trying to save wear on the tires i see haha
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Pitchblack Motorsports Rally e30 318i (now with M50) - and some Porsche 924S stuff.
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It's funny actually - stage really doesn't wear tires down nearly as much as rallycross on our gravel venue. After BRS the tires we used still look virtually new. They'd wear down more after ONE rallycross at Frostburg!Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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So....slight change of plans regarding the Porsche project as well, since today's rallycross was cancelled due to flooded fields (rescheduled for December - snow cross, perhaps!? I had considered just cutting bait with this car and selling it off, but as luck would have it, something worked out that may solve my problem. As noted above, the black car has a decent engine but the interior is so-so and the body has several major issues that I really don't want to deal with.
As luck would have it, though, a spotted a CL post down in North Carolina for an '87 924S for cheap. Got in touch with the owner who said that the body was good, interior was "not too bad" and that he had used the car as a daily driver for years until last March, when the engine started making a knocking noise. Then he just parked it. It's pretty well-knonwn that the 924S/944 engine has problems with the #2 bearings, so that's probably what it is. But I don't much care. It has a good body and complete interior. I already have a car with a working engine.
So after a number of phone calls and texts, today off I went with the trailer, 350 miles south to Yadkinsville North Carolina. Car was as advertised...Had been hit in the rear quarter years ago but the repair looks to be damn near perfect. Other than the primer there is no sign of body damage there, and nothing more than a few small dings elsewhere. The paint is terrible, interior is dirty but all there and in decent shape it seems. Car passed NC state safety inspection less than a year ago and he had receipts from some new things he did in the last year or two (like front wheel bearings and new high-pressure fuel hoses).
So of course, I bought it for under $1k (plus an old mountain bike I threw in for the guy's son).
The tow back was uneventful other than an hour or so in traffic near/behind a gorgeous Porsche GT4 probably coming back from VIR (which was on my route). Love that sound....
Also caught up with a SpecE30 coming from VIR too. Apparently this guy is one of the best SE30 drivers on the East Coast. He is also a very fast driver when towing lol.
So, it's home, it's in the garage, and tomorrow I'll check it out a bit more and see what the plan will be. I do know the plan will be to swap the engine out of the black car into this one (after refurb'ing it over the winter) and take useful parts off the black car, then part it out and/or get rid of it to get my driveway back
Feel free to follow the build on this car further on GRM forum at this link: https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/fo.../121739/page1/Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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So other than being driven a few times, the only thing I've done is put the swaybars back on the e30 (I want to do some test and tuning at the next event since i've clinched the season points, and am doing a track/autocross the weekend after).
Kind of a letdown of a post, after GRM posted the car/thread in their magazine (for those who don't know, I am doing this build thread both here and on GRM)
Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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Today put the rear swaybar back on. I've been runnning without them for a couple years now and I like how the car handles and turns-in in the dirt/gravel. But with a track autocross in 2 weeks figured I want the sways on there to check body lean a bit. We have a rallycross this weekend, but I"ve clinched the points for the class already so probably a good time to see how I like the car with the sways on (with the stiffer springs), since I've never tried that combination. So took care of that.
As luck would have it, I was going to test drive the car, turned it on and my brake warning light was flickering, and then the clutch pedal went to the floor. Dammit. Fluid level was low (not low enough to get air into the brakes, thankfully, but low enough that the clutch line was sucking air. Looked under the car and sure enough, brake fluid dripping on the bellhousing. So looks like the slave cylinder is shot....not bad since it's the same one I put on there 5 years ago.
So with a rallycross on Sunday, got online and ordered up a new slave and clutch master (might as well do them at the same time), and also will touch base with Carlos at Condor Speed Shop and try to get my hands on a stainless clutch line fast so I can just do the whole system.
Sucks that the car is out in the driveway near the street, so guess I'll be working in the leaves and acorns. Thankfully it's supposed to be fairly warm this week...Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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Hah, yeah that was such a debacle....A 9-hour tow to get there and then we got like 4 total runs over two days....but the free-for-all on the circle track was fun. That clay infused with wax is NASTY though when wet. We literally pulled like 100lbs of it off of the car that day and over the next months. Stickiest, nastiest stuff I've ever seen.
Too bad Ryan didn't show the video of when I blew by him and Justin (in the two Justys) on the track, haha....
Btw, Ryan just entered an e30 (with limited success) at Empire State Peformance Rally, and now they're going to use it for Chumpcar. So he's turned to the dark side to some extent :)Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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So a quick update about DC region rallycross #7. I came into this event guaranteed at least a tie for the season points championship (with an 8th event remaining) - so basically I just had to finish in the top-8 or so to get a point. With that in mind, and the fact that I'm doing a "track-autocross" next weekend, I decided to re-install the sway bars for the tarmac. That said, I've never had the sways on with this current spring setup so wanted to see if they performed well at all on the dirt.
