Thursday, December 10, 2009

Photos of my bum

Ok... not my bum exactly but my cars bum. If you have read the previous post, you'll have noted that Tweety got hit in the back on the first corner of the first lap. I was actually watching it from the outside as I was the third driver for this particular endurance race. Anyway, its not major damage but the car is still being repaired. Here are some photos of the carnage after I got back to Tokyo.

Right hand rear corner. Bumper is pushed in. Looks like the tow-hook saved it from more damage.
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Closer view over the exhaust. It's all cracked up.
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Top view showing the indentation.
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Party Race - 2009/11/15

Party Race 1 hour endurance race was held yesterday. Deki-san qualified in my car and did a 1'09.6 to take 6th on the grid. Kato-san got pole with a 1'09.1.

Driver order for the race was Deki - 21 laps, Fujitomo - 9 laps and Tom the remaining 18 laps. Race start was delayed nearly an hour so my stint was going to be rather dark. Not dark again!!! I was excited to try Tsukuba in the dark though as I knew it was mostly decently lit.

For the race start, the cars were lined up against the pit wall. Starting driver was in the car
and I had to run from the opposite side and touch right hands before he could lower his right hand to start the car and go. while thinking about this, I forgot to start TraqMate!!! Damn.

Deki got a good enough start but not good enough to pass another car. I watched as he went into the first corner and saw another car try to go up his inside. It didn't seem possible from where I was standing and I heard a bang. Deki didn't come around with the leaders as he had been hit from behind and spun out on the first corner.

He finally appeared quite a bit back from the group but he rounded the last corner at full speed so I knew the car was mostly ok. Another car pitted. It was a fellow DTR team mates and the right front was bent in.

Meanwhile Deki drove like a man inspired and lapped mostly doing 1'10s and had a best of a 1'09. What a driver! When he pitted we were about 6th but he did a long stint so our real position was further back as other teams had likely already stopped for their required 1 minute pit stop.

Fujitomo was quick into the car as Deki got out. Both needed cushions as my seat is setup quite low. As Fujitomo was belted in I remembered TraqMate and reached over to press it on. Meanwhile the 1 minute pit stop had only seconds remaining. I pushed select 3 times instead of 2 and that's all I could do as I got out of the way as she wheel spun down the pit lane and out onto the course. Unfortunately, We'd get no data again as TraqMate was now asking if we wanted a "new start/finish line" instead of recording data.

Fujitomo did a great job and was very fast considering it was her first time driving the car. Deki was on the phone giving her support for the full number of laps. I had complete confidence in her as she has done a lot of formulae driving and has also won a Clubman 1 party race a year before I did in a Mazda Press car. Watching from the outside she was very smooth both out of the last corner and braking into the first corner. She scored a few 1'11s to put me to shame :-) Well done Fujitomo!!! Great driving!

As she pitted, it was my turn. I hopped in fixed the harness and seat. Got TraqMate started and was off on time. I came out of the pits right in front of car number 8 in 6th position. Wow! Great job team! I was confident that we could hold onto 6th and I wasn't going to let anyone past.

I drove steady the first lap to check the car while keeping the car behind me. Brakes felt better than I expected, but the overall balance of the car was a little weird compared to normal. I put it down to strange tire pressures. It was more than manageable though.

Braking into the 2nd hairpin, something hard came flying into the footwell. I tried to kick it out of the way with my foot but for the rest of the race it would come play with my peddles and me under braking. Quite dangerous but not much I could do except keep going. I found out at the end of the race that it was the official time sensor. The pin holding it to its base where it was taped on the door had somehow worked its way loose and it had fallen down.

On the 2nd lap before Dunlop, I noticed the clutch slipping for the first time. It was the first time, I'd ever felt a clutch slip and I had no idea how best to handle it. After Dunlop and into the second hairpin it went again and such was my puzzlement that I got the car a little sideways on the exit onto the back straight and two cars got past. The clutch made it very hard to pass the cars back again as I would just lose them on the back straight.

Another car came out of the pits in front of me and stayed there for the rest of the race. One more car would get by on the back straight as I fought the clutch for more speed. I tried to up my lap times with more speed around the last corner but I wasn't entirely happy with the cars handling to push more. I was lapped by a very fast car 50 who went around the outside on the last corner with some fantastic late braking. He was unbelievable fast and amazing to watch as he also easily past the two cars infront of me like they were standing still. Maybe a slightly lighter car than ours considering our fuel load where we went a little over board. I managed to score mostly 1'11s which is not bad I think on a bad clutch and handling I wasn't entirely happy with.

We would finish 10th in the dark. I'm quite proud of our team "T3" for getting up as far as 10th considering the clutch and the accident at the start of the race. "What if?" does spring to mind though and leaves me wanting more next year!

After the race when the car was being checked, the officials noticed some oil around the diff. Driving home also felt very weird as the rear end of the car seemed to float around behind me. I wonder if the diff is gone or going too? Perhaps the last accident when my wheel was hit in the last race may have weakened the diff a little? There is definitely a smell of oil if I accelerate around a corner also. I will get that checked.

So! What an exciting weekend I had. Car got another battle scar. I got to race with 2 wonderful team mates. Thank you Deki and Fujitomo! Kato was also in action for DTR in car 27 and they managed to get 4th place. Congratulations guys! Congrats too to all of the other DTR members who finished their races. As for car 100 - I can't believe you had the nerve to hit Deki in the back! I hope the car is not too bad and doesn't cost so much to repair.

I'll try to post some photos later when I check my camera etc. I still haven't taken any photos of the damage of the rear nor seen it in day light. Maybe I'll get up early tomorrow morning to have a look at it.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Imobilizer woes

2 weeks ago, I climbed in after the car had been idle for about 3 days and the car wouldn't start. It was as if I wasn't pressing the clutch. Noticed the imobilizer light was flashing. Oh dear. Called JAF who poked around in the bonnet, checking fuses etc and as if by some magic, the car started albeit with an engine check lamp.

Off to Mazda who confirmed there HAD been an issue but all was looking ok now. They said the error was that the dash couldn't talk to the ABS sensor briefly. Hmmm. But they assured me all was well.

A week later, I was driving down road and the gauges shut down briefly. Speedo and revs just turned to zero but then came back on again almost instantly. Another check lamp. The next race was in a week so I was a little worried and drove down to D-Technique.

I was pretty sure it was the HKS speed limit remover wiring. I've had the device removed since May (because of the Party Race) but the wiring is basically joined using some plastic connectors that they provide. Traced the problem down to a loose wire on one of the connectors. Yikes. After checking all the others, we were back in one piece again and the engine started fine. Lets hope it keeps that way. That was a good find a week before the next race! I've been having issues like this on and off with the gauge and check lamps for about a year so it will be great it this resolves it. Would be cool if it improved performance too. lol.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Party Race 09/09/05 - Video

After much thought, I decided to put up a short video of the incident from the last race.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Quick updates

Just an update to say that I finally got the car back yesterday after quite an eventful end of September and beginning of October. I went to Australia for 10 days and also headed off to California to watch the season finale of the StarMazda series which my friend Deki-san over at D-Technique was racing in. Fantastic race. Fellow countryman Peter Dempsey unfortunately lost out with a very harsh DNF after some superb racing that weekend. It was awe inspiring. Laguna Seca was an amazing track to go and watch motorsport at. Fantastic stuff.

Anyway finally back in Japan and a week later I have my car back again. I ended up getting a new wheel and believe it or not the alignment was perfect so no changes required there. Perhaps it got banged back into place. lol. Anyway, all parts checked out fine and the body cleaned up nicely too. Will have to look at it more closely in daylight.

Had a great drive home from D-Tech with the top down. How I missed this little car.

Back racing this weekend with TGR. Have a look at our car prep over on our TGR blog. This time, we've a 6 hour endurance race at East Course Ebisu. TraqMate Japan have again very kindly provided a unit for the race for us. Thank you TraqMate!!!

Monday, September 7, 2009

Who ate my RAYS?

I guess a few photos are due of the damage.
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Could have been a lot worse me thinks!

Still I guess a bang on the wheel like that will mean that I should check some other things like the wheel bearings perhaps? No noise as it is right now and the car drives perfectly, so will have to see what is under there.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Party Race 09/09/05 - First Contact

Yesterday was the 3rd Party Race of the year. As you may have noticed from the lack of blog entries I had not practiced at all for this race since my last effort in late July. I had of course driven in the 12 hour race in a FF Honda Prelude but that hardly counts as its a very different beast.

As always the most difficult 10 minutes are first. Qualification. How do you hop into the car after not driving it since July and pull off the lap of your life in an allotted 10 minute time frame. I guess in my you don't :-) I got close at a 1'10'4 but nowhere good enough. The qualification session actually saw quite a lot of action as different people went off the track. I ended up 11th out of 15 cars with 1 car failing to mark a time as he ended up off the track on the last corner on his out lap. This is the Emblem class right???

I was in for my own surprise in qualifying. Dunlop corner was not what I remembered it to be. The tires screamed more than usual and I under-steered off nearly every lap. I pondered over my tires and my turn in points etc and it basically pre-occupied my 10 minutes. Still, I did the best I could on the day. When I came in, I found out that it had been resurfaced and it was written in notices all over the toilet walls etc... Hmmm. Never noticed that. After studying the new surface map on the walls and again on the parade lap before the race, I felt I knew how to attack it.

On with the race. I got a bad start and let the revs slip up a little high and suffered too much wheel spin. Still, I had the inside line into the first corner and managed to only 2 spots. I got 1 back on the outside of the first hairpin but lost it again the next lap when I miss shifted after taking a tight line out of the first corner.

