Archive for Auto Racing

C’était un Rendez-vous

I’ve been meaning to write something about this video for some time – just because I think it’s so outrageously cool that I want people to see it. I thought about it again last Saturday morning when I received a message from my buddy Russ that he was on his way to “Cars and Coffee” in a Ferrari 275 GTB – Russ knows that I like old Ferraris and that I think the 275 GTB is one of the prettiest cars ever built.

Ferrari 275 GTB

Ferrari 275 GTB

The story behind this short film is that French director Claude Lelouch filmed the early morning run through Paris and that the car used was a 275 GTB driven by an un-named Formula One driver.

Lelouch later claimed that a large Mercedes carried the camera and that the sound of the Ferrari was dubbed over – I am somewhat skeptical, but I suppose an Oscar winning director should be able to accomplish a task like that.  I thought Star Wars was cool when I saw it, and I’m pretty sure it wasn’t real… In any case, the film and sound are amazing.

The Route

The Route

The route that Lelouch chose also passes by and through many famous Parisian landmarks, including the finish line of The Tour de France (so there’s a bicycle racing connection), and places where my sister worked and lived in the time she spent there (so there’s a family connection).  The speed of the “Mercedes” has been calculated (and independently agreed upon) to have been 190 – 200 kph on the Champs-Élysées – and that will get you to church on time…

 

C’était un rendez vous- Claude Lelouch.flv

The film was removed from YouTube in 2012.  Here is another version.  Still the best!!!

Oregon Raceway Park

There are not words sufficient to describe how cool it is that a bunch of guys that like racing were able to pull something like this off.  Seriously, they are 99.9 percent of the way to a functioning racing facility.

Oregon Raceway Park

Oregon Raceway Park

Oregon Raceway Park Website

Being from Hood River it seems that we are among the closest active racing residents to this new facility – that makes it even cooler for us.  So Sunday, Garth Levin, Jonny Davies and I visited Oregon Raceway Park for the first time since we had attended a tour in November of 2006, shortly after they had cut the original path through the fields that now contain the race track. 

This is going to be a challenging place to race.  It seems that first they will run races in the clockwise direction, but the track was conceived with the notion that it could be run counter clockwise, as well.  I think it looks much better clockwise than counter.  My biggest concern is turn 1 in the counter direction – it will be fast and scary, and it doesn’t get really scary until you leave the track.  There is a nice place to land the medivac helicopter near where the cars will finally finish crashing, though.  I think it will be a while before this track races in that direction.  Everything else I’m worried about looks like it could be handled by mid-week.

Jonny Davies was the driver on Sunday – he is one of the finest amateur race drivers in the country.  I was in attendance to collect data and help with the car – the same car that I’ve been racing this year and was used in the 12 Hours of the Cascades and 25 Hours of Thunderhill last fall.  Garth came along to fix anything I broke while working on the car.

We use the AiM data acquisition system in all of the cars and I also gathered some video, and for one session taped a small Garmin GPS device to the dash.  Here are some interesting factoids from his second session in the clockwise direction:

Top speed (clockwise) – 98.8 mph

Best Lap Time (clockwise) – 2:04.671

Elevation Gain / Loss – approx 400 ft

To put things into perspective, Pacific Raceways, the track with the most elevation gain and loss in the Northwest, has about 140 ft change per lap.  According to our little GPS unit (with a slow sampling rate), ORP is somewhere around 400 ft in just over the same distance!!!

It is a shame that there will not be a race at ORP this year.  It was on the ICSCC schedule up until last week, and then it seems a new interpretation of some rules ended the fun.  For sure, there are still some safety issues to work out.  But, in racing anything is possible as long as everybody pulls in the same direction – for some reason they aren’t.

Again, I can’t say how impressed I am by this group of people that did what many thought was impossible.  This is an awesome accomplishment and the sooner ORP is raced on the quicker the issues of amenities and safety will be addressed, and the facility expanded.

Bravo!!!