Blog Post

1st race of the 2019 season.

Dean Halsey • Apr 08, 2019

Snetterton April 7th 2019

Sorry for the late post the race was 17:40 and we did not get home until 22:00.

Well a very manic Sunday it started with qualifying in torrential rain, even rivers in places on the circuit which was very disconcerting for the rain novice. To make things worse after the first lap the power to my heated front screen was draining down to earth and the screen fogged up. It was like driving in the dark with no headlights, so I gave up and came in only to find the last 5 mins of the session was drier, a lesson learned there. So I qualified 14th and had a lot to do in the race. As usual I drive better when I have to pass and in 3 laps, I was already sixth. Then I was in a big gap just me, and my times went up but I still came in to my pit stop 1st in class, when I hit the kill switch and my finger went on the extinguisher as well and that went off in the engine bay and cockpit. I then quickly got back in as if nothing happened and tried to belt up, laugh It was like being in a foam party. I left the pits engine misfiring and Carl thinking I was mad. I knew if I kept going the engine would dry up and so it did after 3 laps with 3/4 power and a massive misfire it then cleared coupled with all that the soapy foam leaked out and went to my rear tyres and I became a drifter, good for spectating but scary in the driver seat, any way seventh place and third in class a very good outcome to an eventful days racing. I finished with very sore eyes and lips from the foam but me and Sporty survived to fight another day.

Hardened supporters such as Mat and Jonny stayed to the end others went home earlier cold and wet and some on to the night shift.

But thanks to you all for the great support.

by Dean Halsey 12 Feb, 2023
My lovely god daughter holds the cup for Swinging Sixties G2 over all winner for the second year running.
by Dean Halsey 08 Oct, 2020
Well a great weekend racing at long last but it was not without its issues as usual. The data collection went great every sensor was being logged by the ECU and fed via CAN buss to the V-Box. We arrived Saturday afternoon and I had booked 2 motor homes to stay in to save the COVID-19 risk at hotels. They arrived on time and were a great idea, we moved into the garage late afternoon and got everything ready for our Sunday qualification. Come Sunday morning the qualification went well as this was my first race of the season, I qualified 12 th on the grid with a 1:23:68 , and I felt there was a second at least in my time for the afternoon race. We lined up and followed the pace car round for a rolling start and after the first lap I was eighth. I started to look how I could pass some of the faster cars and it appeared my best chance was at the chicane. So I decided to break 50 yards later something I know is possible but this time the brakes faded and I ended up being too fast to turn in so I pointed the car through the gravel trap straight onto the start and finish straight. I only lost 2 places but this made me conscious of the brakes and when I tried it again I barley made it through the chicane broad siding left then right to slow down. I decided to come in when the pit lane opened so as I could report the brake issue and we had 2 minutes to check the car out. During this pit stop I dropped 19 places. I came out passing cars as quick as I could, but the Mustangs were wide and difficult to pass when I eventually did the safety car came out. The clever teams out there already decided to wait for a safety car, and it worked most of them lost only 6 places as the safety car was very slow. It was then difficult to pass with my suspect brakes, but I managed to claw back to 13 th place. I stopped outside the garage and when I re started to enter the garage it needed a lot of revs to move the car, and when we put the car away the brakes were seized on and we had to winch it on. When you look at the pictures below, I do not know how I managed to stay on the black stiff but I am glad I did, it was the automatic cadence breaking my brain must of decided upon as it would have done for most drivers “on and off braking” for those who don’t understand, that kept me out of the barriers and in one piece. 
by Dean Halsey 06 Sept, 2020
We started the Truxton Friday testing with very promising lap times that would have put us on pole position for the race on Sunday. Scott my race coach took the car out for 3 laps to set a fast lap for me to use as a V-Box reference to improve my race driving. He was just due to finish a 1:29:00 second lap when we had what has now been diagnosed as oil serge, this meant that no 3 big end bearing shell spun and seized, consequently the conrod broke and came out of both sides of the block, so there was no Sunday race for us.
by Dean Halsey 16 Jun, 2020
This is a report of the goings on during the winter and our work during lockdown in preperation for what remains for 2020.
by Dean Halsey 09 Sept, 2019
A Brief overview of the work required after Brands Hatch prior to thurxton.
by Dean Halsey 30 Aug, 2019
7.5 ton with 12 ton payload when towing a great race support truck. Mitsubishi Canter ex Snap-On Veichcle with only 32000k miles on the clock.
by Dean Halsey 30 Aug, 2019
Brands Hatch CSCC 2019 Swinging Sixties preperation qualifying and the race.
by Dean Halsey 08 Aug, 2019
Some of the preparation ready for our local race circuit Brands Hatch 26th August 2019. CSCC Historic racing at its best.
by Dean Halsey 08 Aug, 2019
Anglesey CSCC Swinging Sixties July 2019. Historic motor racing at its best.
by Dean Halsey 16 Jul, 2019
Design changes to stop the failure we had a SPA
Show More
Share by: