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Pitchblack Motorsports Rally e30 318i (now with M50) - and some Porsche 924S stuff.

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  • irish44j
    replied
    Exerpt from the carbon thread in GRM (this is Chris Nonack's post):

    ----------------------

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ said:
    Wow, looks good!waffles What's the "Subaru ahead" light wired to?waffles

    On your side of the dash, looks like a pretty sharp edge- I would make sure your leg can't get up there or it could make an already unpleasant crash a really bad time.

    ----------------------

    lol, it's wired to the high beam indicator light :)

    See, this is why I like to post pics, to get the thoughts of other crazy rally people lol. I actually took a palm sander and rounded every edge of every panel I made to avoid nicks, cuts, and bashes. That panel is actually pretty far back from the driver (farther than my old one). I just tested with myselfwafflesstrapped in, and I can't even force my leg to within 4-5" of it with all my strength - so if my leg does somehow hit that in a crash, my leg is probably already broken in a worse way lol. Point taken though, and I may think about putting something soft-ish around that edge - at very least maybe some door weatherstripping or something, ikd



    Meanwhile....at WMWR we took some heat at tech for not having working reverse lights (they were working earlier that day, dammit). Assuming the switch was the issue, I just jumped the wires (conveniently they come up right in the shifter boot) to a toggle switch to get us through tech. ARA rules specifically say they light has to be activated by the shifter itself (not a switch), so got under the car today (removing about 20lbs of dried Summit Point clay in the process) and replaced the switch with one out of my spare transmission. Man, IDK how this stuff gets so dirty above my huge skidplate, but definitely had to take a big brush to it for 15 minutes...







    This was the 5th pile...



    And voila we have reverse lights again. Yay.

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  • econti
    replied
    Subaru ahead. Fantastic

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  • irish44j
    replied
    Ah, to add to the post above, I actually did take some pics of the dash bar, I forgot. Big thanks to brian battocchi for cutting and notching it perfectly for me!







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  • irish44j
    replied
    Ok, well progress made this weekend with the wife and girls out of town. So I made a complete and total mess of the garage, but my work OCD kept me going basically all weekend (aside from some time to hang out with friends).



    Saturday morning rolled up in the Porsche to Cars and Coffee, not because I love car meets (they're ok), but to meet up with Brian Batocchi to get a piece of DOM tubing for my dash bar. But since it was perfect weather and this is a moneyed area, there was quite a turnout of cars there....

    So rolled up there with Jason





    Brian brought his rally car













    A few 928's and even another 924S (in not as good shape as mine).







    The aircooled guys got there early for prime parking...



    Then got back home and down to business. Welded the dash bar in, tying in the steering column support and a similar piece on the passenger side. It's been a while since I welded anything, so as usual some not-beautiful beads, but it'll do regardless (plus, it's mostly hidden).

    So, with the bar in, I got the dash back in and started putting things together, fabbing up additional parts, and doing a ton of wiring and rewiring. Apologies I'm a bit short on "in progress pics..."





    Joining the two dash pieces. I cut out the passenger side to a minimal dash, so as to have access for the bar to mount stuff









    The more or less completed product





    Windshield back in (never fun to get that spreader strip in, but I got a nice black one off the parts e30 to replace the yellowed/cracked one that was on mine previously)











    Still have to re-install all of our electronics and do some accessory wiring, and a few other things. Jim will swing by this week to help out with that.

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  • irish44j
    replied
    With the wife and girls at the beach for a few weeks (their vacation), I get my own vacation, mostly consisting of visiting friends, hanging out, doing road trips, rallying, and working in the garage until all hours of the night. This is the perfect opportunity to get going on a project I've been thinking of for a while: Dash re-do.

    So, into the garage goes the car, after much washing and scrubbing of Summit Point clay...



    Shoulda just left it outside for another day...



    Since I first built the car, the original dash has slowly become a mess of sloppy wiring, mounts, buttons, and switches mounted wherever I could easily attach them, and just general disorganization and crappy arrangement. So time to fix that.

    First order of business was to pull the nice-condition (a few cracks) dash from the parts car in the shed. And pulling the old crappy one out of the rally car.



    My plan here is to change things a bit by chopping the dash at the edge of the center console. With the stock dash, Jim was really getting jammed up with stuff in the way, and had to mount literally everything on the A-pillar posts, which made getting in and out of the car harder, since the OEM dash has basically noplace to easily attach anything.

