I had a spare 45 minutes this afternoon and after more hammering and some jacking, Sven again has a fender. Just need to weld up those two tears.
I had a spare 45 minutes this afternoon and after more hammering and some jacking, Sven again has a fender. Just need to weld up those two tears.
Mostly because I needed it off the floor, I convinced the bent up old bumper it wanted to fit.
Let's call it the new Miata wink.
I guess I never updated this here but Sven is all back together and seems to drive just fine. The steering wheel isn't straight but hopefully that will be cured with an alignment.
It's stashed with the Healey and Elmore for the winter but may get an early-ish wake up. I think I've convinced the rest of my normal race team to take two cars (one being Sven) down to Carolina Motorsports Park in April. We'll see.
Plans for the 2023 season:
Plans for the 2024 season
Sven isn't home from storage yet but with the first race a month away and the fact that I'll be gone for 10 days in the middle of that, I figured I've got to get going.
Aside from the fact that ChampCar is now requiring headlights on all cars, I realized that the SCCA Enduro in June ends at 11PM which means, get this, it'll be dark. I want to remove the headlight mechanisms for weight (don't have any lights in there anyway) so I started dreaming up ways of making my life more complicated.
A 7 inch, two row LED bar where the parking lights usually go. I've also got the two big LED driving lights we used at Nelson 24 a few years back and will probably mount those directly to the splitter.
I'm totally unconvinced that this is going to be bright enough. My street has no lights so I'll be able to test it out before the race weekend. If it's no good, I'll probably replace the two driving lights with one big light bar.
Yesterday I got the splitter mostly done using the old bumper as a template. Today I hope to nail down a couple more mounting points.
Solid mounting points to the disgusting cross member some dingleberry put on this poor car when it had a turbo. Those rusty, sharp brackets that have sliced me a few times also got removed.
I took some steel rod, welded it to a washer and nut and then welded that to the cross member.
The old smushed bumper came off, the new one went on (minus some hardware I need) and I started in on the lights.
It's still unclear whether it's going to be bright enough but it looks pretty cool and works like it's factory. The small lights come on by turning on the parking lights and the big ones are wired into the headlights.
\
I often find myself in a time crunch the week before a race but we're getting there. My 5 year old helped me paint the "splitter".
SCCA Shortest Night of Nelson
14 hours, two drivers and a trusty Miata. It was a looooong day but a great day.
Communication leading up to the event was...lacking... so it wasn't until Monday that I learned there was qualifying Friday afternoon/evening. I had a long meeting in the morning, Elmore was getting his trans rebuilt (lots of drama there that we won't get in to) and I needed to be home after getting Sven through tech for my son's bday party. Since we didn't qualify, they put us last on the grid and into a group a little faster than we'd be going.
We ran 7th or 8th overall all day long, finishing in 8th. We also ran third in class all day long until they bumped someone else into our group late in the day. They also didn't seem to care if a car actually finished the race, just how many laps were turned. The car the had been leading our class most of the day wrecked on the last lap, did not finish yet placed second.
ANYWHO. Before we turboed the black spec car the fastest I found in my thread was 1:23.8 with our quickest time that weekend a 1:23.0. My first stint out yesterday I turned a 1:22.9. Sven seems to go through a tank of gas at Nelson in 1hr 45min, maybe 1hr 50 so that's how long I was staying out. My co-driver was typically out there for 1hr 20-30min. For my second stint I felt tired, sore and just not in it. I was very consistent but was running in the 23-24 range. My third stint, however, was fantastic. The car felt great, I felt great and we turned a 1:22 flat. This was on the same set of tires we ran at Pitt last year. Towards the end I ran a full stint, my co-driver went out for about an hour and then I hopped in for the last 25-30 min to catch the checker.
Success.
We had a seatbelt bolt come totally out, finding it's way inside the factory seat cross member and my co-driver badly flat spotted the fronts around 9PM but other than that it went very smoothly. Perfect oil pressure and ran cool all day long.
Earlier in the summer, I asked my normal team to run Champ at Gingerman in Sven. That ended up falling through with no solid plan of what our next race would be.
