RALLYNOTES TEAM FINISH RIM TO TAKE USRC CLASS VICTORY!

The motto “To finish first, first you must finish” was more evident for the Rallynotes.com team then any other this weekend at the Rim of the World Rally in Lancaster, CA. This is only their 3rd full stage rally and they are proving that they have what it takes to be a national team.

The all volunteer crew pushed hard to keep car 761 in it. “We just kept taking stuff off the car and finding more broken. Everyone was up until 3:00AM,” said driver Kristopher Marciniak. “I called Harry who was coming up on Saturday morning. I can’t believe he answered his phone. I said – you know where I live, Harry. Pick up the four struts off my porch – and at 7:00AM he was waiting for us at service. He had already started on the front right!” The crew of four: Harry Bushling, Kaiser Chen, Colten Becker, and Susan Rand, continued to work throughout the day to see that the car finished the rally.

Setting fast times on Friday the team was 1st in Production and 4th in the very competitive regional P-Stock class. They finished the night in 17th overall, very respectable for a production Dodge Neon. “The Bilstiens were amazing on the rough stuff, I know that’s what allowed us to move up so fast. We went from 33rd to 17th in 4 stages!” exclaimed Kris. “I was heartbroken when we discovered the housings we had made were broken and we had to pull the struts Saturday morning.”

The only goal at this point was to finish the rally. The team would drive smooth throughout the afternoon into the final two night stages. A small mistake on the rougher section of Maxwell Road got the car stuck nose first into loose gravel. A gracious tug from car 632 driven by Dean Schlingmann & Chip Doeden got the Dodge Rally Neon back on the road to finish the last stage.

On the final transit back to headquarters the engine died. Disappointed, the team pulled over and tried to get the Neon going again. “The car was not getting fuel. The oil light was on… I have no idea what was wrong,” said Kris. They flagged down the next rally car driven by Bristol Keele & George Scott. They graciously offered a tow back to the finish pavilion. “That is what rally is all about!”

At the finish, the time control workers told the team to head into the pavilion, where the winner’s circle was located. “I was stunned. I asked if he was serious,” said co-driver Christine Wittish. “It was amazing – as we pushed the car inside everyone was cheering and applauding. Getting to participate in the champagne ceremony was something I had no idea we would be taking part in so soon in our rally career.” The team will be looking for its next win in less then a month at the Olympus International Rally in Olympia, Washington.

Kristopher is a computer technician and support analyst working for the Alteer Corporation in Irvine, CA. Christine is a graduate student at the University of California, Irvine in the field of molecular biology and the lab of Dr. Douglas Wallace.

We would like to thank the following for their support!
Bilstein
RallyDecals.com
The Southern California Neon America Club
Hankook Tires

The Rim of the World Experience

Friday morning I learned never to load a car on a trailer yourself. :D I overshot the tow dolly, jacked the car up and off the trailer, and proceeded to do it again. I could only stand there and laugh at myself. The skidplates protected the car from damage and after some loose strap drama – we learned how to use our new tow dolly. A weekend of lessons had begun.

We pushed the car into tech and was out in time to test the super special jump before it closed up at 5:00. I hit it at like 45MPH and nosed the car pretty hard. I tried again at a reasonable 30MPH and found it to be a little more of a controlled landing. It’s tough to jump a car with 70% of the weight over the front wheels.

We start with a confident win at the super special. The first three stages set the tone for the rally. They are rough and tight with lots of instructions. Christine gets lost a couple of times, but we’re still moving right along. Then we get into the fog on SS3 and a panic sets in. Christine keeps looking up to see where we are and all she sees is nothing. I’m still moving at a good pace and relying heavily on the notes. She knows there’s a hairpin left coming up but is worried that we haven’t gotten to it yet. I settle off the throttle a bit and assure her that we’ll find it together. When we get back on the notes I provide verbal feedback of every turn to substitute what Christine can’t see in the fog.
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We’re home from Lancaster.