I found myself behind a car that was pretty unsettled in a lot of corners and I found that its very hard to not copy someone else's mistakes when you are so close behind them. The get the back and it happens to you too, so its impossible to pass where as it should be possible if you just do your own thing. It was copying one of those mistakes that I lost back a little too much out of the 1st hairpin and gave up one more spot. Drat!

Still. Nothing like a good fight with my team mate number 62 who was now in front of me. I noticed he was having a lot of trouble on Dunlop so I managed to get passed on around lap 10 when I went up the outside on the exit of dunlop, 2 abreast into the 2nd hairpin, 2 abreast up the back straight and 2 abreast into the last corner where I finally pulled ahead and into the first corner alone. I sure made work of that! One more lap to catch the guys ahead and then disaster!

Around Dunlop hot on the heels of the cars ahead. The 2 cars were in tight battle and one of them drove clean off the course around right hand side of the 80R. He was probably doing around 120kmph across the grass and not slowing. As I passed him, he was coming back off the grass and just when I thought I was clear, bang. I got on my rear right corner and it sent me into a half spin where I ended up on the green space that makes up the inside of the 2nd hairpin. I was pretty angry as the guy had obviously tried to accelerate off the grass so he wouldn't lose too many spots. You can't accelerate off grass onto the circuit... you spin... everyone knows that. Well one would thing they would anyway. Looking at my mates on-board camera you can see that he is coming off the grass straight when he just spins into me and we both go flying. Oh well. That's racing...

Anyway, I came off the grass mere seconds later and tried to chase down the pack but I'd lost around 10 seconds that lap due to spinning out so it wasn't to be. I got back safe but all I could think of was where had he hit me. The car seemed to handle fine so hopefully it sounded worse than it was.

As I parked all I could think of was the damage as I hoped out. Lucky me... no gaping holes in the bodywork but there were big chunks missing from my RAYS... I guess I'll need a new one of those. What a great wheel to take such a beating and still get me home safe!!! Rear wing and bumper has some minor scratches but its no where near as bad as it could have been. I got away from it all very lightly. Whew!

I did have words with the guy after. I basically told him what I thought of him coming back on the circuit like he did without taking off some speed. He argued that he was still out of control... Whatever. I guess he learned his lesson as his car is worse off than mine. I shook hands and walked away to cool down.

After it was all over, there was the 4 hour media race to enjoy. That turned out to be a great race. Oi-san and the Engine team did a great job to come home first and Kato-san did a fine job for the REVSpeed team who came home 3rd. What a great long day!

Next on the list is an alignment and a new wheel...

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Facing your fears.

They say you should face your fears so it was very natural for me to suggest that I take a night time stint in this years 12 hour race at Ebisu to see how I would get on. I was feeling rather confident as the weather was perfect with zero rain or fog forecast.

Rod arrived in full of excitement and told me how great it was on the new tires and how he'd just set a new fastest time in the car. Obviously it was fantastic out there. Belted up and waiting for the last of the fuel to be added, I felt ready for the 45 minutes of darkness ahead to bring the car home. A knock on the car and wave and I was off, racing down the pit lane and out into the first corner.

Around the first, down the hill to the S-curve but I couldn't see where it started. I knew it was there somewhere so kept up some speed and turned in. Out the exit of the S-curve and top of 3rd down the hill into the right hander at the end of the hill. Damn - I couldn't see anything, the lights were on, but I could only see part of the road ahead. Not really far enough ahead that is to be hitting around 130kmph into the next bend. I could see the spot light ahead but not where it was shining on the apex. I braked way too late and just barely made it around the corner... Wow. it will take time for my eyes to adjust I thought. It can't really be this dark can it?

Up the hill into the inside hairpin which I also couldn't see, around that and down again through the right kink before the last corner. Darkness... Were my lights really on? Why couldn't I see anything? I expected a lot more light than this. The second lap, was just as bad. Top that with the onset of cars that seemed to be driving way too fast up behind me? How could they possibly see enough to go that fast?

Lap after lap, I had no clue where to brake, I tried counting seconds at full acceleration, looking for where someone had locked brakes on the road, following other cars as much as I could... All I could think of was how well I knew the circuit and yet how little I could see. It shocked me and brought up images of awe at those who race around the ring in the 24 races they have over there. How well can they possibly know the ring and how do they avoid those faster cars who must bully their way by, lights ablaze... Back to the immediate reality, how was anyone else able to drive fast at night like this?

Doubts crept in. I thought about coming in for a driver change, but then again the car behind us, was perhaps only 10 laps or so a-drift and coming in might mean losing a place if the next person wasn't dressed in his gear. The radio had stopped working after all, so I had no way to tell anyone to be ready. No - I guess I would just have to do this, even if I did it slowly... Just bring the car home.

As time went on, I tried to get better and better but I still couldn't drive anywhere near what I can do when I can actually see what is ahead. It was like going into a ghost house where they have dark rooms and all you can do is follow a rope or the wall until suddenly you find another wall and then feel around for the next path. I thought the HIDs would make it easier for me, but I guess I need even more light than they provide for me to function.

