Blog Post

Spa Classic 2019.

Dean Halsey • Jul 02, 2019

Thursday testing went very well with my times coming down to 3:01 and I could see another 2 seconds that I could reduce it by so a 2:59 was my target.

Friday qualification.

During the qualification I could not match my times from Thursday 0.5 of a second or more and every one said it was the extreme heat but I reported a potential problem with the near side rear braking out on me, not violently but grip and un grip was going on, something I had not felt before. So carl wen to work to see If I had a problem and this is what he found. The rear suspension tube where the damper fits inside had come un welded this could of resulted in a big accident.

We managed to get this welded by another team but it turned out to have no penetration and failed as we tightened up the damper in the tube. So the plan now was to drop of the team early Saturday AM and I would go out and about looking for a good welder. I found one 30 mins from the circuit in Liege that did the best job I have seen in a long while

I delivered this repaired leg to carl and we was up and ready to race 2 hrs prior to the start and better still I trusted this job 100%. I lined up on the grid 13th and had a great race to finish 10th but first in class by 3:00.

This qualified me for 10th on Sunday so I set out to better this position and after 1 lap I was in 6th place and felt that I could hold it, only for my ATL fuel cell to fail on me with the negative wire fracturing as shown below. However this is inside the tank so a DNF for Sunday. A great weekend and very happy with the cars performance and the driver was not bad either even if I say so myself.

See the picture below for the DNF culprit.

we are now going to modify the suspension leg on the other side by welding the top and add a welded gusset on both struts as per the modification on the rally cars. We are also looking for a plumed in back up fuel pump idea from ATL.

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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. 
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