Month: October 2006

  • Laguna Seca Round 10 World Challenge Speed GT race report

    Laguna Seca, Ca,       Round 10    9/22/06

     

    the 2006 Speed World Challenge GT Championships

     

    It’s race 10 at Laguna Seca, it’s the SPEED World Challenge Finals.  The piranha tank is frothing, minnows are scarce. Teams whisper strategy, engines curiously get friskier, chassis tuning more creative, and when you think there’s nothing left, the cars get faster.  This is good ole boy racing, right? No pressure.  Think that?  Then you need to get to a World Challenge race. The 2005 lap record got broken by 21 of the 34 race cars in the GT field.  The finish line separated the first and second car by .03 second.   In spite of being 1.5 seconds quicker than last year, the Woodhouse Performance /Kicker /Dodge Viper Competition Coupe #13 qualified 11th

     

    Dodge Viper fans if this were an old western, it would have been called a “Bad day at Black Rock”.  Dodge came into this final round leading in manufacturers points, and left it, the 2006 Championship to Porsche with Cadillac in 3rd.  What a scrap it was, this game of strategy, of preparation, of chance, of risk, of skill.   

     

    Dodge did not have the fastest cars here, after practice and qualifying we were behind the Corvettes, Cads and Porsches.  Our biggest gun, and best finish was Tommy Archer.  He started 8th and finished 6th albeit with a wounded suspension..

    The standing start found me staring at the back of Andy Pigrims’ 9th gridded Caddy when the lights went out.   You usually can’t catch Andy napping but something kept him there.   When the light went out, our  #13 Woodhouse Auto Family Viper slid up between him and the pit wall accelerating up the hill.  As we came side by side the power in our snake began to falter.  Geez of all the times to pick for an engine gremlin, this wasn’t it.  On again off again like a light switch instead of a throttle we ended up at the  #2 turn about where we started. click here.

     

    If I turned left the engine would kill, then back to life as the wheel straightened. I radio’d crew chief Rick about this alien presence.  Not that he could wave his wand but I needed a friend to talk to, Oprah wasn’t handy.  So deal with it.  Each left turn the strategy was; go in till she quits, then wiggle, then charge out.  We were struggling for momentum when the full coarse yellow came out.

     

    “OK, Rick, lets get this re-start right”  Right, heck, we nailed it, he sounded like NASCAR… “green green green” he yells and I punch the throttle while the brake lights are lit on the Lawson AXA Porsche in the windshield. A smile builds, as the acceleration advantage catapults me past two cars heading under the bridge toward the start finish line.  In front of me are the #16 Caddie and the #5 Red Tommy Archer Viper.  The lane I am in narrows as the cars bend left under the starter bridge.  Room, plenty, a foot more than needed to get through  when O’Connell, the #16 Caddy sees me coming, he moves left, I am beside him.

    Like squeezing a hazelnut with a pair of pliers.  Pop, with nowhere to go the front of the car jumps two feet into the air as the concrete and Cadillac jaws squeeze sending shards of body flying.  It was like the gates of hell exploded under the front end.  Due to the forward speed (about 100 mph) the cars had no option but to continue on. Click here

     

    From this point forward I struggle to make sense of all this.  I’m feeling like a low flying water fowl above an outdoor Ducks Unlimited Convention: An engine that chooses when it wants to run. A suspension that is handling erratically after the nutcracker special and I can’t get Rick to answer the radio.

     

    Flinging the car off the outside of every corner now;  elevating myself to idiot status.  Note to self:  “Get a grip”.  In the midst of note, I discover a disconnected ear plug cord.  Conveniently a full coarse yellow allows me to drive with one knee to get re-plugged just in time to hear Rick, in a highly motivated voice, tell me to get my undeniably ignorant self to the pits and pronto.  It takes him 30 seconds to replace the left front tire that was flat due to rim damage on the concrete wall. 

     

    Back out we go with but one of the three issues left.  This time it takes one straight-away for that problem, the engine dyeing, to manifest itself.  No amount of steering and shaking will revive her and I roll dead stick to the inside of turn three. 