At 8:59 on the in-car clock I rounded the last corner and headed up the finish straight staring at the flag tower looking for the checkered flag. Nothing. Next lap too. Then another lap and another... Hard to believe but I guess the race didn't start on-time so they extended the finish to match for a perfect 12 hours.

I ended up doing about an hour that final stint. It was one of the most demanding hours I've ever done in a car. I can't say I learned how to drive in the dark but I did survive it so I am proud at least of that.

I'm rather disappointed in my lack of vision at night. I knew it was bad but am thinking that perhaps as a result of my LASIK operation earlier this year, it is worse than it used to be. It's good to know though.

Would I volunteer again for a night stint? Mad as I am, I'd probably answer yes as I'd like to see if my vision improves next year. Somehow though, I think I would be more effective during a day stint or even in the rain. It was another educational racing weekend!

Read more about our weekend over on our TGR blog.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Ebisu 12 hour Endurance Race

Leaving tomorrow morning to head up to Fukushima to take part in a 12 hour endurance race around Ebisu East course. To this effect, we bought and have since been preparing a car for the job. Have a look over at The TGR Blog for more details and perhaps some live updates on how we are doing. The race is being held this Saturday from 9am to 9pm! 12 hours sure does sound long when you lay it out time wise!

My good friends over at TraqMate Japan have also sponsored our effort and provided a Traqmate system along with video to go with it. Should be fun to look over the different drivers. Thank you Traqmate!

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Party Race 2009/7/26

Bringing up the rear... paddy last... Arguably my worst result in a race so far. Result yes, but I'd argue that it was one of my better performances. It's really hard to pass at Tsukuba so a race really comes down to the following formula for the most part... Do well in the Qualification, get a good start, stay clear of first corner trouble while being aggressive enough to keep or grab places, same again on the 1st hairpin and it will all be sorted out by the last corner on the first lap. If you made it that far, don't miss a gear on the back straight, don't yield the inside line on any corner and you are practically home and dry baring other errors around Tsukuba.

My day went wrong at qualification. I qualified 14th out of 15 with a time of 1'11.7 where as pole was won with a 1'10.4. Looking at the video, its easy enough to blame by driving. I lose most of my time currently on the 1st hairpin. After the first 2 laps, I un-stabilize somehow on entry into this corner each time, and waste time and corner controlling over-steer on entry, only then to suffer under-steer mid-late corner and hold on too much steering to the end result of exit over-steer. Its all quite subtle but its slow and I have to figure it out to go faster. If you don't exit the first hairpin at the right speed, it effects entry into Dunlop which effects the exit and the missed acceleration all the way to the top of third before the 2nd hairpin. I lose time elsewhere too but that is the biggest section right now that I need to work on and it all goes back to how I take the last part of the S curve before the first hairpin perhaps.

In the race, I got a decent start but made the classic mistake of braking too early (in the usual spot but not going at usual speed) and ended up on the outside of 2 other cars on the first corner. I tried my best to keep my position but the other cars were coming out wide and I had to back off to save my paint. Into the first hairpin in last place, I noticed it was looking pretty slow on the inside so I went out and around only to see a car spinning out along the grass on the outside a tad close to my line but I kept on the gas anyway and made up 1 place plus the car that spun out. 13th then.

first cornerInside or Outside?Spinning out

The back straight saw more excitement as the car in 11th missed 3rd gear and the car ahead of me got through on the last corner but I wasn't up for it. I got along the outside of him then in the first corner again but it nearly cost me my 13th place as the car behind got up my inside where he stayed until the 1st hairpin again where I had the best line and back he went again.

2nd lap, 1st hairpinclose battleLooking away!

I tried up the outside of the 2nd hairpin, drafting on the back straight but I couldn't make it passed. As the laps went on, the tires got less and less grip and more gaps started to show as the cars in front missed their braking points under pressure. The car two cars ahead was particularly slow around the first hairpin and I was thinking about how to capitalize on it for a few laps. Lap 8, saw the leader of the race spin out on the last corner and I'd improved to 12th place.

Finally on lap 10, I decided to take a peek up the outside of the first hairpin just to see what the grip was like but my car just went from under me. I guess it was something to do with riding half on the bank and half off and going a little too fast without the aid of the bank to aid cornering. Anyway, I lost the back, countered and then countered more before sticking both feet as a lost cause and then sticking it in reverse as fast as possible to get out of the way of the back markers who would all be on the inside (and I was stopped mid-to-outside).

Once safe, I set off in pursuit and to try and set a faster lap and see if I could find out what the hell I was doing wrong. At least I think I managed to remember what I was doing on Dunlop and curb some of the entry over-steer into the first hairpin.

Coming off the circuit after 15 full on laps always feels amazing though. Juergen - my good mate - took some photos of me and remarked that I looked like a man who had just won the race by my smile and not someone who had come in bringing up the rear.