Swaybar install is as easy as ever, so I jumped in the car to test it out and.....the clutch pedal goes to the floor. Strange since I had just moved the car there an hour earlier. Under the car, a puddle of brake fluid. Dammit. It was pretty easy to trace the fluid to a blown seal on the clutch slave cylinder (which wasn't even new when I installed it 5 years ago, IIRC). With a day before the event, I had to get something pretty quick. I decided I might as well do the master and the soft line while I was in there. In retrospect I should have just done the slave and left the rest alone, because the master turned out to be a major hassle. Difficult to get to, difficult to get to the bolts, difficult to get to the feed hose, and with a cage in the car and fixed seats, it takes some contortion to get in there.
So after an hour on my back, head and shoulders scraping on the floor nonskid...it was in. While I was at it I installed a new braided clutch line from Condor Speed Shop that Carlos overnighted to me (thanks!). So it all works fine now, back to normal. Yay.
On to rallycross. NIce weather, nice courses, nice conditions. The whole MOD RWD crew was there, with 11 or 12 cars registered, including Josh Sennett, trying to finish an event in the M50-swapped e30, and Nick finally with the e36 M3 ready to go. Of course Eric/Neil were there in their e30, battling for 2nd in season points, Eric H/Stephen in their e30, a BR-Z, a couple Volvos, etc. SA front-runner Mike Golden sheared a couple wheels studs before the event and asked for a co-drive, to which I said yes.
Anyhow, the long and the short of it is that the car is terrible on grass/dirt with the sways. Damn near uncontrollable, understeering heavily on lower-speed turns then snapping to oversteer with no warning. And it would NOT rotate on command except at high entry speeds with heavy trail-braking. So I was entering corners faster than usual just to try to get the car to snap, which it did inconsistently. And it was awful in slaloms - could not get it to "dance" the way I always can.
So, the long and the short of it is that even pushing as hard as I could, the best I could manage was 3rd, almost 10 seconds behind Eric Eisele and 4-5 behind his codriver Neil. Too bad since the courses would have been excellent for my normal setup.
Interestingly, Mike Golden (who did poorly when he drove my car last year) finished just tenths of a second behind me in the end. I guess as a Subaru driver he's used to the understeer, lol....
All that said, I locked up the points championship for the second straight year, so that's nice.
This coming weekend I'm heading up to Summit Point Raceway for the "refrigerator bowl" autocross, which is set up on two of the tracks (Jefferson and Shenandoah circuits), has very few cones, and no course working. I thought about taking the WRX but nah...taking the rally car with the old Star Specs on it. Should be interesting, and probably very slow haha...
Oh a few other things...
rusty e36s don't like rallycross (though he ran the rest of the day with no rear shock)
Also, don't use steelies for rallycross. This is the second time a car has had this happen in the last few events....
Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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Last weekend I went out to Summit Point Motorsports Park with the rally car for the "Refrigerator Bowl" - which is basically an autocross but on several of the road course tracks. No cones, no course working, basically each run is about half of one of the tracks, with a few curbed chicanes to keep speeds down. We ran on Jefferson circuit (which I had never run) and Shenandoah Circuit (which I have hundreds of laps on, but it was reversed-direction for this, which was weird).
Car went out "as-is" except with the swaybars on, and my 5-year-old 195-width Star Specs. The courses were a lot of fun and out of 80 cars out there (almost all of which were either "sporty" daily drivers or autocross cars) I actually finished 40-something on Jefferson (more open course where my lack of power showed) and low 30s on Shenandoah (a more technical course where handling is rewarded).
Here's some vid of the two courses in case you're interested:
And some pics:
Alan Claffie caught me running up the hill on Jefferson
Off-camber, over a crest, in a rally car = wheel gapz!
A couple of the rallycross e30s on the tarmac
And some BMWs better suited to the tarmac
New Focus RS, and a CAM car...nice
At lunch went down and watched some action on the Main circuit
Anyhow, that was fun, and was also a good prep for the NJ rallysprint coming up, which is half on a paved track, and half on a dirt motocross course next to it. Decided I really dislike front sway on the track too with this suspension (and definitely on the dirt, as previously noted), so today took it off entirely. Rear I'll leave on and just disconnect one side.
WIth temps dropping into the 40s, today was a good day to switch over to the winter tires (Altimax Arctics) and hide my Star Specs away out of the freezing weather. I also ordered up two more Altimax Arctics so I'll have 7 total wheels/tires for the rallysprint and Wellsboro Winter Rally in February
Also, the black 924, now stripped of everything I wanted, went away last week. Two fellow rallyists - Robert Pepper, who lives near me, and Charli Tameris, who lives up in NY - took it for use as body/glass spare parts for their 944 rally cars. This is kind of a quid pro quo for me that I'll be able to get parts from them in the future (especially interior stuff that they don't need for their rally cars).
