Wow, So damn, it looks like I have ignored this thread for a year and missed some questions. Time for an update.
I came to talk about my grandson’s first race weekend. It wasn’t easy or drama free.
But first I need to bring people up to speed over the last year or so. I think I mentioned before, karting isn’t his main sport or passion. His main love is football (ugh) and also sometimes does basketball, equestrian etc. But karting has been a fun side thing, and since both his grandads are car geeks, it’s a great way to spend time together. Also, while my grandson is now 8, he has a 15 (nearly 16) year old uncle with the other grandpa, who he hero worships. Over the years the uncle started in quarter midgets, then moved to karts. But now he’s on the verge of getting his license, he has a New Edge SN95 with a cage, good suspension, and mild engine work as his first car. Right now, he’s itching to get into track days, and I think karting may be done for him at the end of this year.
So, back to my grandson and his karting. Over the last 18 months between us we’ve taken him to at least eight test days, maybe a couple more. Last month we got out for the first time this year, and everything seemed to have come together. He was soon into the rhythm and was faster on the more twisty version of the track they ran that day, then he had been on the full faster track last year. He was holding nice speed and felt good. We talked with him, and he said he’d try racing. Yeah.
To go racing we needed to do a bit of work. First we needed new tires, previously he’d been practicing on unknown age (3-4 years), wrong brand tires that came on the kart when we bought it. We also needed to add ballast to get him to the right weight. I think we added about 35 lb.’s (on the scales at the event he was 4lbs. low, but no one minded, we were totally open about it). Now, thinking about it with the benefit of hindsight, we should absolutely have given him another test before a race weekend with what will obviously be a very different kart. We didn’t, our bad.
The format at ELKT is two practice sessions in the morning. Two heats with random grid, reversed between each race to determine the grid for the final, then the final. Total of five sessions on track. So, 1st practice, and we notice he’s got corner exit over steer. We’re not sure if it’s handling, or him lifting on exit. Rob (other grandpa) and I talk with people, and to reduce the corner exist oversteer we were told to narrow the rear tr4ack, which is what we did by 1” per side. Note. This seemed wrong to me, as I would have thought that less track would reduce grip, but what did I know? Well, it was the exact opposite of what we should have done. He goes out for the second practice and ends up coming in early as it’s super twitchy and he spins many times. We talk to more people and determine, contrary to what we had been told, that we should be increasing the rear track, also they suggested we decrease front track. Karts are all about cross jacking and things, lots of caster and camber with high offset in the front, so as you turn the wheel there is a lot of vertical travel, which creates twist in the chassis, which changes cross weights which, which…….. It’s not like cars!
So, two session down. The poor kid has not had a good practice and is nervous about racing, and says he doesn’t want to race that day. No problem, he wasn’t going to be in the correct race for his class anyway, so we told him he and a couple of other new kids would start in a different race from his class, at the back, as a test session. It was a race but telling him that it wasn’t was all the confidence he needed. His class has 16-18 kids, 8 to 13 years old, and some have been doing this for years and are very fast and very competitive. Luckily, there is another junior class called ‘Junior swift’ for two stroke engines.
Quick aside. The class we run in uses the very, popular Briggs and Stratton ‘Animal 206’. This is a custom built, sealed, 204CC, 9hp/10lb/ft, 6,100rpm engine. New inc carb they retail for $600. They then have different slides to reduce power for the various younger classes. Adults get the full unbridled 9hp!! Not sure exactly what power our kart has, but it has a ‘green’ slide in there per the regs. These 2 stroke ‘Swift’ engines are 50cc, have (in unrestricted form) 10hp and rev to 14,000rpm etc. But while they are faster, they cost $3,500 new and need $2,000 rebuilds every year, Vs the 206 Animal that seems to last many years with nothing but oil changes. Some people like spending big bucks! But three in a class vs 16-18 shows the power of economics.
Anyway, back on track. The three ‘Mini Swift karts’ have their race, and they add three younger, new kids like at the back of their race. As I said, to calm his nerves, we told him it’s not really racing. Just a practice session in a race for him and the others. The good news is because the Mini Swift race was two races after his group, he got to watch them race. This was great as he could see procedures and things. So anyway, he goes out, he’s running around right next to another 8-year-old, who’s a girl who’s done two prior actual race weekends. He’s close to her and everything is going well. Then at the hairpin, she does a ½ spin. Now a kart sideways stops instantly as it’s got mile wide track and now hot wide slicks. He can’t do anything and hits her side on near the front. She’s out instantly with a mangled bumper and a bit shaken up. He appears OK but beached on a curb. I was out assisting the flaggers as an extra hand for the kids’ races. One guy checked the girl and got her off track, while I got her and the kart off track. I then unbeached our grandson and got him going. As he set off everything appeared OK, but then I heard scrapping, I figured it was his bumper, let him go then turned my attention to getting the girls kart way off track. He had the sense to pit. Once the race had finished and got back to the pit, I discovered the scraping sound was his chassis was bent like an overloaded bridge, and the middle of the chassis was dragging on the ground. At first, we thought we were done, but the old hands jumped in and told us what to do to get back on track. We put a big piece of wood across the middle of the bend in the chassis. Two big guys stood on the rear, and one bounced up and down on the nose until it was ‘good enough’. We will strip the kart down this week and take it in to be professionally straightened.
Two more races to go!! Next race things are calmer. The third kid soon passes both our grandson and the girl, then the two of them run around close to each other and he was to catch her. After a few laps he’s 1-2 kart lengths behind. As soon as he was that close, he started trying to take the inside line to get past her. Too soon, he was too far back, then would lose time being too tight in the corners and would fall back for half a lap. But hey, things were progressing. That race came to an end with at least a reasonably handling kart, and his confidence returning.
By now TBH he was probably done for the day, but we (I’m ambivalent about having done this) said he needed to finish the day as we’d put in a lot of time and effort getting him here. He did, and I think enjoyed it. We did make one more change to the kart, we further narrowed the front track. Things went much better. He got ahead of the girl at the start and kept her behind for the first two thirds of the race. Then across the start/finish they showed him the blue flag as she was close. He took the flag way too seriously and lifted right off. She sped past and was instantly 6-8 kart lengths ahead. After that he closed in and followed her to the end.
Honestly, he did outstandingly considering the adversity. That was a lot for a young kid to take on in one day. Well done to him.
So, this week we’ll strip down the kart, remove the wheels, tires, engine, chain, sprocket, seat and weight, fuel system, clean it up and take it to PKT in Wixom, a local kart supply, retailer, workshop, prep shop etc. They are the go to people around here. They will get it properly straight to original specs.
Not sure where we’re going from here. We’ll see if he wants to race again, it wasn’t the greatest experience. Maybe he wants to go back to test sessions again or not, we will see. It wouldn’t be surprising if he doesn’t want to carry on next year, and that’s 100% fine. We don’t want to push him to do anything he doesn’t want to do.