my shoes (both street and driving) and my suit. Miserable doesn't begin to describe it. But once in the car, it was all forgotten. Adrenaline is a good drug. During the day, I saw some interesting driving. There was a 240SX that couldn't drive straight. Great car control to catch the car every time. Reminiscent of the Dukes of Hazard driving style. I was quite intimidated and didn't dare pass in fear of him collecting me either on the upswing, or the rebound once he caught it. Luckily, after 2 or 3 laps following him he went way wide in 13 and blasted inside him. Whew!.
Day two and a short affair,
thankfully. After getting the snow off the race car, we took a short
session on track, 3 practice starts and the race. The race should have
been 10 laps, was cut down to 5 because of the heavy snow falling, then
3 because of the worsening conditions (visibility? what visibility?). Lesson 5: it is true what Kirk said: always take the inside on the first corner The race was on. We all lined up, me back
in 8th place (grid error?). Green flag and off we went. By turn 3, I had
passed a couple of cars on the inside and was going on. I watched the
leader take off (an ef-ing fast VR6 golf, and the driver is good too!)
and set my sights on 3rd and 4th cars. I was trying to gain on them when
the red flag came out, halfway through the second lad. Damn! 6 cars blew
that flag, btw. Turns out the Alfa put a wheel off coming out the
carousel and flipped. The car is toast, but the driver was fine.
Lesson 6: not all BMW drivers are
snobs! Well, that got long winded, didn't it? If
you are still reading, get back to work you slacker! I am glad the weekend is over, and I got
signed off. Thanks to Jon Marefhka for being a great group leader, Ray
my instructor, all the workers at Nelson. Ya'll were first class. The
weather sucked, but the people rocked! __________________________________________________________________ KONI North America | Honda-Tech.com | MAD FROG Racing
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