NEFR 2021
Day 2
We were back up and at Parc Expose again around 7am. Same deal, more spectators this time (we ran out of ANY% stickers!) and soon it was off to the stages for what would be a longer and rougher day than the last.
SS6, Sturtevant Short, was a fun stage that excluded the rocky garbage of Sturtevant Long, although the transit in has some exciting rock crawling. We did well on this one, putting in a decent time and feeling great through the spectator-heavy section of 3s and 4s toward the end. This car feels so incredibly good once you get up to speed and actually start driving it, and I know I'm still leaving a good amount more on the table at the best of times.
SS7, Wilson Mills, was fast and smooth but has a couple of the dreaded virtual chicanes in it- luckily it seems like we left our issues with them behind on day 1, and while annoying they didn't screw us up much. No complaints, we got to really push here and it felt great.
SS8 was the first running of Aziscohos, the OTHER big nasty car breaker of this rally after Icicle Brook. Say hello to the friendly rock!
This one was just as nasty as we thought it would be. Rough, huge rocks, and cars off everywhere- Block, Downey, some rolled Subaru of some sort, and at least 3 other cars were off on our way through although luckily everyone was fine. We had a really scary moment where I asked Sara to add a note for the next pass, which she did, but it threw off our timing and had us off the notes at like 90mph over bigass rocks into a downhill R4 with an upside down car on the outside. But hey, we didn't crash and nothing important broke so that's a win!
On the transit immediately after, we noticed extra dust coming in- some inspection revealed that we had ripped up the little rubber thing that covers the front of the DS rear wheel well, and it was coming from there- we just lived with it and noted that it was time for some duct tape at service.
SS9, Morton Cutoff, was short and smooth for the most part. We went fast here and it felt great!
On the way back to service, Sara got cell signal again for the first time and checked the results... and we were LEADING L2WD! By a minute and a half!!! Apparently Gruszka, previously leading the class in a Fiesta, had had an electrical problem that set him back a bit. I feel a little bad but... how many times did our Merkur slow us down? We celebrated briefly before deciding to stop freaking ourselves out about it.
At service, duct tape ws applied to the wheel well holes, bolts were checked, and the car was found to be ever so slightly low on oil so that got topped up. Mostly we just stood around and ate though, because the car is solid and our crew is awesome:
Then back out for the nastier, long version of Sturtevant as SS10. It was choppy, rough, and I wanted to keep my lead but also really didn't want to hurt the car. We lost time here for sure, I don't think I was too cautious in the rough section but I didn't get back up to speed fast enough after it- still learning how to adjust pace in this thing. This was another one with busy reading and Sara was on top of it the whole time.
SS11 was Wilson Mills again, and apart from taking it easy on the jump/kick things we really boogied on this one, it may have been the most fun stage of the rally for me and I think we may have been the fastest L2WD through here.
SS12, cue the scary music because it's Aziscohos again and now we have a lead to potentially lose. We pushed a little more than we probably should have, and at one point took a rock the approximate size of a shoebox to the DS rear trailing arm but it mostly stayed straight and the car drove fine so we didn't slow down a bit. It was fun, in an "I hope this keeps working" sort of way:
Then SS13, Morton Cutoff again, where we were warned that we'd find Pastrana's car on its' roof about 2.5 miles in- it turned out that they really, really oversold how far into the road it was and we wasted way too much time slowing down for it. Still felt good, still went fast.
Back to service and our lead had been reduced to somewhere around 45sec with our more conservative approach and Gruszka's faster driving overall, but there was only one stage to go! Everything got checked, we left the now smooshed trailing arm since it drove fine, and the car was ready to go again:
SS14, the last one, North Road. It's a fitting finale to NEFR, full of rocks, covered in spectator areas, and always near sunset- we ran a conservative pace though, because who wants to bin it on the last stage of the rally? One of the spectator areas even contained family members of ours for the first time, with my brother and sister-in-law finally solving the admittedly complex puzzle of spectating a rally- they snapped this picture:
We were greeted by organizers, volunteers, and friends galore at the finish- we had made it!
The transit after North Road is always special- all of the service park and spectator traffic is also on their way back to Sunday River, so it's just a sea of rally cars, service rigs, and other wild vehicles all on their way to the finish line. 50ft before the final time control, irish44j took this picture:
Then, time card handed in, car parked, time to catch up with everybody- crew, family, friends, I'm so grateful to have these lunatics along making everything happen so that we can go drive stupid cars too fast in the woods:
And then... a series of firsts for us: a giant novelty check that I need to get a photo of for second place in the Banchwerks 2wd challenge, our first class win at a big rally, and of course the first podium and first champagne spray!
We've never gotten to do the champagne thing before so we were slow on the draw and got completely blasted by those next to us, it was awesome and our driving suits smell absolutely horrific now:
So the full breakdown- 1st in L2WD, 7th of all 2WD cars, 27th out of 81 overall. Couldn't ask for more on the car's second rally, and despite the truck's questionable condition we practically floated home on a cloud of "can't believe we did that!"