Episode IV - Debut Event
Debuted the car today at the first Northwest Ohio Region SCCA regional event of the 2013 season. Event was held at Toledo Chrysler Machining in Perrysburg, Ohio. Surface is older asphalt, a little crumbly but not terrible, though there was quite a bit of loose gravelly bits all over the place.
Thankfully, I ran the second heat (of three), so the first heat cleaned a lot of that garbage away and gave some time for the day to warm up. Even still, race time weather was 41ºF, Wind 11 mph ESE, Partly cloudy... so... less than ideal. Also, because of some issues with getting our wheels, I wasn't able to use the BFG Rivals sitting in the shop. Instead, I had my rain tires, Continental ExtremeContact DW, 205/50R16, on the stock wheels. Also, because of the late delivery date of the vehicle, only modifications were those described above, shocks and springs and... nothing else, not even numbers! Blue painters tape, enter stage left:
I have my times, but they won't mean much until the full event results are posted, which may be a few days. Overall, the car was decent. It definitely felt slow, but only comparison is a 2011 MINI Cooper S, and a 2002 Honda S2000 that is pretty much maxed out for STR... so not surprising.
Other than that, it felt good. The B-Spec suspension was decent, but I'm definitely going to be trying out some stiffer springs in the future. I have a pair of 6"-2.5"-500lb springs for the fronts, which will also help with the ride height weirdness. But we'll have to scrounge the shop and maybe call in some favors with the road race guys for the rears.
As is, 325F 350R, the car cornered pretty flat (several people commented on that) and felt very neutral, maybe slight understeer. I have still not quite mastered the "S+" system. The manual implies that you should only have to press it once, but I think you actually have to press it each time you're on the accelerator. (For those that don't know, the S+ button is able to activated when battery charge is greater than 4 bars, and vehicle speed is over 19mph, and forces the car to use the maximum electric assist).
At speed:
The car charged very quickly in grid. All I had to do was put in the neutral and hold engine speed at over 3500 RPM for ~5 seconds, then maintain over 3000 RPM while it charges. It took about 2.5 minutes to go from one or two bars to five... but then it stopped. It appears that it isn't possible to charge to more than 5 of 8 bars in grid. We'll definitely be investigating whether this can be defeated or not. Though, it was nice to find out that we could charge the battery quickly enough to support a co-driver. Also, since this course was only around 40-45 seconds (depending on class), we didn't have any trouble running out of battery, but it could be an issue on longer national levels courses. I'm really really hopeful that we'll find a way to allow charging fully in grid.
Also on deck between now and the next event (5 May) is a full exhaust, header (cat-delete), high-flow catalytic converter and a muffler. Hopefully the numbers and graphics will come it by then as well. Lastly, I really feel there should be some more camber from those camber bolts (only ~ -0.8º). We'll investigate that and start slotting stuff to get the camber the car definitely needs.
Also, the CR-Z is easily convertible from mph to km/h with a little button on the dash. Yeah, I totally ran it in km/h. Told everyone I hit "90". AND they use metric in Japan so... JDM, yo.
That's all I have to this week. Will post more as parts arrive.