Catching a tow back to HQWe got home and headed right for a nap. What a weekend! There’s too much to even start to go into now, but we will post a complete story soon. If you didn’t see the standings, we fnished, thus taking a USRC win. We came in 4th in the regional P-Stock (Both the Friday and Saturday Rallies)

Huge thanks to our crew! Without them this would not have happened. We received a lot of comments from other competitors on how well you guys did and how busy our service area was at all times.

The picture is the back of Bristol Keele’s car towing us back to headquarters after the last stage of the rally. Huge thanks to both her and Scott for that – We congratulate them on their first finish!

Check out our pictures from the turnaround stage here.
Lots more pictures and stories to follow!

A pre-rally last minute under the wire update.

The plan was to get the car on the trailer last weekend. The plan was to have the transmission and the struts sorted a week before the rally. The plan was to not be last minute with like 3 major things. I gave the plan enough time. I set it in motion a month before the event. I monitored and updated the plan. I called and made sure the plan was going to work and then made other plans.

New transmission, clutch, and struts. The transmission leaked out of it’s first shipping container and delayed it for a week. The clutch was ordered on April 4th and was confirmed on the 14th but never shipped. The strut bodies were sent out for machining on April 3rd and as with any ‘one-off’ custom suspension setup – it takes time. Dave Turner Motorsports did a fantastic job with them.

The transmission arrived and I went to work. When the clutch company did get back to me I learned they didn’t have my complete order. I cancelled the partial order on the 18th and called allchryslerparts.com. I spoke to their internet sales person directly and they had the clutch kit and bearing in stock and ready to ship. A call to Dave Turner revealed that Bilstein needed to ship him some small parts and that they didn’t go out before Easter vacation.

Monday: Harry from the SoCalNeon Club gave me a hand getting the clutch and tranny swapped. I’m now on a fresh R/T transmission with a PT Cruiser clutch. The PT unit has more holding force but is basically a stock replacement. Tuesday: I swapped the front control arms with stock bushings back on the car. The stiff poly bushings keep splitting apart. There is just too much play on the Neon front control arms for stiff bushings in rally. I noticed the passenger side subframe mount had broken free from it’s factory spot welds. :eek: I drilled and bolted both sides with a fat ‘grade 8′ metric bolt. (So THAT’s what the knocking noise was from… :p ) Today: I’ll install the struts and get the car on the ground, ready to rally. Tomorrow: I’ll drive Ze’Neon to work and get it aligned. It will have a solid 30 miles on it before the clutch drop at the Super Special Friday night. :D

To add to the drama: My birthday is tomorrow and I got a root canal yesterday. :D

UPDATE: Around 1:00 AM I discovered that the front right tire was rubbing the strut bad. I tweaked the strut out more and adjusted the spring perch. The rally tires barely clear on that side. Just enough to drive it to an alignment shop. After a warm up lap I hit a large speed bump in town at around 50MPH. Shwoom! – A successful test. :p

Phantom Grip installed.

Phantom Grip in a Neon differentialLast night I cracked the case on the 3.94 and prayed that the magic wouldn’t fall out. After reading the forums over at Neons.org I learned the best way to install it. Replacing the stock dowel pin is no good. Replacing the stock diff pin with the ‘diff saver’ is not much better. (Pin cracks in half and shoots out both sides of the diff = grenade :eek: ) The Mopar Differential plates 05134957AA are the way to go. The pin is free to slide a bit, but is prevented from turning my MTX inside out. :D

As soon as the new clutch arrives I can get this installed and then tested!

RALLYNOTES.COM READY TO ROCK AT RIM

Rim of the World

This year the team kicks off a big season with a huge rally close to home. Living up to its name “The Rim of the World Rally” in Lancaster, California is one of the biggest and most well known rallies in the country. Covering over ninety stage miles, the freshly graded roads offer two days of high speed action. This includes an arena style super special stage where the team can show off their championship rallycross skills. With this event, the Rallynotes.com Team begin their quest for the United States Rally Championship!

