September 29-October 3 – Nationals in Iowa. We tried packing up most of the things for
the trip on Tuesday night but only got the car on the trailer. Tia’s blower motor stopped working the night
before and its dash needed to be reassembled so Susan could drive it to work on
Wednesday. I also managed to damage one
of the rear doors on the Suburban which caused it to pop out the passenger side
rear lights. On top of this I pulled out
the wires from the trailer hookup. Yay
me. So after work on Wednesday Susan
worked on fixing the trailer hookup while I adjusted the back door. We both had middling success. I was able to get the door to stop knocking
out the rear lights but it still scraped and popped audibly (we decided I would
probably do more harm than good if I kept messing with it). Susan was able to wire up the trailer hookup
but discovered that the right blinker wasn’t functioning (it’s an issue on the
Suburban which we decided was something we could figure out after the trip). It was starting to get dark but we thought it
best to still leave so finished packing up and headed out. We drove to North Platte and stayed in a
Comfort Inn. Not long before we got to
the hotel one of my dental crowns fell off eating gummy life savers. Luckily it didn’t hurt much and I was able to
wedge it back in its spot.
On Thursday morning I called a local dentist and had my
crown cemented back into place. Then we
finished the drive out to Indianola, Iowa.
After checking into our hotel (Quality Inn) and dropping off the evo and
car trailer at the race site we went to dinner just up the street at Cal’s bar
and grill where we got to hang out with several other competitors. We got house wine and ate greasy stuffs
whilst we talked racing.
Friday was the day before racing and we had
to check in and have our car tech’d.
After this we headed over the practice course for a few runs to
acclimate to the conditions. The course
was very short and overly tight but was still worth driving. Susan and I went to lunch at a pizza and
steak place with a diverse menu (Italian, Chinese, Middle Eastern) which was
very good. Saturday’s courses were set
up so we could walk them and we did so before it got dark. Susan was the chief of timing and had to
figure out the grid and run order for all the drivers. This ended up being a pain and we were late
heading over to the dinner provided by the SCCA (held at a winery across the
street from the racing venue). We tasted
wine before getting in line for BBQ which ended up being tasty. After eating there was a town hall held where
various rallycross issues were discussed.
We were going to hang out and play card games with fellow
Coloradan-racer Dan Hipwood but I was too tired from the day so we went back to
our hotel room to sleep.
On Saturday morning I was up well before our wakeup call at
5:30 and excited for the day. Our run
group was last which normally would mean we’d have a lot of time to hang out
but Susan was stuck working during the two other groups (I was the designated
writer for the stock classes (meaning I was to write an article for the club
magazine “Sportscar”)). I watched and
took notes of what was going on. Unlike
last year there was no rain the night and morning of the event but morning dew
made the course slick for the first run group.
By the time the second group was racing the ground was mostly dry and
the cars subsequently got faster. When we
finally got to run conditions were great.
Unfortunately for me I kept hitting cones (a big no-no at national
events) which immediately put me far down the standings. I was driving frustrated and five hit cones
had me in 12th place when we broke for lunch. Susan put down consistent runs throughout the
morning and was in 9th place.
With the help of Susan and a pulled pork sandwich I felt better in the afternoon. I figured I had nothing to lose and drove more relaxed and climbing up to 3rd place by the time we were done racing on Saturday. Susan fell two spots to 11th place as some of the other drivers found their pace.
We met 25+ other competitors at a downtown tavern for dinner. Homecoming was happening so most of the restaurants were packed with high school kids. We occupied a long table at the back of the place. It took a LONG time to order and get our food and drinks but time went fast as we talked about the exciting day. In the end Susan and I filled ourselves up on tasty food and headed back to our hotel.
With the help of Susan and a pulled pork sandwich I felt better in the afternoon. I figured I had nothing to lose and drove more relaxed and climbing up to 3rd place by the time we were done racing on Saturday. Susan fell two spots to 11th place as some of the other drivers found their pace.
We met 25+ other competitors at a downtown tavern for dinner. Homecoming was happening so most of the restaurants were packed with high school kids. We occupied a long table at the back of the place. It took a LONG time to order and get our food and drinks but time went fast as we talked about the exciting day. In the end Susan and I filled ourselves up on tasty food and headed back to our hotel.
Sunday began with heavy fog that didn’t clear until the late
morning.
