Mike had a pretty good day Sunday. The rest of us were struggling.
Gary was having just about as much difficulty as I was, but showing less irritation about it.
Mike was in my run group, so I couldn't watch much except for the big grin and hand gestures as he went by in the pits, indicating he was stretching his lead with each run.
In the morning, I was nailing the front left cone on the first gate in Corner Station 1, because I was trying to continue accelerating from the start, instead of slowing to turn.
At the end of Corner Station 2, I was having trouble keeping control in the hard right turn.
And directly following that, at the beginning of the hard left turnaround at the far end of the lot in Corner Station 3, I was fishtailing and/or spinning on every single run. I had the camera set up and for my single clean run, had it shooting down the left side of he car. The angle shows some really wicked rear wheel drive looking counter steer to recover the tail.
I turned the rear dampers down 1 1/2 turns and the fronts up one click, even dropped the front tires 5 pounds, nothing helped.
I was running 52s with fishtails, and 56-58 with full 180 spins and having to turn around. I should have been below 50 easily.
I drove back over to the far end of the lot and ran through the video while walking the turn, and finally determined that I was swinging to the right after the gate to set up for the left hand turnaround. Just outside the chalked line. And unless you reached down with your hand and felt the blacktop surface, you wouldn't know that there was a thin layer of tiny gravel and grit in that exact spot. Left foot braking does not like transitioning from clean pavement, onto pebble covered pavement. Lesson: When at Family Arena, drive within the lines.
Blytheville is concrete, and should be clean since it's an airport. The good news is there shouldn't be any gravel to foul up cornering. The bad news is that Mike will be able to stand on the gas pedal more between the corners.
Gary was having just about as much difficulty as I was, but showing less irritation about it.
Mike was in my run group, so I couldn't watch much except for the big grin and hand gestures as he went by in the pits, indicating he was stretching his lead with each run.
In the morning, I was nailing the front left cone on the first gate in Corner Station 1, because I was trying to continue accelerating from the start, instead of slowing to turn.
At the end of Corner Station 2, I was having trouble keeping control in the hard right turn.
And directly following that, at the beginning of the hard left turnaround at the far end of the lot in Corner Station 3, I was fishtailing and/or spinning on every single run. I had the camera set up and for my single clean run, had it shooting down the left side of he car. The angle shows some really wicked rear wheel drive looking counter steer to recover the tail.
I turned the rear dampers down 1 1/2 turns and the fronts up one click, even dropped the front tires 5 pounds, nothing helped.
I was running 52s with fishtails, and 56-58 with full 180 spins and having to turn around. I should have been below 50 easily.
I drove back over to the far end of the lot and ran through the video while walking the turn, and finally determined that I was swinging to the right after the gate to set up for the left hand turnaround. Just outside the chalked line. And unless you reached down with your hand and felt the blacktop surface, you wouldn't know that there was a thin layer of tiny gravel and grit in that exact spot. Left foot braking does not like transitioning from clean pavement, onto pebble covered pavement. Lesson: When at Family Arena, drive within the lines.
Blytheville is concrete, and should be clean since it's an airport. The good news is there shouldn't be any gravel to foul up cornering. The bad news is that Mike will be able to stand on the gas pedal more between the corners.