Their German rally cars are pretty sweet too
Last edited by irish44j; 11-20-2016, 07:15 PM.Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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NASA RallySport Englishtown NJ
Last weekend we towed up to Englishtown, NJ for the inaugeral NASA Rally Sport rallysprint at that location, organized by William Petrow (known for his combination drift-and-rally 240SX, among other things). Unlike many other rallysprints, this one was set up at Raceway Park, using both the road-course track (usually used for track days and drift events) as well as the large motocross complex next to it. The layout was a 2-mile overall course, with about 50-50 on paved and dirt, starting and ending on the dirt section with the track section in between. The track has a number of setup options and the organizers set it up with a number of chicanes and tight features to limit top-end speed (since nobody would be on track tires). Indeed, we were torn between running snow tires (which would have more grip on the tarmac) and gravel tires (which would lack tarmac grip but be much better on the rough dirt areas). For the dirt areas, we didn't use most of the large motocross jumps, instead the course was routed around the big table-tops with a TON of technical features both fast and slow speeds. It was substantially longer and more complex than any rallycross course I've ever been on, exacerbated by the fact that the big tabletops and jumps obscured most turns so you couldn't "look ahead."
Some pictures of the track and dirt areas:
Because of the long course and blind options, there were classes for both solo drivers and for "with navigator," so Jim came up to call the notes. There were no notes made, so he jotted them down during a recce run (both directions), and overall they worked pretty well (aside from one turn that we called out wrong on the notes and proceeded to repeatedly take too fast until we remembered to fix it). The course had a few small jump areas, some banked areas, and several kicks and ran in some places right along the fenceline and other large obstacles. Not as much crash danger as a stage rally, but a LOT more than a rallycross - which is why only logbooked rally (and track) cars were allowed to run. The track section, of course, had concrete walls as well as tire walls and some other obstacles (tires and giant foam blocks).
The night before we unloaded and then had a few beers in the on-track "bar" which is really an old barn with some heaters, lol
Parked with Petrow's 240SX
The turnout for this event was about 20-25 cars, amost all of which were experienced rally drivers - including some of the fastest guys in the region like Jon Kramer (Impreza), Paddy Brennan (Evo), Barry McKenna and Michael Gillespie (Mk1 Cosworth Escorts), Lajos Jonas (M3), Brian McNamara (Impreza), and a bunch of other cars, including Alex Jagger and Ryan Symancek in Alex's 240SX Drift/Rally car, and Tad Uzzle in the Mazda2 that we ran against at the winter rally last year. Also there was a local (Bobby Calhoun) in his Lexus V8-swapped 240SX drift car. Bobby was actually suprisingly fast in the dirt areas and very fast on the tarmac, but eventually hit a wall at high speed and wrecked the car near the grandstand area. For the most part, there was only minor damage to other cars (some bashed fenders, lost bumpers, etc) other than Constantine Mantoupolis's beautiful vintage Audi S2 rally car, which had a mechanical breakdown on the recce lap and couldn't run.
You can see Jonas's M3 and Contantine's Audi in the background
Also a Ken Block clone and a legit Lancia Delta were there hanging out
We started out a bit cautious, and the e30's low power was a real liability on the tarmac track, especially with the lack of traction through the corners with the skinny rally tires (which did allow us to do some drifting, at least). As the day went by I got a better feel and we were more confident in both the track and blind dirt areas - and we were happy to see that every single run (a total of 11, each about 4 minutes long), we were faster by a few seconds, and never had a run slower than the previous. So that's always the goal, right?
Werkes Automotion photo
Emanual Mozes photo
In the end, we finished 11th overall and were only about 10% slower than the fastest cars out there. Granted, a lot of the drivers were there for seat time and were doing a bit of showboating - but it's not like rally drivers to just let off....and on our later runs once we got in a groove we were pretty competitive with most (though not all) of the 2WD cars out there. More importantly, we didn't break anything on the car and got a lot of experience using it on the tarmac surface with the gravel tires, which may come in handy later.
Emanuel Mozes photos
Chris Ludwig photo
Stephen Nichols photo
Also thanks to Stephen Nichols and Amanda Pemberton for coming out in the cold and wind to crew for us. Happy that you didn't have to do any fixing!
We did miss out on the final DC rallycross the day after (too much towing and too much stuff to do at home, so I had to bail on it. However, since I already clinched season points for the class, at least it didn't hurt the season effort). Next up: Wellsboro Winter Rally in February (unless anything local/interesting comes along in the meantime!)Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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Also here's a video of the course at speed. Just skip to about the 3-minute mark since I forgot to crop it well...
Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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Also here's some great drone footage of Paddy Brennan's Evo running the full course - gives a good idea of what it looked like overall
Stage rally/rallycross e30 build/competition journal
Track/street e21 build
visit Condor Speed Shop
visit Motorsport Hardware
[FONT="Franklin Gothic Medium"] 1985 318i/M50 Rally Car - 1988 Porsche 924S - 2005 Sequoia tow pig - 2018 GTI
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Damn I knew I should've gone to that event at Englishtown! I always go there to watch and go drifting. William Petrow (and all of Broken Motorsports) is the man! They are always out drifting and generally having a good time. Glad you got see Sneaky Pete's too, I try to convince my non car friends to go to the track and use the "well there is a bar right next to track" to persuade them hahaha!
I don't know if you saw this gem or not, but it made me laugh, since I know Bobby from drifting at etown.
http://jalopnik.com/this-rowdy-240sx...cussion-region
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