On Wednesday last week, I get a text in our racing group chat, "Are we running Sven or the Spec Car at Nelson this weekend with AER?". Ummm. Although busy all Friday during the day and evening as well as dinner plans Saturday night I figured it's tough getting these guys to the track together these days so I should make it work.
Between about an hour and a half Friday morning and another 30 minutes or so early Saturday morning I changed the oil, bled the brakes and clutch and gave Sven a good nut and bolt check. I got to the track about 9:15 Saturday.
Tech was no problem although I don't have a rain light nor do I have a camera and AER requires both. They just told me to have it fixed for the next event. The format was an HPDE Saturday morning, 4 hour race Saturday afternoon and an 8 hour race Sunday. The three of us who were driving have plenty of laps around Nelson and decided to just skip the track day.
I started the race Saturday and had a good stint. I can't remember my best time but it was somewhere around 1:21:6. That was a PB for me at Nelson and I was about 1.5 seconds faster than the other guys. Our pit stops were much slower than everyone else primarily because my fuel jugs are so slow and we didn't realize could take one of our required pit stops during caution. Either way, we stayed out there, ran consistently, some other teams had bad luck and we and ended up winning Class 1, 8th overall!
By the end of the day it was clear we weren't going to have enough front brakes to get through the full 8 hours on Sunday. These were the same pads we ran at Pitt last year and the 14hr earlier this year. I asked around the paddock and found a set of pads that I thought were right for the small 1.6 brakes and headed to dinner.
I got there bright and early Sunday to get the front pads swapped. Man was it a pretty morning.
They were 1.8 pads. berkeley. So, we called up one of our team members who started to pull the fresh brakes off the Pink Lady and the other guy who was with me at the track went to go meet him. I then also asked AER to send out a text as a last shot asking if anyone had 1.6 front pads to spare. Jake at Winter Motorsports did and gave us the parts. Would not let us buy them. Racers are awesome. I got the fresh pads and rotors swapped over and pulled onto grid before it closed. Phew!
My first stint was the most fun I've had on track ever. The Layin Pipe racing team was running their Miata after the front right strut on the E36 snapped on Saturday and Chris and I had an absolute ball. We were in total lockstep, bump drafting down the back straight cheering each other on and just having a time. We ran a ton of laps in the 1:21s and my best of the day was during that stint at 1:21:2. Jake was right with us too in their Miata and we got a lot of comments about how fun it was to watch the train of three Miatas having fun. I had one small incident where an RX8 that I was quicker than turned into me on the last corner. He was so wide at mid corner that I assumed he was letting me by so I stuck my nose in and he turned right into my door. Technically race control could have probably found me at fault but every indication the car gave was that it was staying out wide. I went up to the driver after the stint and explained what I saw, apologized if he thought I did something wrong and we were all good. That car though, the rest of the day, was avoided. They ran inconsistent lines, hit the brakes in unnecessary places, etc.
When I got back in the car in the afternoon, the driver before me had gone off, tearing most of the splitter off and denting the front left fender. No serious damage though. I ran a nice clean stint, lapped the Winter Motorsports car twice and the Layin Pipe car once. My fastest lap that session was a 1:21:8. The rest of the day was pretty uneventful although the same driver who went off and broke the splitter had to put two wheels off after he got turned in on and something came up and shattered the passenger quarter window.
When the checker flew, we finished 2nd in class and 11th overall. So, Sven had some knocks this weekend but was a total champ again with perfect oil pressure and temp all weekend long.
You can see the tire mark and dented door from where the RX8 hit me. Clearly my nose would have been ahead but stewards could have made an argument it was his corner.
Splitter and the lower fogs removed forcefully.
Shattered window and bump drafting damage.
And some hardware and jewelry for Sven.
I really wish poor Sven didn't take such a beating but man, what a great weekend!
I think I'm going to step up to a 225 tire for Sven. I've only run 205s. The Layin Pipe guys were running 225 up front and 245 (yes you read that right) in the rear. They're running Megasquirt and probably making more power but the 245 seems like overkill. Either way, there are a few corners where, aside from driving ability, tires do seem to be the limiting factor in how quickly I can go around. I figure it can't hurt to try.
Dinged up fender.
Spend a few minutes with my friends hammer and dolly.
Good enough for an endurance car.
