Dusterbd13-michael said:
I was disappointed to say the least. Really a kick in the emotional nuts. Spent a lot of time thinking, and wrote the following the next afternoon.
I think I introduced too many variables, both mechanically and psychologically. Trying to re-learn drag racing, while relearning how to drive slicks on a car that is completely unknown on a drag strip. It felt squirrelly on the big end, squishy all around, etc. Nothing felt right, which caused fear. Dear amplified the nervousness and perception of the cars oddities. Which increased fear. Etc.
My plan is to rrtest. On street tires. And focus on shifting and driving the car straight. Once im comfortable with that, THEN introduce the variable of slicks. Relearn a car with a single new change.
I wasn't launching properly with the rolling and overthinking slicks. I was lifting when it got squirrelly. I wasn't shifting well, or using 4th properly. There's a LOT of wrong with last night. But a lot of right. It drives straight, stops straight, passes tech, and the clutch doesn't slip powershifting.
Im pretty sure there's a low 14 off the bottle in the car. But not a glory run that will get me the overall.
{...}
over my 5 runs, I got down to a 78.xxx the fast guys were all in the mid to high 60s. However, this is my second event in this car. And second event in two years. And first on warmed up slicks with a properly running car. And various other excuses. Im not fast. Im not a rock star driver. But, im getting better, and learning the car and how to drive at an autocross. Hopefully ill feel confident in October of being able to get everything out of the car I can. I plan to run all ME, and skip the pro driver at this point. That is subject to change, however.
Nice deal on the seats. I'd see if you can keep both in the car for challenge. I fully support you doing all the driving, with no pros... but you might make sure to have Seth or Spacecadet ride along for a run or two to talk you through lines and inputs.
I didn't see any feedback in the autocross write-up about the spring rate increase. Was it an improvement?
re:squirrelly
So, unbeknownst to everyone here, I was back in the US for a few days during this time... and managed to stop by and "help" with the pre-autocross prep. (don't forget the zipties) Duster let me take it for a jaunt down the front road. With the 4.1 gears it's really quick through the revs in 1st and 2nd, there was no looking at the tach/shift-light. It definitely moved sideways on me (specifically to the pax side) in 2nd... but I wasn't sure if that was due to road surface (there was a dip when I was in 2nd) and/or the "move around" tires it was on. I'm not sure if the hard seat was amplifying that "feel", though, because I don't recall doing much reaction before the car settled and then hit redline. It was also pretty "jouncy" over the road imperfections, but not "teeth rattlingly so"... I think it reminds me how my '94 felt weighted down for OneLap transits, with much more acceleration.
I think some of the experience from this past weekend can be addressed with something that is "Challenge Budget Neutral", and only costs time and gas (and might have been referenced in the other thread): Be more familiar with the car. But I'll go beyond that blanket, stupid, statement though; I think you need to be proactive and intent in your familiarization with the car. You've made the step from 'wound up to build a winner' to 'remember this is a fun car for after', and learning the car supports that primary mission. There is fun to be had in learning the rhythm of the shifts from a start, and "feeling" where they are each time you pull away from a light. Has your dad driven it, if so what's his input? There's fulfillment to be found in the refinement of this initial nugget.
Good luck!