NEFR 2022
Day 2
Everyone at parc expose on day 2 was half asleep, but most cars were still in it and a few that had dropped the previous day were back to try again. We were sitting 5th in L2wd with about a minute to regain if we wanted to get onto the podium, mostly thanks to Concord Pond. But this rally is a car breaker, and a minute is a flat tire, so we knew it was time to turn it up even more if we could.
SS6 was North Road Reverse, and it went great- we ran a reasonably competitive time and jumped right back on pace rather than the slow start we'd had the day prior. I was feeling good, Sara was delivering the notes perfectly, and we planned to keep pushing harder. SS7 was Sturtevant Short and we were ready to see what we could get out of the car on it, once we passed the nasty rock crawling transit to get in there. I am not sure if that transit hurt anything although it didn't seem to.
On SS7, flying along and feeling awesome about 1.2 miles in, something on an R5/cr knocked the entire front end of the car into the air- can't see it on video, can't see in photos, no berkeleying idea what it was, but it was like we'd hit a landmine with the front right wheel. I didn't think much of it and continued to push hard for the rest of the stage, but the car wasn't handling quite right. Here's a photo from a few miles later, still pushing:
That right front wasn't sitting the way it should, and the car was turning way differently left vs. right- of course I didn't really clock this in great detail while driving, just knew something wasn't going quite right. Somehow we ran a competitive time like this, I would love to know what it would have been without the damage.
By the time we transited to the next stage, Wilson Mills, I'd figured out something in the front end was bad so I hopped out and looked. Sorry for no photo of the strut itself, we were pressed for time and I was trying to un-bend it by kicking the hell out of the wheel with this corner jacked up:
The strut insert was bent near the top and looked like a twisted soda can. We somehow ran fast enough to hold our class position on Wilson Mills, but it was relatively smooth so I could just baby that corner over the kicks and otherwise run at a halfway decent speed. By the end of the stage the strut had cracked a little but was still holding together, and was puking all of its' oil out.
The next stage was Aziscohos, and it's hard to get through without damage in a perfectly good car, so you can imagine how we had to run with a bent strut and only a couple inches of ground clearance- I was basically just driving the right front on the smoothest road I could, with the secondary goal of keeping the nose off the rocks where I could. Partway through the stage the noises from the front got a LOT louder and the steering got a lot worse. We got passed once, crept through some sections at really low speed, but we made it. Here's what greeted me in the wheel well when I hopped out at the end:
Yep, that's snapped all the way through. Figuring it would at least stay in the tower as long as we didn't fully unload it, we ran Morton Cutoff really slow and kept the front wheel planted on the smoothest piece of road we could the whole way through, bleeding time the whole way just trying to keep the thing pointed the right direction. We managed to make it through that stage too, and by my math we ran probably about 12 total stage miles with a fully snapped strut.
Then we had a 30 mile transit to get back to service, so we did- I'm not going to claim this was safe, we shouldn't have been driving on public roads like this but dammit if I could keep the car moving I was going to. We made it to service on time too.
The moment we hit the service park it was go time- bluej, Andrew, Pat, Cam, the Deep 6 guys, everyone was all-in on getting a fix going. Problem was, I only had a spare insert which meant we had to salvage the bent, bashed, gouged, seized housing inside of 30 minutes. A vice and angle grinder from Down East Rally Team were involved:
We blew right through the 30 minute service just getting what was left of the insert out of there, and then had to cut it up further to jam the new insert in. We actually had the thing most of the way together and everyone worked right up to the last second as the 15 minute maximum lateness expired, but it was no use- we drove all that way on this broken thing and had an all hands on deck 45 minute thrash but it wasn't enough, we were out. Our first real DNF.
This is on me. I wanted to save the $500 that it would take to make whole new housings, so I never did and just packed a spare strut insert, figuring that if we made it back to service at all it would mean the housing was still usable. It wasn't, and it cost us the rally- we actually got the car back together enough for gentle road driving shortly after the MPL expired, but with no points to earn there was no reason to go out on compromised hardware so we didn't reenter. After feeling sorry for ourselves for a bit we took this picture with our cool two piece strut insert: