The recovery drivers went out plenty. They pulled something like a baker’s dozen from the grass, mud, tires and Armco surrounding VIR. Any mistake in the rain could quickly turn into a huge regret.
Even non-mistakes–more than one car spun on a straight after hydroplaning–could end in disaster. So, with some 2 inches of rain falling, the SCCA gave everyone …
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ddavidv
UltimaDork
4/10/24 6:30 a.m.
Being competent in the rain can win you races. A lot of guys I raced against were scared of the wet. I grew up sliding around on gravel roads so it was almost fun for me.
wspohn
UltraDork
4/10/24 12:14 p.m.
Living in the Pacific Northwest (well as I'm in Canada, I guess it is our Pacific Southwest) one learns racing in the rain or one says home after repeatedly 'falling off' the track on wet days. I noted that a lot of the "I have big balls and a V8 car" guys wound up as part of the scenery while we drivers of small cars, being more used to using brains than balls to race, often finished well on wet tracks.
My embarrassing moment came when I had to run one race that year to keep my license current and of course it poured rain at my home track. It was the last race of the season and two other drivers were going at it hammer and tongs for the season trophy. Of course they both 'fell off' the track and I didn't, which meant that one would finish champion because I had 'stolen' their points by being there. I didn't think that was fair so I talked to the organizers and volunteered to be disqualified (so the end of season placement would be as if I had never been there) as long as I got my race credit for the year. Fortunately they agreed.
I will add one comment on racing in the rain - I ran one open car and one closed coupe and the latter was a PITA to keep the windshield clear on a rainy day - it would fog up inside and you'd be wiping it off inside when you should be attending to other things. The open car was 'self-clearing' as the windscreen was nominal and the wind blew off the face shield.
Rain definitely makes things interesting. When NASCAR first tried rain tires in the late 1990s at Watkins Glen, I remember who went out in the rain in practice and who didn't. Some enjoy the challenge. Others fear it. I don't think either strategy is wrong, though, especially when it's your car and your butt on the line.