SOFR 21
Saturday, Rally Day 2
Up and out:
We got our service area set up right near all the E30 guys, and the rally started on schedule:
We transited out to SS4 Diagon Alley and... waited. And then were told to transit through the stage- apparently radio problems forced a cancellation of competition for that stage. So we put our gear on anyway and treated it as another recce pass.
Then on SS5 Disco Inferno, the same thing again- no competition, 30mph speed limit, just transit. Radio issues again.
At SS6 Top Gun North Short, we had to wait for a long time but could hear the very front of the pack starting at race pace so at least it wouldn't be canceled. At least we like hanging out with rally people!
Eventually, far behind schedule, we got to race on SS6- I was feeling the car out and realizing that I could brake way, WAY, WAAAAAAAY later than I was used to, everything felt great, and apart from an inconsistent surface (how does it only stay wet for like 50ft, then dry, then wet again??) we had a good run of this stage before heading back to service. Our time wasn't incredibly impressive but the notes were good and we were finally getting to start really feeling out the car.
At service the car went up on the stands and got a complete check over- no issues, all good! The truck, however, hadn't been so lucky- while idling with the AC on it had cracked one of the plastic endtanks on the radiator pretty badly- I told Brian to stay on the car stuff and Evan to handle the truck radiator; I thought it would be a simple swap, but it turns out that Duramax and 8.1 radiators basically don't exist and the only radiator we could source was for a 6.0. Every dimension was wrong and 7 of the 8 fittings were also different, so this began a hellish afternoon of adapting the wrong radiator to the truck. I am so sorry Evan, thank you for persevering to fix our garbage tow rig, and huge thanks to Josh and Eric as well for running the AC on your trucks so that Kila the rally dog wouldn't overheat herself.
Then we went to transit to SS7 and... were told to go back to our service spot. The radio net had completely failed and competition had to be halted until it could be fixed.
I have to admit I was feeling pretty low at this point- we finally had a car that wasn't perpetually broken and everything else failed instead. Our truck was broken, the rally itself was broken, and neither had good signs of being an easy fix. But as always, the rally community pulls through, and after several hours and many hands on deck even including Ben Chuong getting under the truck still in his coolshirt and fire gear, the truck radiator swap was moving in the right direction and eventually the event organizers got a backup radio relay working and we were told we'd be starting again.
The new plan excluded a number of stages and basically repeated SS4/5/6 two more times, but we were back to rallying! We had sporadic rain on Diagon Alley and that kept me slow with an inconsistent surface- for some reason I had trouble spotting mud vs. dry spots on the road, I'm not sure if that's just Ohio's dirt composition or the car being lower or what but it was odd. Then on Disco Inferno, everything really started clicking- the notes were good, the car felt good, the surface was consistent. Our pace wasn't that fast but for a solid chunk of the middle of the stage we pushed a bit more and everything felt great, I was even braking late enough in places that Sara was reminding me "this is a right two minus... RIGHT TWO MINUS!" and I STILL was braking too early. We both need to adjust to this thing, but it feels so freaking cool to have a car that we need to get fast enough for instead of a car that we need to limp through.
The surface on Top Gun North Short was still inconsistent, somehow, so we weren't super fast there but things still felt good and the car seemed happy. I tried to ham it up at a spectator R1 that turned out to be way slicker than expected and made a complete ass of myself spinning the car. Back to service!
Same deal as last time at service, the car was fine and not a single paint stripe was out of place. Evan was moving along with the truck and things were looking up! We put somewhere around 7 gallons of fuel in the car and went back out to repeat the same three stages again.
For this last leg, Ozgur's white E30 had dropped out (or at least back) putting Josh and Jim right behind us on the road. Tracking said they were a few seconds ahead of us in the standings, so we had somebody to race with- on the final running of Diagon Alley, they got us by a bit and I decided to push it some more on the next stage, Disco Inferno. Push it we did, taking back 20something seconds! By this point it was dark and Sara and I were both tired, but we wanted to finish strong so for the last stage, one more pass of Top Gun North Short, we tried to keep a decent pace. It was at this point that the car decided to have its' only real issue of the entire rally, and for the full 11 miles the big LED lights were flicking on and off at random leaving us to navigate the road at speed with just the regular high beams. We still went pretty fast, all things considered, just squeaking out enough of a margin to stay ahead of Josh. The car threw another check engine light for a misfire too, probably because I was yet again paying more attention to all the stuff I couldn't see and not the limiter.
That last transit feeling is like no other, cool air blowing into the car, helmets off for the last time, just a line of rally cars that have made it through the tough stuff on a cruise back to the service park. We were exhausted but the car felt like it could do it all again without issue, other than the lights. On our way into parc ferme we got a rolling high five from Santiago (L2WD winner) and Adam Brock was waiting right there to congratulate us. We did it, first rally down, this car made almost entirely out of best guesses and "I can do it cheaper" solutions had made it and had made it clear that it could go so much faster. It was a good feeling:
Podium stuff happened, some rich guys went fast but more importantly Dan Downey and Sammie Gouin won regional O2WD and Jon Kramer and Jason Smith won regional NA4WD, and Kimmett and Skucas got and impressive 11th overall. Sara also talked to some pro level Subaru people- John Hall told a story about having to slap an electrical box to get the car running and Brandon Semenuk thinks BRZs are cool apparently:
I was nearby talking to the Brock brothers while Adam was double fisting a champagne bottle and a beer with a picture of a rally car on it. Sara can be the famous one, that's fine by me! John Leonard came by with a plate of post-rally brats, and we all hung out for a bit while the impound timer clicked down.
Eventually we loaded back up, and took our truck with a freshly installed too-small radiator back to the airbnb. Evan headed home to shower the sweat and dexcool off himself. The rest of us turned in somewhere around 2am.