    The second part of this plan is to install a dash bar for the cage. Rally doesn't require it, and due to time constraints when we built the cage we didn't put one in. But in the interest of safety, I want to add one. The other upside is that the exposed bar on the passenger side will allow Jim to mount his stuff at the bar, which will make things easier for him.

    Once out, the scope of the 33-year-old wiring mess is apparent...will do a lot of cleaning up, rewiring stuff, and organizing. Luckily most of the nonessential wires are already gone since I thinned them out years ago. So, on to detaching stuff and labeling wires and such. Will also clean all the grounds and add some more grounds.







    Taking a break from that, I made the cuts on the dash (including a cutout for the cage on the driver's side) and then mixed some black and gray flock and flocked the whole thing.

    I had also been working on some designs for the center stack to make it more useful and less totally-ghetto. So, after making cardboard templates, got some aluminum sheet and started cutting, sawing, and drilling.







    And here's what I came out with:



    Oh, I also made a new gauge cluster blanking plate and moved the warning lights to someplace I can actually SEE them.....



    I wanted to move the window switches back to the middle of the car, and add some more toggle switches for current and future stuff. I have some on the way courtesy of ebay. Also made new places for power outlets, the KILL switch, and a few other things. And goofed around with my new phone (Pixel 2), which should hopefully provide you all with far better action pics than in the past!



    Continued to do wiring stuff, then decided this would all be easier with the windshield out, so I pulled that out too.





    So, I have about 2 weeks to finish all this and get the car back on the road for the next rallycross. This weekend I should have time to make some progress and next weekend me and Jim are heading up to STPR to hang out and crew for Dan Downey and whatever other friends who are rallying that we can help out.

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  • irish44j
    replied
    Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View Post
    Been to countless track events and seen things like tennis balls, racquet balls, balaclavae, socks and tee shirts etc stuffed in naca ducts. But I must say this is the first baseball. Lol. Quite a clever idea using the string.
    I'd love to take credit, but someone on Grassroots Motorsports suggested it :)

    Leave a comment:


  • ForcedFirebird
    replied
    Been to countless track events and seen things like tennis balls, racquet balls, balaclavae, socks and tee shirts etc stuffed in naca ducts. But I must say this is the first baseball. Lol. Quite a clever idea using the string.

    Leave a comment:


  • formyhealth
    replied
    I like the idea of the naca ducts, clever solution to keep the wet out too!

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  • irish44j
    replied
    Another little thing I've been meaning to do for a while. This isn't for use DURING rally/rallycross, but the car is pretty hot during long transits on summer rallies, and I also drive it to some rallycrosses and around town. With only front windows able to be rolled down, the car gets pretty hot. The little pop-out vents I had before pretty much did nothing, so decided to take it up a notch:

    Got some 3" NACAwafflesducts from my man Carlos at Condor Speed Shop and installed







    I plan to make a plate on the cage crossbar to allow us to run some neoprene ducting to between the front seats, with some kind of remote block-off plate (haven't designed it yet). In the meantime, need to prevent rain from getting in (and will want to stop dust/mud from getting in at rally/rallycross), so I found a cheap solution: 4" foam baseballs from Target. They push right in and stay securely.



    I have since added a piece of thin rope through the middle which is tied to the inside of the door so if they fall out they won't go anywhere...

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  • irish44j
    replied
    I mean, it's fun. But going fast is more fun :)

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  • econti
    replied
    I can imagine that would have been the best fun you can have

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  • irish44j
    replied
    FINALLY GOT TO RALLYCROSS this season....After missing the season's first event due to being in Vietnam (as well as two other local events), last weekend's second event almost didn't happen, thanks to the weather. After like 8 dry days, it decided to rain heavy the night before our event at Summit Point Motorsports Park. As you may recall from way way back in this thread, Summit is red clay surface and when it gets wet, it is some nasty, slippery stuff! But with other things stacking up behind the event (SOFR, STPR, and other rallycrosses) the organizers made the decision to give it a go.waffles

    Now historically in rallycrosswafflesmuddy events haven't been my strong suit, but with now three years straight of dealing with slippery conditions at WMWR (including this year), I'm starting to get more comfortable when it gets "slippy."waffles

    I had plans in Richmond (2 hours south of me) on Saturday night and drove down to meet some friends for a concert, which luckily ended fairly early. Then rolledwaffles back up to DC to get a few hours of sleep. I had already decided to just tow up there (which turned out to be a good idea due to all the mud on everything after the day), so jumped in the rig and hauled up.