Coming homeSmiles

Its the car I think. It's just too much fun to drive. It challenges you everywhere to wring the most from it and squeeze out every last bit of performance from both you and the car. You can't do that in many cars these days. It's a super car :-)

It's all in the preparation!

So thanks to Mazda for giving us this great car, Brains for the race, D-Technique for all their help and being such a great team, Yoshida-san for his help and support on the day and Juergen for his fantastic photos. Congrats to all the winners, I am very jealous and I'll be back to claim my part of the glory again soon!

Next party race is September 5th!

Thursday, July 16, 2009

SSPark Video

Had a great time at SSPark. I've been rather busy recently so its taken me a while again to create some footage to sum up the 2 days.

The first day we worked on 3 separate areas of the gymkhana area. We had a big open area with cones where we could do anything we wanted to practice like handbrake turns, small circle drifting, figure of 8s etc. Another area, we concentrated on faster turns and speed control and the last area we concentrated on a tight timed part of the course. We also combined the 2 last parts together and did one big timed attack at the end. It was wet for my session which was a lot of fun.

My brake problem happened again on the first day where the peddle would get hard after a lot of hard braking. Kato-san repeated it also so I know I am not mad. He said it also happened in his car and speaking to some others, it happens in their cars sometimes also, mostly after ABS is enguaged under hard braking. Hmmmm, so I guess, I just cannot use ABS in the roadster as a result in order to be sure of stopping when required. Not so good.

To get back to things, the second day we did all the same things as the first day but the weather was very sunny and it made the day very hard indeed! This time we spent all afternoon attacking the bigger course in 4 groups. I managed to get a 1'03.9 in the video run below (although the TraqMate data shows it as slightly slower due to me setting my own start/stop position on which it basis its timings.

The footage is just a combination of 2 last runs of the day. One is Kato-san and one is me. Also shown is a TraqMate generated GPS map showing both of our lines and progress around the gymkhana run. Its rather cool to see where and how we differed and what effected the speed and what didn't. I think you could probably look at this and go out again and do an even faster run.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Brake update

Yesterday I finally got a chance to work on the car a little. I swapped out the rear pads with new new ones. It had been a while since I had replaced the rear pads so it took me some probing around to figure out how to do it. The handbrake/piston thing would back with no issues on each side. I remember doing this on the RX-8 and it was a nightmare. I guess this is how it is supposed to work. Easy...

Anyway, the left side pads had 2mm and the right ones 3mm. I wonder is this enough to be causing the problem that I was seeing. Seems like lots of pad to me (although it definitely needed changing at 2mm).

I'm in two minds about putting in fresh front pads too as they are down to about 5mm but I figure it will at least get me though the first gymkhana day on the 4th.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Braking brakes

Last weekend the 13th, I did 2 runs at Tsukuba. The first session, I had just rotated my front left/right tire so I was getting huge oversteer for most of the 1st hairpin until I'd shaped the fronts into their new positions. Likewise, I was under-steering around the right handers. The 2nd session, I felt more confident that the tires were working a bit better again so I set out to do a fast lap or two.

Needless to say all didn't go well but it wasn't the tires. I locked brakes into the 2nd hairpin for a brief period and after that braking was a bit of a gamble. When braking hard, I'd push down on the brake but instead of the peddle sinking down, it would sometimes remain hard under my foot and not sink to its usual depth. This was very disconcerting arriving at a hairpin at around 130kmph and wondering if your brakes would work or not. I peeled into the pits and had a look at my tire pressures and the brakes. Front pads seemed ok - a little slim but no problem. The rears as always were hard to see but with my helmet on, they seemed like they had meat. I decided to take it easy for the rest of the session and just work on tire shaping and bring the car home alive.

Asked a few people about the problem. They suggested fluid. But I'd recently had a fluid change and the peddle feeling was actually fine. I know what it feels like when I've got some air in the pipes. Somebody else suggested the brake booster which makes sense when you think about it, but I think it was more than just extra effort to brake. Something else perhaps. Someone else suggested piston problems but braking seems fine now as it did when it wasn't acting up on the track also.

Today I had some free time to play with the car a little even though it was pissing rain all day. I finally took a look at the rear pads and although they do have meat on them they are looking rather slim. I wonder what the inside pads look like??? So I decided to buy some new rear pads (MazdaSpeed) and will install them the next sunny day and take it from there. Hope this will resolve the issue!

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Karting 09/06/14

As the previous day in Tsukuba was such a disaster brake-wise, I thought I'd blog happier news first and show you all some karting photos from Sunday.

We did the 8pm night race again at the New Tokyo Circuit. That place is great fun and the karts are all decent for the most part. Highly recommended!

I managed to grab pole again much to the dismay of my fellow racers. K was looking pretty fast though sitting up in 2nd place and at the start the 52kg lightening rod took off and left us for dust quickly opening up a 7 or 8 car gap by the 2nd corner where he got into a little over steer and happily enough for me I got the lead back. From there on, my goal was to break into the 48s mark so I tried various things.