The Dodge Rally Neon has received a number of upgrades since last season, the biggest being a full set of Bilstein Shock Absorbers. “What a difference! It’s a whole new car to drive. I always push what I have to the limit and I’m excited to test the Bilstein Shocks on water bars and jumps,” said driver Kristopher Marciniak. Along with new suspension, several upgrades to the car’s performance were made. “There’s not a lot we can do with a production car according to the rules – but we’ve taken what we can do to the max,” Kris said with a grin. This year the car will be riding on new Hankook Ventus rally tires which have just been introduced to the United States.

Rallynotes.com TeamSetting a goal for the event, the team wants a strong showing. “I want to win. I want to push and have a lot of fun, but I also want to finish the rally and head up to Olympus unscathed. So, we’ll keep it real. If I’m comfortable with our pace and in the hunt, I’ll stay on it. If I start to stress things I’ll go into ‘finish the rally’ mode. Plus it’s my birthday weekend so I know I’ll have fun no matter what happens.” said Kris. “I just want to have a good time and finish. Co-Driver Christine Wittish added, “Having driven up some of the stages as a volunteer last year I’m a little terrified, but hopefully the notes will keep my view away from the sudden drop-offs.”

The volunteer crew will consist of people from various Dodge Neon car clubs and friends. “We have someone driving all the way down from Sacramento just to be here! We can’t thank them enough for their support,” said Christine. The team only recently started to be active with the Southern California Neon America Club, and already the members are helping out the Rallynotes.com Team with various facets of racing a Dodge Neon rally car.

We would like to thank the following for their support!
Bilstein
RallyDecals.com
The Southern California Neon America Club

Bullet cam setup – Awesome vids to follow.

bullet cam testing

I’ll admit that my in-car camera footage seems static. Yes – It’s an inside view of going really fast on a dirt road, but it’s always that same shot from the roll cage. One of the new upgrades that I have for the car is a Sony bullet cam (or lipstick camera) hooked to my trusty old DSC-TRV330 HandyCam. Now if you know me, you already know that I didn’t stop there.

The first problem with the in-car camera setup is power. The camera battery lasts maybe an hour and costs more then a set of tires. :eek: When you add a bullet cam you must power a recorder AND the camera. So, do you grab 12v from the car? Do you try to power the recorder with car as well? Then, say something dramatic happens, will you remember to start the recorder after you spin and stall the car? You won’t.

I wanted the following:
1. A large rechargeable battery that could run the recorder and the camera.
2. A recorder interface that would allow me to start and stop the tape without scrambling out of the car or reaching back in some sort of crazy yoga position. (and subsequently elbow Christine in the head. :p )
3. A way to keep this all self contained and not attached to the functions of the car.

I went looking for 12v NiMH batteries and came across a 4.5 AmpHour beast – designed to power kit robots. I then picked up a spare Sony charger on ebay, ripped it apart and pulled off the cord. The HandyCam requires 8.4 volts, but after some testing with a DC to DC converter I got it to happily run on 8 volts. I then powered the bullet cam with 12 volts from the robot battery. Now I have the whole kit running off ONE rechargeable battery that will last days instead of hours. I recorded several exciting hours of our fish tank to test it. :) Click here to see a break down of what’s in my bullet cam system.

The only thing that remained was camera control. Without it, you’re wasting tape. You can’t imagine the gigs of digital video that I transferred and had to skip through. We’d get to the time control and I just didn’t want to reach back there after my belts were tight. So, I’d start recording before we pulled into the ATC. That’s 6 minutes of boredom right there. Then after a stage I’d be pumped up and forget that we’re still rolling. It’s only after we’d pulled into service that I realized I was still burning tape and 2 hour batteries. “Dammit!” :mad:

It’s a good thing I was an AV Geek in High School. :| I needed LANC. LANC is a controller. LANC can be used to control two recorders in an editing suite, or it can be used to make the zoom a nice thumb button on a tripod. Sony sells a LANC controller for the HandyCam, but after some exhaustive Google work, I learned that it can’t start recording in VCR mode. This is the mode the camera is in with the bullet cam connected, and if I can’t start and stop the recorder this $100 unit is worthless to me. I did however find a LANC controller that was exactly what I needed. You see, the kids over at Hoyt Technologies have been doing extreme camera work for some time and sell a single button LANC remote. Not only does it start and stop the recorder in VCR mode, but you can hold the button for a few seconds and put it in standby. A quick press of the button gets the tape rolling again. It’s fantastic and Christine ordered it as an early b-day gift for me.