    The day started dry, and I helped set up the morning course, a tight/technical course that would have been great for my car and my driving style. As luck would have it, the rain started and that course got torn up too badly during the first run group to actually run any longer, so we built a second course on a different plot of land, which proved to be somewhat better (though MUCH faster and wide-open).







    The MR class, as usual, was ultra-competitive with 15+ drivers registered - most of the regulars plus some new people and a few out of town fast movers. Dirty Industries (Eric and Neil) coudlnt' make it, and neither could Josh Sennett, so that was some of the top guys gone. However, Bee Thao was there in his turbo Miata, Amanda in her and Jim's new Miatawaffles(formerly Jason's), Chris and Stephen in their 325, the MR2 guys were there with their many MF and SA championships in the past, and several other e30s and miatas, plus Nick in the M3 (who won the first event). Many of the cars had full sets of Maxsport mud tires on, but I only had a pair - so they went on the back and I ran some DMack gravels up front due to the sharp side shoulders that I hoped owuld help with steering bite.waffles

    It was really, really muddy...





    other competitors...







    seriously, people were even getting stuck in grid...





    I decided to go hard right out of the gate and hope I could hold the lines and get a lead. And I did.....got a few cones on places I couldnt' make turns, but my time was the fastest in the class other than Bee, who put up a similar time. The rest of the class was over 10 second behind, as I recall, after one run! Second run went out hard again and more good results (but a couple more cones too). After that one Bee and I were 6/10ths of a second apart. Unfortunately, due to conditions and the 70 cars out there, we were destined to only get three runs. At least they told us in advance, so Bee and I knew to both go hard on the last run, with nobody else even close it was our event to win or lose. I ran fast and clean and put the pressure on Bee, who was several cars behind me and saw the time. Made one big mistake but mitigated the damage with a good recovery. Bee went out faster than I did (by this point it was so slick we had to have push starts from spectators and other competitors!), but he made a mistake in the same place I did and much worse, losing a ton of time. In the end, pulled off the win by a healthy margin!





    Subarus lost several bumpers, as usual..



    We also did some fun runs in the mud, hitting all the giant puddle/lakes that were coned off for the competitions runs - so hopefully Steven Philips got some good photos :)

    After pulling about 20lbs of clay ouf of my wheelwells I packed up and rolled out. Feels good to get a win under my belt early in the season. Even better, the top threat guys were either not present or didn't do well at all (Nick finished 12th!) so it's going to be a points shootout all season I think. Next event it at the big, open Panthera training center where the power cars really dominated the first event. So we'll have to see what I can do there in a few weeks.



    Also, cleaning up took a long time when I got home...





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  • irish44j
    replied
    I'm a bit behind on this thread. So skipping a few things that are in my Grassroots Motorsports carbon-copy - so jump over there if you want to see what boring things I've been up to. Getting back up to the present and recent stuff:

    So some updating.

    First, a quick project. Trying to get some old tint off my lexanwafflesrear windows, I pretty much ruined them. That adhesive is a bitch, and as I increasingly got frustrated and used stronger and stronger solvents, I found out that Toluene pretty much MELTS lexan, and I totally ruined one window. So time to make some new ones. I've been meaning to do this for a while anyhow since I don't like the two pop-out vents and I want to do some different airflow options, so off to ebay to get some Lexan (well, actually Makrolan, but it's essentially the same).

    all cloudy...



    making and installing the new stuff....



    masking and painting the edgeswaffles



    new rivets



    reinstalled one of the pop-out vents. IN the upper area I'm going to put in some NACA vents for better airflow on transits and road trips..



    After those were on, I had to make new names and stuff, so out came the vinyl cutter. While I was doing that, also cut some new warning stickers (electrical, fire extinguisher, etc) and tow decals for the bumpers (which I repainted). Been a while since I did any cosmetic work on the car lol.





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  • irish44j
    replied
    Originally posted by econti View Post
    I didn't think you guys really had any mk1/2 Escorts there at all. Shame it got lidded, but can be repaired at least
    All owned by Irish expats who have lots of expendable income, from what I can tell. I believe both of those are actually "shells in white" - brand new reproduction shells built from scratch as rally cars in recent years - not actual vintage Mk 1/2 escorts. Word is that the green and white one is a $200,000 build. And I've seen the brakes and suspension on it and don't doubt it for a second. Its shocks alone cost more than my entire rally e30....

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  • econti
    replied
    I didn't think you guys really had any mk1/2 Escorts there at all. Shame it got lidded, but can be repaired at least

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