Jon, I read back through your thread and saw that. No wonder it was in such good shape!
Weekend recap
This was the first race outing for the car, and the first time two of my teammates had seen - let alone driven the car. One of the guys had raced the SHO with me for years, and the other had run a Lemons race several years ago, but in another car. They didn't know eachother before the weekend, either.
Going into the weekend, we had levelset our expectations. None of us predicted that we would be toward the top of the timing and scoring, based on what we knew about our car and the others on the entry list. We set out to have a fun weekend, drive as much as possible, but drive conservatively and take care of the equipment. None of us cared about running the fastest lap, or being quicker than the other teammates. As the weekend progressed and we continued to climb up the leaderboard, our strategy talks continued - we would drive within our own and the car's limits, and have as much low stress fun as possible.
We ran the test day on Friday, mainly to let them get comfortable in the car. One of the drivers had never heel-toe/rev match downshifted before, and spun the car once practicing that. I think it was good that he spun when he did, becuase he learned the limit, and got it out of his system. Otherwise, the test was uneventful, and we passed tech the first try.
On Saturday, I started the race, and drove for 2:45 finishing my stint in 15th place. I knew that there were at least that many cars that had passed me, as the car was capable of about a 1:55 pace, but in traffic averaged about a 2:00. The newest driver to the team took over for the second stint, and ran for 3 hours, pitting from 5th place. At this point, we were shocked at how well we were doing, but tried not to get too excited. The car was still unproven, and there was a lot that could happen. The third driver got in the car, and drove the remaining 2:15, taking the checker on Saturday in 6th place.
Typically with our SHO, we added a couple quarts of oil, changed wheel bearings, control arms, brake pads and rotors, and tires overnight between Saturday and Sunday. This car was great. It didn't use oil, the tires were great with plenty of life left, as were the brakes. We noticed that one of the splitter supports had pulled through the plywood, but I didn't have big enough washers or material on hand. We considered a drive to Tractor Supply, then a beer walk around the paddock looking for material, then settled on cutting a small piece out of the spare tire well in the hatch to just get it done quickly. That's all the work on the car we did all weekend.
The splitter is just a tad low - it scraped the ground in a couple corners if we were really pushing. I plan to add some sacrificial sliders to the bottomside leading edge in the future, or raise the blade slightly.
Sunday, I started again, and only had to drive 2 hours to the church quiet hour break. I had a great battle with this Corvette pretty much the whole time. I was a little faster in laptime, but he had power on the straights. So every few laps, he'd get by and I'd have to work to reel him in and pass. Then a couple laps later, I'd get balked into a turn and he would motor past on the straight again. It was a lot of fun working through traffic together and trying to make passes stick.
The other two guys split the remaining 4 hours in half, each driving clean stints, and we took the checker one position off the podium in 4th place. It's the best that I've ever finished, the cleanest race I've ever run, and the least wrenching in the paddock as well. It will be hard to top, but we'll certainly try.
Based on some lap time analytics, we had the 30th fastest lap, but finished in 4th place. The 5th place car was charging hard at the end of the race, averaging about 8-10 seconds a lap faster than us, but had just gotten a lap back right before the checker and finished on the same lap.
Here is the video from my Sunday stint, with the others available on my youtube channel if you're interested.