High Performance Driver Education

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High Performance Drivers Education and Open Track type events. Where you learn to drive your car at high speed on a race track. I'm an instructor in one of the best HPDE groups in the country, and have been driving in these types of events since 1980. I'll also cover related events, such as autocross and those sponsored by GM and Mazda in the summer months.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008  

 Assessment of Driver's Events in Texas
 

For Driving Enthusiasts, Texas is a very nice place to be these days. We have year-round events, a terrific group running HPDEs, and several tracks.

The Drivers Edge (http://www.TheDriversEdge.net/) is the best HPDE group I've seen in my 28 years in this hobby. Thanks to the management of this group, a large body of experienced instructors, and it's "non-denominational" approach ("run what you brung" - meaning no snotty brand-centricity, as in the LSR PCA), high performance drivers education is doing very well in Texas these days. I'm proud to be an Instructor in this group (having abandoned the LSR PCA when their elitism got the better of them).

Texas is also doing very nicely for roadcourses these days: we have Texas World Speedway (TWS: the original, the best, and the fastest) in College Station, Texas Motor Speedway (TMS: for one event a year, with challenging banking on the NASCAR oval) outside of Fort Worth, Eagles Canyon near Decatur (a new track; our first event there is coming soon), and the very well-established and recently expanded Motorsport Ranch in Cresson. Also:

  • there is another Motorsport Ranch facility near Houston, but design and management issues prevent it's use for these types of events.
  • there was an announcement of a new facility named "Racers Ranch" to be located east of Dallas, but that project appears stalled and unable to get off the ground for the time being.
  • and there was also a roadcourse in Corpus Cristi on the airstrip at the US Naval Base, however this has been closed to racers since 9/11 and may never reopen. 

When I originally moved to Texas in 1989, TWS was in bankruptcy and there weren't any other roadcourses in the state. Now we have several open, and two more on top of these are also being discussed.

The brand new Harris Hill Road facility is nearly completion and is coming along very well. All paving is complete, and enough is there for a few test laps at slow speed. Follow the link above for more information.

Photos below show the Harris Hill Road pit area, and the general scope of the track. This is particularly nice for me - it's located practically in my own backyard.

In other types of events, we also have an Open Road event (in which we won our class in 2000: http://www.drivingenthusiast.net/sec-events/events-open-road/2000.04-bb/index.htm ), a measured mile event, and of course several SCCA regions running autocross events. 

What we don't have in Texas is an established and continuing road rally program: a few groups such as the Miata Club and Texas A&M SportsCar Club run a (very) few events between them. A group in Dallas also ran a navigator's school once to my knowledge. What we need is a dedicated Rallymaster who will establish and run a continuing event. The best example I've seen of this is the "Discover America Rally": (http://www.rallywny.com/rallywny/DARflyer2007.htm ) in Western New York. I entered several Discover America events when I lived in that area back in the 70s and 80s. The husband and wife team who run them, Tom and Karen Krajewski, make a strong commitment to running the event every year.  Running a rally means becoming intimately familiar with hundreds of back roads and their oddities and nuances (all the better for challenging route navigation) and driving them continuously in advance of the event. And it means dedicating probably a hundred hours of hard work towards it every year in order to make sure it comes off well, which, snowstorms allowing, it has for 30 years straight.  These types of folks are hard to find... keeping them at it is even harder. I'm hoping somebody in Texas steps up to the plate one of these days - and that many of us make a commitment to help them run the events year after year.   


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Sunday, April 08, 2007  

 What ever became of your old cars?
 

Have you ever wondered what ever became of your old cars? Did the kid who bought it wreck it? Did the old lady who bought it drive it only on Sundays? Did the new owners ever find out about the all the mods you did - and then removed?

A good way to find out is with CARFAX. Membership is inexpensive http://www.carfax.com, and the results are detailed. Using the VIN numbers, I recently looked up several of the cars I've owned during the past 20 years.

My '94 Cobra:


This one is the exception to the usual rule. I traded it in to a dealer on a '96 Cobra. The dealer whole-saled it to another Ford dealer, who sold it to a person who later became a friend. I was sitting in my office at IBM one day when the phone rang and a person asked "are you the person who used to own a '94 Cobra?". I figured it had blown up and was hesitating to to answer... until he said it was fine and wanted to know some of the dertails about the car. Things naturally went in the direction of track events (as they do in any conversation with me), and a month later he was at his first event at Texas World Speedway, and shortly afterwards was doing mid-130s thru turn one! Later, when a twin-turpo Supra enticed him (as they do with everybody), he sold it to a friend of his who also took up the same events, and is still doing them to this day. That person also became a friend.