The most important corners are 3 and the last first part of the chicane on the last corner. Those also happen to be hard bloody corners to take just right so its very challenging to get the best out of a full lap. I got a few 48s laps with the best being a 48.736. I wonder what the ultimate lap time would have been for my car with a 70kg driver in it. I reckon there is perhaps 0.7 there for some god to steal yet. I notice the best lap time so far is 46.9 and judging from the photo that guy weighs about 50kg or there abouts. Would be fun to weigh 50kg for a day to try and beat that!

Anyway, great fun. Can't wait for the next time.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Ebisu East 5/31 another video

Here is another 3 laps from Ebisu as the course was drying out and I was on my own in the car so I could go a little faster.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Ebisu Circuit (East) 09/05/31


Wet/Semi-wet day at Ebisu Circuit. It was my first time there in the roadster. We had 5 sessions altogether. Only the first one was dry really. My best time of the day was around 1'14.699. Semi-wet or mostly dry it didn't seem to make much difference.

Looking at the videos, I was pretty cautious through the chicane. The rear end seemed very light on turn in to the left part which was a little disconcerting although I probably could have tried more different approaches to see what worked and what didn't. I also slowed a little too much around the first corner but I did find the car quite prone to over-steer on accelerating out of that corner also. Looking back I would like to try more keeping speed there. I should also have tried a few different things on the last corner to see if I could keep more speed for that cruel uphill. There are chunks of time left in this circuit yet. I'll try post more videos later.

One of the cool things (apart from the track itself) was that we were allowed to bring passengers aboard our car during the sessions as long as they had helmets and gloves. This was my first time to give some friends a spin in the car beside me on a largish circuit such as this. It was as interesting for me as I'm sure it was for them.

In a way, the car actually felt a little more balanced with someone in the passenger seat. The lap times didn't vary that much although I took it a little easier when I had someone beside me to be responsible for - particularly as the track got that bit wetter. I actually did a 1'15.2 with James in the car beside me :-)

Here is a video of me taking my mate Derek around for a few semi-wet laps.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Ebisu Circuit here I come!

Ever since last year when I competed in the 12 hour endurance race in the Honda Civic, I've been dying to get back to Ebisu circuit in the roadster to see how it would like it. Finally, I've managed to hook up a date with 2 good mates and a tuner called Bozz Speed. Should prove for an interesting day out. Now if only Ebisu circuit wasn't so damn far away... Guess its not as far as Suzuka. Suzuka has to be next on the list you would think!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Party Race 2009/5/5 Video

While I am not sure if it is totally allowed to post footage from the Party Race, I guess 2 laps won't hurt anybody and I've been wanting to show off the new RPM input into my TraqMate video setup.

Anyway, here are two early laps from the rather wet race. These were not my best laps for sure but they are a little exciting none-the-less as on the first lap of the video, I just got away without spinning the car through Dunlop and unfortunately lost a place in the process, followed by a faster lap trying to catch people up :-)

Anyway, enjoy the footage and don't get splashed.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Party Race 2009/5/5

As is usual, I neglected to make full use of my camera as the day swallowed me. Try clicking on the photo to find the precious few that I did manage to snap though.

May 5th celebrates my 1st year anniversary since I competed in my debut race. This year I decided to compete again in the Emblem race rather than dropping down to Clubman 2. The competition is fierce in Emblem usually and this year was no different as shown by the qualification lap times. Having missed all of the winter sessions on TC2000, I hoped to beat my personal best of 1'10.578 around TC2000.

The previous day on a crowded circuit I'd managed to get a 1'10.8 so I was very hopeful of scoring a 1'10 flat or there abouts and I pushed hard to get it. I managed to get a 1'10.2 on my first lap and a 1'10.1 on my second lap and never bettered it. I was quite happy with this as it was my best time around Tsukuba and I felt sure it would get me a good medium grid position.

Unfortunately, it was only enough to get me to 16th on the grid out of 17 cars!!! This amazed me as it seems the level is even higher this year. Imagine 16 cars qualifying all within 1 second of each other around a 2km technical circuit? Wow. Seems I'm gonna have to up my game next time out and get some more practice in.

As a quick aside to qualifying with a time of 1'10.1, I remember reading a quote in Going Faster about how a particular driver used image training to gain extra time around a certain circuit. On qualification, he did exactly that time but he made a small mistake which if he had avoided would have seen him an even faster time. Its funny because, on my best lap, I lost about half a second on the exit of turn 1 due to bad oversteer which in turn limited me to my best of of around 1'10 flat... There must be something to putting limits on yourself like that. Think faster to go faster out there!

On with the story. As lunch came and went, it started to rain and by the time it came to race it really was quite wet out on the track. I quite enjoy rain as I find it a good teacher. At the back of the bunch I was also quite content that I no longer had any pressure to preform and could just go out and enjoy the weather.