More morning dew once again had the first run group going slower but the competition was fierce. As is with this sort of thing the best drivers ended up taking the victories in their classes despite the wet conditions. I was upbeat when we finally got to race as I only had a little over four seconds to make up to take the lead (1.5 to get into 2nd place). While I immediately got into 2nd place I only managed to be a half a second faster than the leader. Susan put down some quick runs and maintained her position to finish in 11th. 19 competitors from Colorado made the trip out to Iowa for the event and many came away with trophies. After the awards ceremony we hopped into the Suburban and started home. We stopped in Ogallala, Nebraska for the night (another Quality Inn) as we were too exhausted to make it all the way to Denver.
More morning dew once again had the first run group going slower but the competition was fierce. As is with this sort of thing the best drivers ended up taking the victories in their classes despite the wet conditions. I was upbeat when we finally got to race as I only had a little over four seconds to make up to take the lead (1.5 to get into 2nd place). While I immediately got into 2nd place I only managed to be a half a second faster than the leader. Susan put down some quick runs and maintained her position to finish in 11th. 19 competitors from Colorado made the trip out to Iowa for the event and many came away with trophies. After the awards ceremony we hopped into the Suburban and started home. We stopped in Ogallala, Nebraska for the night (another Quality Inn) as we were too exhausted to make it all the way to Denver.
Monday had us driving the last three hours to Denver where
we picked up our WRX (it was getting its axle seal replaced again) before
heading home. After unpacking we went
out for lunch at Sweet Tomatoes and did a little necessary shopping. We then spent the evening alternatively
napping on the couch with the pugs whom we had missed very much.
October 8-9 weekend – Twas a quiet weekend for us which was
great. I was going to be installing a
newly rebuilt steering rack on the WRX but that had to wait as the shop we used
was closed over the weekend. We ended up
relaxing quite a bit and trying out a couple of new (to us) breakfast
places. On Saturday we tried The Bistro
which was fancy-schmancy. The food was
delicious and reminded me of breakfasts on past cruise ships we’ve been
on. We went to Breakfast Off Broadway on
Sunday because they had bottomless Mimosas which Susan wanted to try (she did
like them). I think it was the best
breakfast place we’ve gone to yet. The
food was tasty and the coffee was excellent.
They also had live music in the form of a bass guitarist jamming out
with a looper pedal. Very cool.
October 10-11 – I picked up a rebuilt steering rack on
Monday after work and headed home with the intent that I’d install it
quickly. I made a mistake when connecting
the steering knuckle to the rack which essentially ruined the knuckle’s
splines. I spent far too much time
trying to make it work just to give up at 10:00 that night. The next day I went to our local awesome junk
yard and found a couple of steering knuckles that could work for $10 a piece (a
new one would have cost around $200). It
took me approximately 20 seconds to install the junk yard knuckle the correct
way and I had the rest together after another couple of hours. Susan and I then dropped off the WRX for an
alignment and got dinner at Chili’s which was pleasant. When we got home we discovered Sophie had
peed in her kennel so she got a bath in the kitchen sink. After drying her off Susan put her by the
water bowel and Sophie fell on her side.
She arched her back and her limbs went stiff. We’ve never seen Sophie have a seizure before
and now are worried this is why she’s been making mistakes in her kennel. Hopefully it was an isolated incident and not
indicative of serious problems.
October 14 – dinner and games at Kari and Alvin’s
house. They baked Costco food (ravioli
and mac’n’cheese) and we brought salad.
Alvin’s sister (Emily) and husband (Kevin) were there as well as
Jeff. We ate and then cleared the table
to play Cabo. It was an epic game and
Alvin came away the victor. Emily and
Kevin were first-timers but picked it up right away. Kari and Alvin just adopted a puppy from New
Mexico they named Ringo. The vet thinks
he might be a Rottweiler/German Shepherd mix but he’s pretty small and doesn’t
look like he’ll get a whole lot bigger (little paws). Whatever his pedigree Ringo is very cute and
has a calm demeanor.
October 15 – I had plans to do work on Tia in the morning
but we decided to be lazy and went out for breakfast instead. This time we went to a restaurant named Urban
Egg which was south of C470 off Broadway which is closer to home than most any
of the other breakfast eateries. The
name had me thinking it would be hip and modern but it was pretty standard (or
what I think of standard for such places).
