I was chatting with Greg today and commented that much of what I've been up to lately has gone un-reported. I have been very busy but I also thought I should do a little more sharing so that the club doesn't devolve into just a "how do you fix - X - " sort of thing. I don't have a bunch of photo's from the event, but I can share the experience.
That's the first piece of the puzzle - you have to have a SNELL 2010 approved helmet. The 242 had to get the summer tires put on it before May long weekend...which is basically against my religion. So I took the day off work and emptied the trunk and changed my snow tires and got ready to race.
The events are running at either Red Deer or Fort McLeod and are run through the Southern Alberta SoloSport Club
http://forums.sascsolo.com. They're running a local championship (I'm not even close to being ready to worry about that...I'll explain). I registered on line and joined the SASC club (which helps them with equipment etc).
The first event had a practice day - this was last Saturday and I went to the that to try it out. Met up with some Lethbridge guys that have been doing it for years and headed out early. I'm always worried about being on time and having things organized. The event was well organized, but really low-key and everyone was very friendly. It's a practice day, no one was very worried about much. Put me at ease. The 242 was a big hit with most as they hadn't expected to see anything like a 2-door 240 and anything old out there is usually more a race car than a nice car if you know what I mean.
I cleaned the engine bay after the winter - everything was looking pretty good for a tech inspection (that I ended up doing myself...no one is very worried about stuff unless you're running in the championship).
I'm unsure what class I'd be in and the SCCA manual is difficult to interpret for the 1981 GLT. I'm still waiting for a classification, but it won't matter as I'm not in the fastest car out there - so no wins are in the cards. I picked number 242 and no one in the province is running it...so on with the tape graphics. I'll have to get some real numbers for the next contest. A fellow competitor took this shot.
The practice day started with a trip to the novice course at the far end of the runway (the track is at the old airport). Three seasoned instructors took the first drive in your car and showed you what was possible. Nobody in the rookie camp could better that time or experience. The Lethbridge guys told me to do whatever I could to get a specific instructor. Turns out he's a 7 time Canadian Champion and National Champion in SCCA - so he's like the Stig (but he speaks). He hops in my car and just beats the tar out of it...seconds into the run he notes the open diff as he's whizzing through the slalom and then after a long corner, he floors it and the tires break free. Oh, it's turbo'ed he says. I'm thinking, if I live, I'm learning how to do this.
Now, I've had one half day of track school and an afternoon on the track with my 122. Autocross is quite a different discipline. It's far more technical as you have at least one change in direction per second of running time. You don't leave 2 gear and every mistake is really amplified. Soft pedal the start and you loose 0.5 seconds, mis an apex and it'll show up, every little detail matters and there are lots of details. I like it - it's a mental challenge as much as anything. Everyone says it takes years to get any good.
In the afternoon, I'm talked into running with the big boys instead of down on the learning track. Lots of guys wanted to see the 242 run. I did my best and finished DEAD LAST. By a respectable margin, if there is such a thing. So was I that bad? Nope - learning sure - but I just couldn't get the power to the ground and the car understeers terribly - pushing all over the track. If you hit it too hard, you go from understeer to snap-oversteer as the rear end brakes loose and you've got to be quick to catch it.
It's no Miata. So I've got some rear end work to do. I'm trying to get the parts together to rebuild a power-lok limited slip differential that I've got and I'm changing out the big IPD rear bar for a stock unit and am taking out the poly bushings in the rear lower control arm (the big ones). They're getting replaced with Kaplhenke units. I've also got to dial in the front end camber. I run -0.5 degrees and have been advised that another full degree is the bare minimum that is useful and can be achieved with stock struts. The outsides of my front tires were a lot hotter than the insides (by the hand tire pyrometer...I'm not fully equipped yet).
Anyway - I'm booked into a school at the end of May. We'll see if we can fix some parts of the learning curve as I improve the major issues with the car. My only other thought is to read the rule book before you build a car. I'm going to end up in a very competitive class for silly things like a ceramic coated turbo hot side and the trans swap. I'm happy with both - but neither really improves performance noticeably.