The first lap was hectic with traffic jams on each corner until the final corner. I was nearly in the back of a car as he braked suddenly mid 1st hairpin but I managed to avoid him. I was in 15th place at the end of lap 1. After the due care lap of checking out the grip, I had some nice slippage through Dunlop which made me remember why its a corner to be respected in the wet. 1 lap later, I should have remembered that as I was carrying too much speed into Dunlop when the car in front was slower than I expected and I lifted slightly mid corner only to lose the rear... Luckily though I recovered the car with only a loss of speed... oh and my 15th place... Damn back to 16th!

Having upped my adrenalin somewhat, I began attacking over the next 10 laps to try and gain a place or two back. Probably about 3 or 4 laps to go, there was a yellow flag at Dunlop and I picked up a place courtesy of car 62. Car 36 was dead ahead but proving very difficult to pass. I'd spent a few laps up his outside on the 1st corner, the 1st hairpin and the 2nd hairpin only to loose out due to being too close to him to accelerate cleanly as early as I wanted to.

On the very last lap, I took an aggressive Dunlop and got up on his outside on the 2nd hairpin where I stayed and some how he gave me the space I needed to exit cleanly on his back left corner on the outside heading up to the finish. Having gotten on the throttle that little bit earlier, I gained inch by painful inch all the way up to the final corner for a side by side up the outside. I felt that this was the thing to do as I had checked out the outside for grip earlier on and felt confident it would work out as long as he didn't spin into me. I felt pretty confident about this too though luckily enough :-)

So, elated, I drove over the line in 14th place. I'd never driven a race quite like it before nor learned as much as I did during those 15 laps of pure rush.

I can't wait for the next Party Race! Thank you Mazda for such a great car and the chance to race it! Thank you Brains for the superb organization and thank you D-Technique for the great support and having me on your team. Thanks to everyone who helped out and supported me on the day including Y & A. Finally a big congrats to all the race winners! Heros all, but watch out as I want my place on the podium back this year!

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Tsukuba TC2000 - 09/05/02

Bit of a disaster of a day at Tsukuba today. 30 cars on the track and not all of them managed to stay on it all the time so there was quite a lot of yellow flags throughout my 3 sessions. Best time was 1'11.3 which I set in the first session even though I had nearly a full tank of gas.

Anyway, Monday and Tuesday await and I'm a little more ready now. This photo shows my new helmet paint to match the car. Side of the helmet is a wolf shape which if you stretch your imagination also reads TOM top-to-bottom. Yes - it requires that you think real hard about it :-)

The good news is RPMs worked great, so I'll see if I can put up a video if I have time later today.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Karting again in Chiba 09/04/26

I still haven't found my way to TC2000 since the last race. I haven't been avoiding it... just worked out that way. I was supposed to go on the 25th but it was a very wet day so I canceled and ended up going karting on the 26th instead.

Karting is such a blast particularly when you get a nice handling kart which just does what you want it do do. Even it wild oversteer moments if you are quick enough it comes right back although you do lose speed that way :-)

Anyway, thought this was a decent photo and it does show my new helmet paint job which I haven't blogged about yet. I'll take another photo of it when I put the darker visor on.

The good news is weather for the rest of the week and the beginning of next week is looking fine as I'm due to hit TC2000 on the 2nd, 4th and 5th :-)

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Adding an RPM input to TraqMate

The TraqMate unit provides a wire whose sole purpose in life is to hook into a tachometer feed and tell you how many RPMs you are doing. By hooking in RPMs, tire sizes, gear ratios etc you also get some other info like what gear you are in, what HP/Torque your car is producing. It also makes for more entertaining videos as the rpm needle should finally move!

After asking around and gathering the required info on how to connect that wire to the car, I finally got together with my good friend The FeatherKing and hooked it in.

TraqMate showing RPMS!!!
Traqmate Display Unit showing the live RPM feed.

It all turned out to be quite easy after we had TraqMate hooked up to the cars power/ground. The key is the following diagram which shows where to connect the TraqMate wire to. The target wire is marked TA and is color coded Yellow/Black.
Mazda_NCEC_Roadster_TACH

The PCM is on the roadster is located under the airbox and once you get the airbox off (and disconnect the battery etc), you see something like the following. The red arrow shows the 2nd wire from the left on the top row where we hooked into.
Tapping the tach/rpm signal at the PCM.

Once we'd tapped the wire and tested it to the TraqMate unit by setting the car as a 1 cylinder car in the TraqMate car setup, it all worked and we needed to find a way through the firewall from the engine bay into the cabin where the TraqMate unit is kept. This also turned out to be quite easy and we found a nice path using the same access hole which my gauges were using. The arrow below shows the place.
Path through firewall.

Finding where this hole came out in the cabin was another thing... I forgot to take a photo of this part but its basically deep in the passenger footwell and higher up than you expect.