     

    Relegated to spectator status I sit buckled in watching a bit of the race flashes across the turn in front of me.  20 minutes have gone by now and every five or so I try the starter.  This time it fires.  Fans have placed themselves along the inside fence observing the  fate of the #13 Viper.  When it fired I could hear their screams.  Cool, I’m with ya on that one.  It ran long enough to get back to the pits where Rick tugged on all things electrical until he discovered and plugged in a loose connector. 

     

    Out we go again.  Four laps left.  Rick says “Keep your eyes on your mirrors, you have leaders behind you.”  Not to worry the car was all it needed to be, they advanced no ground. 

     

    Our team goal was to bring back a top ten for the year.  We finished 7th.   Eight finishes were top ten, four top 5 and a podium. We get to say we finished all ten.       

     

    Race teams get asked to vote for the crew of the year.  In the TC series congratulations go to the hard working 3R team.  In the GT Series, Rick and Nancy, our little crew on the #13 Viper Competition Coupe received the honors.  A more meaningful recognition you could not bestow.  Nancy is still flushed with excitement.

     

    Some of the hard working, caring folks that support this:  

     

    Woodhouse Auto Family we deliver nationwide. 800 889 1893 www.woodhouse.com   

     

    Kicker livin loud.      www.kicker.com

     

    Dodge Motorsports   www.dodge.com

     

    Charity of choice       www.alexslemonade.com

     

    More info at     www.speedtv.com  or  www.world-challenge.com

     

    broadcast time

    Saturday, October 28,

    TC at 1 and GT at 2 p.m. Eastern on SPEED

     

    Bless you all.

     bobwoodhouse@woodhouse.com

              

  • Rd. Atlanta Round 9 of the Speed World Challenge TC

    Road Atlanta Round 9 of the SPEED World Challenge

    TC Race Report Through the Windshield of the Woodhouse/Kicker/Viosport/Alex’s Lemonade Dodge SRT-4

    by Brian Smith

     

    WE WON!!!!  Okay it was only the practice session, but it sure felt good to the team to be on top of the charts.

     

    Obviously the practice sessions went well for us.  We made many significant changes during practice to get the car to accommodate the high speed corners and the somewhat user friendly curbs.

     

    We made a change for qualifying that we thought would help us gain a few tenths.  Instead it cost us a few tenths and we qualified a disappointing 10th.  However, we knew the car would be strong for the race so optimism was high that we could get the top three finish that slipped through our hands at Road America.

     

    Race day was a perfect day for racing … pleasantly warm and sunshine.  With a significant amount of friends and family around it was an enjoyable day.

     

    On to the race.  With the normal pre-race activities completed (which we had our favorite flag girl Danielle back) we lined up for the standing start in the outside line in the 10th position.  After Road America and Mosport this front stretch looked like it was an eight lane highway with plenty of room to maneuver.  The only catch at Road Atlanta is turn 1.  You can enter four or so wide but you probably will not exit the corner with everyone still on the pavement (if you were the driver you should probably have made a note of this).  Also, when something goes wrong the outside car tends to be the loser.  Oh, and it is a fast corner … minimum speed of 90 mph.  I figured everyone would head to the inside which is the conventional thinking at Rd. Atl.  So, as usual I planned on going were everyone would not be going … the outside.  I had another great start pulling several cars.  Either I need to switch to drag racing or a lot of people were sleeping.  I did head for the outside because nobody was there.  As we entered turn 1 it appeared we were up to 5th or 6th (hard to count exactly when you are driving at the same time).  I was about to pull beside the Tindol Mazda and Acura running side by side and thought about tucking in behind them for the remainder of turn 1.  However, greed obtained the best of me and I decided I wanted those two extra positions to be up to 3rd or 4th.  Remember that comment about not being on the outside too long?  Well half way up the hill I hit the loose stuff on the outside and the rear of the car stepped out into a slide.  This slide became larger when the rear tires went over the curb and into the dirt.  Luckily I did not spin.  I just slid for a long time watching out the windshield as all the cars that I had passed and a few others passed me.