Well, it's been 10 months since I gave an update on Sven and other than putting it in and taking it out of storage, I haven't touched it. Good bit it's signed up for the ChampCar race at Nelson this weekend.
No pics but I got the quarter window replaced on Sunday. This afternoon I pulled the splitter/thing that keeps the bumper from flapping in the wind off to "fix" it.
It took a real beating when one of our drivers had an off. The strategy is to trim it so it doesn't look so raggedy and will still support the bottom of the bumper. Hopefully this is just a stop gap for this race.
What I really don't want is for that leading edge to come apart during the race so I figured I'd brace it.
The stock under tray was also damaged so I picked up a fresh one last week. Hopefully this evening after the kids go down I'll be able to get the new under tray and bumper support (can't even call it a splitter anymore) installed.
Great thread! My lemons team just bought a stock 96 M to eventually build up as our next race car, so it's interesting to see all the details.
In reply to pyrrhicvictory :
Thanks! I was sold long ago on Miatas as endurance cars. Don't know what platform your team is currently running but I can't imagine you'll be disappointed.
I guess the hurricane came through Cleveland today so all I got done on Sven was updating the firmware in the Flagtronics unit and changing the diff fluid. While I was down there I noticed...
Whoopsie. No time for a new piece so I'll just put that all back together and bolt 'er up tight!
In reply to AxeHealey :
Someone here recommended a washer on the outside of the bushing to keep the shell on when that happened to me. I didn't... and it promptly popped out again. Just a heads up
Shavarsh said:In reply to AxeHealey :
Someone here recommended a washer on the outside of the bushing to keep the shell on when that happened to me. I didn't... and it promptly popped out again. Just a heads up
I was just about to comment and say, big washer and a longer bolt!
In reply to Shavarsh & fouckhest :
This is some insight into how my brain works but, literally, my first thought when I woke up this morning was "I should put a big washer on that drop link."
It's not the first time this has happened but the last time was when my co-driver wrecked it so I figured that had something to do with it.
Thanks!
In reply to AxeHealey :
Or, just leave it disconnected for more rear grip. (Depending on the cars current handling attributes).
Well the end link may not matter...
It's got great oil pressure and it's not knocking but that looks pretty bad to me. The chunks aren't engine material but all that glitter is. I'm going to cut open the filter after lunch and see what's going on in there.
In reply to wvumtnbkr :
I cut the filter open and the oil sitting in the bottom was very glittery. It's almost impossible to detect any in the pleats but I think that's a factor of the color contract between the material and the glitter.
I am tempted to go buy 4 qts of cheapo oil, run it and see what's what but at this point, we're just going to run another car.
Grimy old replacement attained.
This is the engine out of the race car I probably have the most total seat time in. Our group refers to it as the "Spec Car". In it's most recent configuration, it had a pretty cobbled together turbo system on it. The owner of the car purchased a wrecked NB with a fully built engine and nicely done turbo kit that will be going into that car. On Sunday after we parked the Pink Lady, we plucked this old thing out and it'll live on in Sven.
It had great oil pressure (can't rely on that I've learned) but it's been around the block many times so I'm going to do very minimal cleaning/resealing, etc.
I've been slowly getting the engine in Sven ready to pull out and yesterday afternoon, before the rain, I pulled it outta there with very little drama. Some things were taken off the "new" engine such as the crank pulley, coils, throttle body and others which will come from the hurt engine.
Unfortunately, the "new" engine is leaking enough that I can't just toss it in there and look myself in the mirror so as it's being added to, it's also coming apart. Some of the seals have shown up, others should be here Tuesday.
It appears to me that the head has been off and refreshed at some point.
Unbelievably clean. Strange looking wear on the intake side of cylinders three and four and there's some odd pock marks on the bottom of another lobe but I'm just sending it.
It's almost as if someone had the head cleaned, checked and then just tossed the old cams back in it.
I'm reusing the FM Happy Meal that was in Sven. I don't love that big old heat mark but to the touch it still feels perfect and nicely machined.
I'm at a standstill with the engine(s) while I wait for parts so I'm poking at other things. The race at Pitt is ChampCar and they don't require a middle net but AER does and I got one as a gift a while back.
I started to plot out the rain light (also an AER thing, not ChampCar) but will need to make a bracket and it was dinner time.
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