The '94 Cobra was the most successful track car I've ever owned. I put 22,000 very hard miles on it, and it only had a very few issues (loss of a MAF, front control arm bushings). Currenlty, it had over 80k miles on it and it is still running strong, although there have been a few T-5 transmission issues (all solved). With Ford motorsport headers, an exhaust system, a larger MAF, a complete suspension replacement (the V-6 based SVT suspension was terrible when stock) including a much-needed panhard bar, and a set of racing seats, the car is dependable and predictable. It isn't particularly fast (the market for performance cars has moved well beyond what a pushrod 5 liter V-8 can compete against) but it is dead reliable. I drove it about 4 years ago and fondly remembered it's predictablility and dependability.

CARFAX - shows the change of registrations from me to the 2 other owners in succession. No issues shown.

My '97 SHO:

My '97 SHO was a lease, serving the purpose of daily driver when I was in Redmond with Microsoft. I had it about a month when I came back to Austin before I had to turn it in (coinciding with the arrival of my '99 Cobra) and in that time I took it out on the track at Texas World Speedway just to confirm my high-speed impressions of it. It was flawless there, although of course not particularly fast.

When I turned it in, it was in perfect condition. It did have one distinctive mark on it from a scrape on a peice of cement in a parking lot, under the front left bumper.

After I turned it in, I spotted the car up the road in Elgin TX in front of the City Cafe. It was clearly my car, as evdenced by the same mark under the bumper. Soon after I saw the car several times again and came to the conclusion that the new owner lived somewhere near my house. I even saw it at the neighborhood 7-11 and almost stopped to talk. No point in that, though.

CARFAX - unbelievable: the new owner kept it to the 122,000 mile mark and has moved to San Antonio. A year ago, the car was sold at dealer auction and hasn't been re-registered since. I'm disapointed at that, but not surprised. The SHO engine had it's reliability problems and I'm surprised it lasted this long. RIP, SHO.

My '99 Cobra:

 

The '99 Cobra was my first big build-up after my return to Texas from Redmond WA. The increased power and the new independent rear suspension made this car work very well. Modifications (see link above) mad eit work even better.

I kept the '99 for two years, then sold it to a friend who in turn turn sold it almost immediately when it didn't work out as a track car for him.

CARFAX - the '99 is in it's 4th owner, but still in Texas. As of last Fall, it has 59k miles on it. At one point in 2004, it was sold thru a dealer to it's current owner outside of Houston. I do wonder if it stil has it's Recaro seats and the othe rmods I made to it.

==============

Several years ago, I looked up some of my more infamous cars on CARFAX.

  • The hated 1983 Mustang GT ended up wrecked at the same dealer I traded it into for my Mustang SVO. That's a fitting end for a car that was an absolute piece of junk.
  • My '96 Cobra, complete with Yellow KONI DAs, was still in the state of Washington - but is in it's 3rd owner. The 2nd owner, no doubt had to spend all of their money on back surgery due to the KONIs and the thousand-pound front springs. That was one great car on the track, but a bone-crusher on public roads. All-around, you couldn't live with it.

==============

So CARFAX will give you the mileage at major milestones such as registration renewal, major dealer service, or austion sale. It will also indicate whether the car has been crashed and received major body damage. Flood, fire, and lemon buybacks are also indicated. Junk and salvage tieles are also shown. An estimate of yearly mileage is computed. Any potential odometer rollback is indicated.

That's the extent of the information CARFAX can provide... if you want to know more you could take the VIN to a dealer and ask them to run a service history on the car. They won't of course tell you the name of the current owner, bvut you could see what kind of servicing and parts replacement it's had.

==============

But there is more to this research going on in my mind... like most of the cars I've had, these three were originally love/hate relationships. I drove them ruthlessly on the track, or left them carelessly in whatever open parking spot could be found. They had a single purpose to me and I drove them to within an inch of their lives in achieving that purpose. The Mustangs were driven at 10/10ths for most of their lives. The SHO was left in any open spot that could be found on the Microsofct campus - that was after all it's purpose - and it was even driven near flat-out on dirt roads in the Olympic National Forest in Washington State while spectating at a SCCA Pro Rally. It ended up stuck in a ditch, but it served the purpose of getting me to some great spectating locations.