This is not a bad thing as the service, food, and coffee were all
good. I’m not sure it is our favorite
place but its close location may help it become a standard weekend venue for
us. After breakfast we drove around town
running errands before coming home to prep to race.
While I swapped out the wheels on the WRX (our car of choice
for the event) Susan took apart and fiddled with the wiring on the
Suburban. I managed to hammer the
Suburban’s back door into better shape and it no longer scrapes and pops when
opened or closed (win!). After a couple
of hours of checking the wiring and having a lot of dirt fall on her face Susan
discovered that a blown fuse was the cause of the trailer blinker not
working. Next time we’ll know to check
the fuses first when something like this happens. We finished the day with the WRX loaded on
the car trailer.
October 16 – rallycross at USTDS. We got up extra early on Sunday and the sun
wasn’t up until we were almost to the event site. I thought there was a timing issue which
ended up only being in my head. Susan
did her normal thing and the WRX got through tech with no issues. I was excited to drive the WRX and was
perplexed on the very first turn when I lifted off the accelerator but the car
kept on accelerating as if my foot was pushed to the floor. Apparently starting with our particular model
the car’s computer keeps the revs high for a moment after you lift off the gas
pedal to help the driver shift smoother.
This might be fine in daily driving but at the racetrack means that one
can’t depend on the gas pedal to react in the way one would expect. It really felt like the car was trying to
kill us and it made us two frustrated drivers.
Predictably we did horribly but on the bright side I learned how to
left-foot brake as doing so was the only way I could get the car to act like I
wanted it to. The front bumper didn’t
approve of hitting cones (which we did a lot of) and we found out that it could
come most of the way off the car if we weren’t careful. The WRX also didn’t like being driven too
hard as it almost overheated after one particular high-reving run (yikes!). Also the power steering couldn’t keep up on
the tighter turns. Basically we should
have driven the evo as it is a better car in every way. Susan earned the cone-killer award for
hitting the most of anyone competing by hitting 20 (her first!). We did end up having a good time as we didn’t
really have a choice but to accept our fate and deal with it. Luckily for me the guy who I’m most competing
with for season points also had a bad day.
The WRX had started the day with almost brand-new snow tires which were
essentially destroyed while racing. They
were really cheap and came with the car so we were ok with the sacrifice. After the event we attempted to get dinner
with some friends but found the two restaurants we went to had wait times too
long for us. Susan and I actually went
to a Wendy’s before heading back home.
October 16 – both of us worked late and I got
home to find Sophie had made a mess in her kennel. I gave her a bath and then Susan got
home. While she was drying Sophie had
another seizure. This time she cried out
as it was happening. Maybe the saddest
sound I have ever heard. We don’t know
what’s going on and wonder if somehow the baths themselves are somehow causing
them. After the incident she seemed like
her normal self. Susan took her to work the
next day to watch her (of course, she was fine).
Sophie has been staying in her own kennel the last week or
two as she has consistently made mistakes before we’ve gotten home. I had the feeling that she doing her business
soon before we got home and perhaps would do better if she was with Tweetie
again. Sure enough, we gave it a shot
and Sophie made it through the whole day without incident. We’re glad as we were doing a lot of extra
laundry. Plus we do think something to do
with the sudden drop in her body temperature after her baths was causing her
seizures and no mistakes means no baths.
October 22 – the morning started late with us driving up to
Snooze for breakfast. Unfortunately a
whole lot of other folks were doing the same thing and the wait was 45 minutes
to an hour. I tried to take the edge out
of my scoff as we left. Unable to come
to a consensus we ended up at Village Inn.
Besides having an obviously harried waitress it was a pleasant
experience. I think going to Village Inn
worked to reset our breakfast expectations.
Susan didn’t agree but I think she just wanted Mimosas (which they don’t
serve). After we got home we took a
close look at the evo’s suspension.
The knocking sound coming from the passenger front side
which started back in August didn’t go away when I reattached the side skirt
and has progressively worsened. We were
very worried the strut was blow which would be a huge bummer as a replacement
strut would be very expensive and the manufacturer (Bilstein) doesn’t rebuild
them anymore (they used to until early 2015).