The following photo shows where I have both the TraqMate Sensor Unit and ChaseCam stored under the passengers seat. It works out quite well with some heavy duty velcro sticking them both down.
TraqMate/Chasecam

I'm getting really fond of the ChaseCam unit even though I am officially still testing it. The camera mounts nice and low and the units mic is out of the wind unlike when I had my conventional handy-cam up there on the rollbar.
Chasecam on the rollcage

All I have to do now is hit the track and get some proper footage! Next track day is May 2nd and of course the Party Race is coming up on May 5th. Wish me luck!

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Creating a video with TraqMate

I've been wanting to upload a TraqMate video of March 10th at Fuji for sometime now but I thought it would be fun to show a little demo of how easy it is using the TraqMate/Chasecam combination to pull out a video of your best lap of a certain session. So here it is...



Two things wrong with this video of course... One is that the video capture program that I used to capture the video from my desktop doesn't actually show the video that the TraqMate software actually shows for some reason. It does show the other videos though which is a bit wierd. But anyway... The second thing is that I was too lazy to do sound :-)

So - once you do all that, you basically end up with your video file... It's so easy. No more editing or not much anyway depending on what you want to do. The video I made in that video is this one... Its not actually my fastest lap but it's not so slow either :-) I'm quite the happy camper with my purchase!



Enjoy!

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Tsukuba TC1000 - 09/03/01

I'm rather late about posting an update on TC1000. Needless to say I had a great time and it was great to be back in the car again and to put it through its paces. Before going though, my tires were in bad condition from the last endurance race last year. The front tires were pretty badly worn so I decided to try using 2 rear tires from my spare set on the front and to see how that went. The rear tires don't wear so much on the roadster compared to the front so it seemed like a good idea to save some money.

So as well as needing to wear in new front tires, it was also my first time with the Chasecam and TrackMate setup. I was looking forward to trying that out. Tires proved to be quite a challenge for the first 2 sessions with lots of under-steer followed by some over-steer. TC1000 is not a bad place to enjoy a little over-steer though as its quite safe and I was soon having a lot of fun.

I managed to post my best time at TC1000 which is 0'43.847 some 700ms faster than my previous best. The weather had a lot to do with that I think as the temperatures were still quite on the cool side of things.

Unfortunately, I was in a bit of a rush to setup the camera and the footage is all sideways as I didn't check it before recording. Shame on me! However, TraqMate worked flawlessly and gave me some interesting data to look at. The most interesting thing was comparing 3 other drivers of my car against each other and seeing the differences in lines, braking etc. I've prepared a little video which I captured from TraqMate to show off this cool feature.



A note about the video. The car is my car. I was the only person in the car when I was driving where as I was in the passenger seat for the other 3 drivers. I'd estimate the car was therefore about 60kg lighter when I was driving it hence acceleration is a little better. Tyre conditions and fuel loads were also getting better with the green driver having the worst of it and the red driver having the lightest fuel load and probably the best grip as I'd wore the front tires down nicely.

You can really see where my strengths and weaknesses are. I need to work on my braking mostly. I think I'm engaging ABS too much as I take too long to slow down on the first hairpin. I also lose time under braking into the first section of the last corner. The GPS really shows how the lines differ too. So lots of ideas for what to try out next time I visit TC1000.

Friday, February 27, 2009

The Traqmate Kit

As promised in my previous post, here are some photos of the Traqmate Data Logger. I haven't got the installed photos handy right now but here is what it looks like when it arrives.


Traqmate Data Logger Box
This is the pizza style box it comes in. Quite nice presentation I think.


Open Traqmate Box
And this is what's hiding inside! The Display Unit, Sensor Unit and a few other necessities.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

New TraqMate Datalogger!

It's almost March! My first session since November's race last year will be at Tsukuba TC1000 on Sunday - March 1st. Can't wait to get back on the track.

Since I've been gone, I've been busy saving money and well decided to splurge out and get a data logger. After looking around for quite a while I decided to go with TraqMate. Some cool features are:
  • High GPS sampling rate (up to 40Hz). Higher sampling means more accurate info me thinks. This is pretty high compared cheaper offerings.
  • Extendability - Programmable Analog/Digital inputs for recording stuff like water temp, rpms, brake lights, ABS or anything else you care to tap a wire into.
  • Integrated Video - Can view video directly with data analysis. This is great as you can see why you were slow/fast etc directly with the sector data!
  • Video Creation - Save certain laps etc as video along with a virtual display for speed, g-forces etc. I do like my videos so this is a great function for me.
  • Small Footprint - separate display unit takes up less front window space than a performance box for example.
  • Easy to Use - I tried a friends last year and it was really easy to use. I also tried the Performance box but Traqmate wins hands down.

Anyway, I'm rather excited about my new purchase and getting some data at TC1000 this weekend. I've also got a chase cam on lend so will compare that to my usual video recorder.

Oh yeah, in case you are interested, I might as well point you in the direction of TraqMate Japan. The website is TraqMate Japan. If you get tempted, please mention that you heard about it from Tweety and you might get a discount! The website is still under construction so if you can read English you might get more info from the main website in the US.

Anyway, I'll try and take some photos later and will be sure to post some video from Sunday.