When I was done with these cars, I left them behind, very rarely giving them a second thought. I was already on to the next one at that point, ruthlessly driving yet another car to 10/10ths of it's life while plotting another round of mods or planning it's disposal for yet another track car. 

And after many years of this I've come to one conclusion: that this is the problem with this hobby. It's very difficult to "love them as they are". You lust after them until you finally own them, and then inevitably find there is always something dead wrong or something that needs major (and expensive) improvement. Finally in the end you hate them and move on to something else. After several of these, you realize you never even liked them for what they were.

There are very few of them you look back fondly at - and never until years later when you have exhausted the hobby and then find new dimensions to it such as restoring old cars. For example, I'd love to find and restore an original 240Z - even though the car would be useless as a track car, is dead slow by modern standards, and has the chassis integrity of a wet noddle, there is something timeless in it's appeal. Even thirty-seven laters later, it's got stunning looks. This is a car that could be a keeper, one that I'd preserve, protect, and even cherish.  And if there are some fellow hobbyists who also see the value of certain classic cars like I do, then chances are they've also exhausted the love/hate beat/abuse track hobby.

Next month will be the 27th anniversary of track events for me. My first event was, I believe, in May of 1980 at a Corvette Club of Cleveland event at Nelson Ledges. The car was a '79 Indy Pace Car Mustang, and it had it's faults. Nevertheless, I ditched the car for an '83 Mustang GT which turned out to be an absolute piece of junk and was a major mistake. That was the beginning of my love/hate phase of track events - and particularly of Fords for track events.

If I've found love since then, and perhaps even reformed (recovered?), it's with the S2000. It's not the fastest thing around the track (although it is within the top 15%), but it is the most fun and the most visceral car I've ever driven (and as an instructor I've driven nearly everything made in the past ~20 years). It's a car you like from the first drive and to the last. It's taught me far more about driving than any of the Mustangs ever did. Instead of relying on brute (and unreliable) power, it relies on finesse. Instead of the loosing power while trying to figure out how to get the power down to the ground you are challenged to keep the engine in it's power band (a stratospheric 6-9k RPM), really leverage the full abilities of the independent rear suspension, and focus the razor-sharp steering on finding and keeping the perfect line. All of this makes for a car that will run circles around most others, while constantly and repeatedly endearing itself to you. I have no doubt I'll someday be restoring one of these for concours events, while at the same time explaining to folks what I've done with them over the years - both on track and on back-roads driving (something no Mustang ever had any capabilities for). And that's what true love is all about - a lifetime of stories, perhaps even love lost - but above all having and remembering good times without excuse or regret.


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Tuesday, January 16, 2007  

 Nurburgring back in the day
 

Thanks to AutoSpies.com for digging up this video from Google. This is an open track day at the Nurburgring, probably around 1970 or earlier. I haven't taken the time to figure out what cars are what in this... but I do know I never want to drive anything in this video on any track anywhere.

Note the folks in the VW bug 'vert that goes by... and then the bug hardtop where in a spin the door pops open and the seatbelt-less driver flies right out of the car. And look at the crowds rush out onto the track.

Clearly very little in the way of safety standards then... and no instruction either!

Unbelievable...! These were not the "good old days"!

[Continue at link]


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Thursday, November 23, 2006  

 GM The Drive in Vegas - closed
 

"The Drive" by GM in Las Vegas has closed. That's a darn shame... this was a unique experience for most people, and it offered something the other manufacturers didn't have.

Reference: my visit to The Drive in May 2006, in which I drove nearly everything they offered: http://www.drivingenthusiast.net/sec-blog/2006/05/18.html#a1505

Thanks to the marvels of Microsoft's Live Search, we can see what it used to look like - in the glory of 3D.

Try the 3D experience at the link to this post.


A picture named gm-experience.jpg


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Sunday, November 12, 2006  

 HarrisHillRoad - new racetrack in Texas
 

home

Harris Hill Road announced on November 10th that it is taking memberships. Track construction is underway. 1.8 miles in length. I believe they are considerably further ahead in construction and membership than is Bergrennenring.

Here's another view of the track, courtesy of YouTube:

 



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 Yet another new racetrack in Texas: Bergrennenring
 
Bergrennenring

Another new track is in the planning stags here in Texas: the Bergrennenring. IF DONE, this would be located near Johnson City, a short drive from Austin. The track owner has been going to club meetings around the state explaining what he plans to do.

This would make 6 racetracks in Texas... not counting the track on the Navy base in Corpus Christi - closed since 9/11 and likely to remain so since the base is closing.


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