JamesMilko wrote:
Hey, we had multiple collisions and mechanical failures as well. Luckily they only cost us 13 minutes total.
Bad MAP wire, 2x cracked rotor, 2x impacts worthy of looking the car over/repairing stuff.
I'd consider you guys on the right strategy.
Exactly. If Randy could get his car reliable, it could win, even with a 5 laps for the D class penalty. We started off with a broken axle boot prior to the race. This was found at Noon for a 2pm start. Try finding a Infiniti J30 axle on a Saturday

Then we had the contact, but that really would have only cost us the mandatory 5 minutes on pit road to cut off the remainder of the fender, but a universal boot on the axle was then put on, replacing the home made boot Randy fabbed up.
Shortly thereafter, the car was making horrible noises... Throwout bearing on the clutch was done. After the full clutch install, one of the two shifter bolts came undone going into turn one. Being stuck in 5th with no ability to get it out had me stranded in the grass between 1 and 2. Randy then had an offcourse excursion that ripped off the o2 sensors, causing a small electrical fire. Then the differential overheated and caught on fire (literally), which after filling it with new fluid, only got us another 5-7 laps and we called it a day. Even with that, we had 4 of our 6 drivers that each of their best times would have cracked the top 10 for the event, with my best lap of a 2:20.6 was on lap 8, just before caution that bunched me up for the rollover wreck in Oak Tree. With 90 cars on the track at the time, I was pleased with that.
With all of that, it still goes to show that reliable speed, consistency and staying on track wins endurance races.... every single time. - AB