We found that entering our driveway quickly caused the noise so we took
turns listening from the outside while the other drove. I put the evo on jack stands and checked
everything out thoroughly. It was at
this point I discovered the trailing arm bushing (a big hockey puck-shaped
rubber thing) was completely trashed on the passenger side. The driver’s side was torn some but in better
shape. Bingo! We figured out the noise. While I was doing this Susan worked to clean
up the WRX’s interior (gear oil had leaked onto the passenger foot well – yuck). Jeff came by in the evening for dinner and
conversation. I made marinated pork
which exceeded our expectations. We had
a nice time.
October 23 – we finally dropped off Tia at the body shop to
get fixed on the way up to have breakfast at Breakfast Off Broadway with
Jeff. It was pretty busy at the
restaurant and we beat Jeff by 20 minutes but we were able to be seated
immediately when he arrived. Once again
the food was excellent and Susan enjoyed her Mimosas. On the way home we stopped at an auto parts
store to pick up sway bar end links for the WRX (that one rallycross really
took its toll on the car). They didn’t
take long to install and I also rotated the tires so the slightly-less-shredded
tires would be on the front of the car.
I also noticed that the axle seal is still leaking. Yay. Our
buddy Dan Hipwood came by with some clean and un-torn Miata seats we bought off
him. He has two Miatas which he is
turning into one using the best bits of both while selling off what he doesn’t
need. Bonus for us. He also picked up his rally wheels/tires we had
brought back from Iowa for him.
October 26 – Susan picked up Tia from the body shop. We didn’t know how long it would take for Tia
to be fixed and painted but were surprised when Susan got a call it was done
only three days after we dropped it off.
Susan was so excited she left work to pick her up. The shop did a great job as far as we can
tell as one really can’t tell anything is amiss.
October 28 – went to Alvin and Kari’s for dinner and car
work. I reached out to Alvin about
pressing out and in the new bushings on the evo’s control arms as having a shop
do it added a lot of potential expense.
Since I had to pull the control arms out I decided to replace the other
bushing on the control arms along with the ball joints. Taking out the control arms was surprisingly
easy and I did so the night before having the new bits installed. We brought marinated chicken (same seasoning
packet as with the pork the week before) which Susan and Kari put in the oven
while Alvin and I worked in the garage.
Getting out the bushing wasn’t the easiest thing but eventually we
(mostly Alvin) prevailed. We did find
something unfortunate when trying to press in the new ball joint on the
driver’s side control arm. About a year
ago I installed a new ball joint that was not an exact fit for the control arm
(sometimes part stores have incorrect numbers).
In fact it was too big and now the hole was too large for the correct
ball joint to fit snuggly. Dang. While it might seem sketchy I bought some JB
Weld which we used to mortar the new ball joint in place. This should work just fine except for when
the ball joint eventually goes bad and we have to replace the whole control arm
(there is NO way anyone is getting out the ball joint we just installed). Such it is.
Dinner was tasty and I had the opportunity to help carry out some old
couches to the sidewalk for craigslist peoples to pick up. We stayed late which was fine as the company
was good.
October 29 – we slept in late and after taking care of the
pugs I installed control arms on the evo.
With the ease of removal I was hoping the installation of the control
arms would be simple. I was
incorrect. The new hockey-puck bushings
were quite a bit thicker than the OEM bushings and thus were larger than the
space they were to occupy. Grease, brute
force, and a rubber mallet convinced them to go in their home (plus I had to
disconnect the tie rods and pull the struts… fun). I finished up around noon and we dropped off
the evo for an alignment on our way to a late breakfast at Breakfast Queen. Breakfast Queen is just north of Hampden on
Broadway which was convenient for us. We
got their around an hour before they close and the restaurant was mostly empty
because of it. The food was excellent as
was the coffee. Amazingly the alignment
on the evo was done before we finished eating and we picked it up on our way
home. This was after driving around
trying to find a place for Susan to get her flu shot. Our insurance says most any grocery store
will be covered but we found this to not be the case.
October 30 – we went up to Conifer Medical to get Susan’s flu
shot as we knew it was covered there.
Since we were in the area we had a late breakfast with John and Karen at
DW’s 285 Diner. We had a nice time
talking about this and that while eating way too much good food. On the way home we decided that the remainder
of the day would be a lazy one. Susan
ended up taking a nap on the couch while I played video games and we did not
add anything of value to society for the rest of the night. It was nice.












1 comment:
My head spins while reading about your busy and exciting lives!
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