     

    I settled down and by lap 10 was back up to 8th place with the 4th fastest race lap.  I felt confident that we could still obtain our top 3 finish as we were running a comfortable pace and catching the cars in front.  However, luck struck us again.  On lap 11 of 27 the engine temp started to climb and I could smell some coolant.  For the remainder of the race the engine temperature continued to climb and the power steadily decreased (7 seconds a lap slower by the end of the race).  In addition the fluid we were losing was going under the car making the car a touch too loose.  We soldiered on to finish 11th.

     

    We head to Laguna in California in a couple of weeks for the final race of the season and hopefully a win.  We are also in the process of obtaining partners for next year so if you know of companies that would be interested in an affordable marketing tool let us know.

     

    Remember to go online at www.woodhouse.com to purchase your next vehicle no matter where you live, upgrade your car stereo system or purchase your SRT with Kicker products (www.kicker.com), utilize Viosport (www.viosport.com) for  your affordable rugged wearable video needs, visit www.turnonetrackevents.com for corporate and track day events and consider supporting www.alexslemonade.com in their fight against children’s cancer.

  • Road Atlanta Round 9 of the WCGT Race

    Road Atlanta, Sept 29, Braselton, Ga.  Round 9 of the 2006 SPEED World Challenge GT race as seen through the Woodhouse Windshield

     

     

    The Place

    This is totally wrong, a select number of male species in the human race have a desire to come as close to killing themselves as possible, then live on the thrill of telling others about it.  (Do I fit here?).  Road Atlanta, a road racing fantasy for thousands of drivers due to its ability to exploit the phenomena just described.  It receives credit for the endorphins still in my bloodstream a day later.  Thrilling and dangerous, yes, but throughout the week the old-timers emphasized:  “this is a “cake” course since they took out the big hill and put in a corner approaching turn 12.  The old coarse took real men!”   OK, whatever, my aww-S… meter was pegged plenty of times, can’t say it was missed. 

     

    To be at Rd. Atlanta in the fall sunshine and cool air, to be part of the IMSA governed Petite Le Mans show, to witness the increase of 60% in ticket sales, it was all good.   To be part of both the Touring Car (driver Brian Smith writes the TC story for you) and the Grand Touring Series of World Challenge is “living”, meant in the vernacular of Steve McQueen “racing is life, all else is waiting” something like that. 

     

    The Politics   

    One race to go to decide the championship for the 2006 season.  The pressure is on, going into this round Porsche was leading the manufacturers championship by one point followed by Dodge. Cadillac has every intention of ripping it from the grasp of either.  At Atlanta the intent was apparent, instead of their usual two car team there were three, with their all year guy, Andy Pilgrim who everybody loves, then Ron Fellows and Mad Max Angelleli, fondly (or not) called Max the Axe.  At this writing however Dodge is now leading, (hold the applause for one more race).

     

    You feel the posturing, the tension in gatherings and the sobriety of the drivers and team owners, whether Porsche, Cadillac, Dodge, or Corvette..  It is pull out all the stops, make everything count.  Lead driver in the Dodge Viper camp, Tommy Archer was concerned by his ability to qualify even close to what he speculated the competition was capable of if pushed. It turns out he had plenty to worry about even though he killed everybody with his pole time.  On that bonsai lap he found pieces of race track to run on that didn’t exist.

     

    There is an overwhelming depth of preparation that goes into each car before it hits race start.  Alignments are scrutinized by 100ths of an inch, corner weights are within 10#’s, engine oil is low friction, fuel tanks filled to only that needed to get to the end.  Some creative interpretation gets used as well,  we can’t talk about that can we.  Hey, over there, not here, we passed post race tech with flying colors,  we are grateful we even get the chance to be teched.  It was rewarding to see Brian Smith in the #13 Dodge/Kicker/Woodhouse Auto Family  SRT-4 post the quickest practice time of the week-end for TC and to have the other #13, Dodge/Kicker/Woodhouse Auto Family  Viper Comp Coupe post the second quickest in GT practice times.  Counts for nothing though. The SRT-4 received it’s reward by having the power reduced for the balance of the week-end.  And so you know, his 11th place finish was also done with a wounded engine.