Today I tested some potential locations of the bullet camera in the car (and outside). The HandyCam can grab stills onto a memory stick, so I took some test shots. I think we’ll stick with inside the car for a few rallies, and get more brave as the season goes on. I’m stoked about the foot cam and the wide angle lens on the camera grabbing much more of the action. The 2006 rallynotes.com videos will undoubtedly rock. :D

Why repair – when you can upgrade?

braided linesKaiser from our crew stopped by the other night to swap ECU’s. He just finished the conversion from automatic to manual on his Neon and was limping the car around with the old computer. In trade he had a brand new Mopar ECU that he didn’t want to use for a daily driver (with the cost of premium fuel these days) and we struck a fair bargain. :D

Both cars started right up and Kaiser and I were both interested to see what the Mopar computer did ‘out of the box.’ I frantically piled all the tires and items stored in the car off to the side of the parking lot and we took off. Rev-limiter? What rev-limiter? :p No speed cap either. The car makes power all the way past six grand. After the car was warmed up I wound it all the way out to 7 grand. That’s quite enough for a motor with 80,000+ miles on her.

I came up to traffic and began to slow from sub-light speed. The brakes dragged a little but didn’t bite while the pedal dropped to the floor. “Ahh… We have no brakes…” I announced calmly to Kaiser as I slipped into 3rd and engine braked the car. I safely pulled to the right and yanked the e-brake hard while looking for the anchor to toss out the window. :eek: We manged to pull off the highway and get back to the parking lot without incident.

The rear left brake line was dripping fluid when I pulled in. After a quick look, it was worse then I thought. It was coming from the hard line before the connector. The frame had rubbed away the metal and opened the line. My new set of braided replacement ends would do little to fix this, so I decided to replace all the hard lines and run them inside the car. I might as well do the fuel lines too. This afternoon I was up to Baker Precision to pick up fuel and brake line. I’m glad it happened now and not at a rally. :)

Rally Music Video Zen

1981 Acropolis Rally video done to \"Mea Culpa\" a song from Brian Eno & David Byrne

A couple years ago I was hanging out with some friends at casa’de trunkmonkey and we were watching all the rally footage available to Sean’s PVR. This included a “Legends of Motorsport” from the 1981 Acropolis Rally.

About 3 minutes into the show, begins this sequence of radio calls. Service crews are trying to contact each other, back and forth, etc. They layered the audio over a deep electro beat. Ambient radio chatter along with a track you might hear from Fischerspooner or Prodigy. A wicked tune matched up with 80’s rally cars. Sean, Andrew, Brian and others wondered if we could ever figure out where to get it.

Yesterday I stumbled upon the remix site to “My Life in the Bush of Ghosts“. A project recently remastered and re-released by Brian Eno and David Byrne. This album – way ahead of it’s time – was released in 1981. I’ve been a fan of Byrne’s work, so I click to hear some of the tracks. “Mea Culpa” hits me right off the bat. “I’ve heard this before”. My brain jumped into trainspotter mode. It took me about an hour, but when I came back to my desk I knew I had the song from the Acropolis Rally Video.

A quick dip into the DVD rally video collection when I got home yielded “Chariots in the Sun – The 1981 Acropolis Rally.”
The song is “Mea Culpa” off the album “My Life in the Bush of Ghosts” done by Brian Eno and David Byrne.
Oh… and you can download the video here – please enjoy it. :D