In typical fashion, I neglected to do anything with this car until 2 days before a rallycross. This time, the task was to get the electric power steering working. Luckily, the installation wasn't terribly difficult. The worst part was figuring out how to package the electric motor in a way that it wouldn't get in the way. I pulled out the steering column, took some measurements, and cobbled this together:
Starting at the top of the picture we have:
-new quick release. The old one was an ebay special with a hex shaft that had a ton of slop. This is a proper QuickCar one with a splined shaft
-Howe 1.5:1 quickener
-Ford Fiesta Electric Power Assist Steering (EPAS) motor
With a bit of finesse, I was able to get it tucked up partially behind the dash in such a way that it doesn't get in the way of the pedals, nor the drivers legs as they try to reach the pedals. A bit of black paint and suddenly it sort of blends in.
I took it for a quick drive to NAPA to get some some oil/filter and everything seemed to work well! The assist doesn't really feel that different at speed, but you can definitely notice it at parking lot speeds.
EPAS done, oil change done, nut/bolt check done, transmission fluid topped off, and I was ready to rallycross!
At this event, my main competition for season points, Sean Grogan, would be co-driving my car. His Boxster fried the clutch at rallyx nationals a couple weeks ago, so I had him give my car a try. My main goal for the day was to not let him beat me in my own car haha
The morning course was a little slick, but had a nice mix of tight/technical and fast sections. On the very last run, Sean noticed that the throttle pedal was acting up. He managed to finish the run without losing much time, but noticed that the throttle wasn't really working as we drove back to the paddock. He noted that when he had the pedal to the floor, the car gave him about 20% throttle. Upon closer inspection, the bushings that the throttle linkage rides in had completely fallen apart, allowing the linkage to fall out of the little tabs that hold it in place. I popped it back in, bent the tabs a bit, and zip-tied them so they wouldn't open up far enough to let it come out again. Good to go!
After the morning runs, I was sitting in 3rd by about 4.5 seconds. I'm going to blame myself here since I hit 4 cones in the morning.
The afternoon course was noticeably faster than the morning course. Because we were a two-driver car, we were effectively hot lapping the e30. Between runs, we started to notice an increasing amount of smoke coming from under the car. Turns out that the slight transmission output seal leak had gotten worse and was getting some transmission fluid onto the exhaust. Luckily, new seals for the shifter and the trans output were already in the mail!
My main goal for the afternoon runs was to keep the driving clean and stay away from the cones, which luckily worked out and I managed to claw my way back to first and win the class by about 1.5 seconds! The car seemed to handle all the abuse we were throwing at it, but the lifters were definitely singing after a full day of abuse. The fresh oil change helped, but I might have to start considering refreshing/replacing this engine over the winter...