     

     

    The Race

    Waaaaiting; aaargh, excruciating, all day you think about nothing else but the race, you wish it were under way, finally it is 4:15, time to suit up.  I drive the car to pre-grid. Most drivers don’t, letting their crew chief do this, they walk out and wait along the safety rail visiting with each other.  For me, I want to be alone, just Rick for the next ½ hour, I can reflect and be calm.  I watch the others out the windshield, they look classy in their driving suits, fidgety, looks of anxiety, mannerisms show, scratching an itch that isn’t there, putting on the dark sunglasses then pulling them off, anticipating the big show, finally the ear plugs and helmets go on and the crew chiefs help them to their seats.

    On track and assembling for the start, Rick warns me, “there will be no one minute board,   the lights will come and go out as soon as the cars settle”.   

     

    That they did…. catching me in a confused state with launch procedure.   Somehow I managed to turn the pit speed limiter on and fumbled through turn one before thumbing it back off.   Five of my fellow competitors are probably still trying to thank me for that.  Into the S’s in the valley, I was ticked at myself  for that lack of intellect and tried making things worse by attempting a pass there on the Yellow Vette of Doug Petersen.  Patience prevailed and I got by on the inside of him at corner 6. 

     

    Corner seven is the beginning of the long straight and you can find out how well you did that corner by who got to the other end first, it so happened the corner was good to me and at the end of the straight we managed to get back a couple more spaces leaving us one car back from our original 10th grid spot. 

     

    As the race settled in on lap four, Mike McCann and I were in a Porsche 997 sandwich with the AXA team of Lawson Aschenbach and Ricardo Imory on both sides.  We couldn’t shake em or overtake em.  They were faster in the slow corners of 5 and 7 and we got it back on the high speed down hill of corner 12. Lap 18 McCann Viper gets by the Lawson AXA Porsche, then the Lou  G Corvette leaving me watching the Porsche and Vette do battle three car lengths in front. 

     

    “The Pass”, here is what all the ruckuss was about (Coolest Move of the Race):  Coming out of turn 7 Lawson sticks his nose inside Lou making a side by side dual the entire straight.  I am stoked, these two have their hands full with each other but if I stick my car to the inside coming over that 160 mph hill, Lou (a smart racer) will forget about Lawson and close the door to the corner.  So with throttle foot buried I stay behind Lawson till waiting longer would end up involving corner workers.  Then yank left, across their back sides to the inside.  I see a Yellow Corvette disappear past the passenger window and a clear corner appear in the windshield, well actually part track and part grass by the time I slid up to 10b.  Gee that went well, two for the price of one.  Lou had to remind me he was not that impressed by putting his nose on the back of my quarter, then again square between the tallights on the way out of 10b.

     

    Finishing 4th was a blessing since that pass put us into 6th but the misfortune of Mike spinning at corner 5 and Sofranos losing his suspension gave up a couple spots.  Gratefully accepted. 

     

    Tommy had a really great race finishing 2nd behind Andy Pilgrim.  He did Cadillac battle the whole way with some of it respectfully done, some not (referring to the Cad team here.)  His show had everyone on their feet and yelling at the end as he passed Ron Fellows 100 yards from the finish line in turn 12..  

     

     

    Remember the people that make this possible and deserve your support:  www.woodhouse.com Woodhouse Auto Family

    Kicker www.kicker.com livin loud.

    Dodge Motorsports  www.dodge.com 

    feel good about yourself, check out www.alexslemonade.com

     

    Also look for the Woodhouse Auto Family/Kicker/Dodge SRT-4 story authored by

    driver Brian Smith, if you do not get his report e-mail him at brian@full-lock.com

     

    Find more info at     www.speedtv.com  or  www.world-challenge.com

     

    Race will show on  SPEED at 3pm GT and 2pm TC est. Oct. 14th Sat.

     

     bobwoodhouse@woodhouse.com

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