Neil

Towing to Mid America Motorplex

As Jessica mentioned on Friday, that afternoon we loaded up the trailer and Jeep and headed to Omaha, NE. For what? A track day of course! At about 5 1/2 hours drive time, this was the furthest we have traveled to do a track day.

We also took the dogs, which always makes a trip more work, but also more enjoyable. We’ve been really lucky, Clive and Matilda are really good sports when it comes to traveling. Even with the added noise of pulling the car on a trailer and alongside noisy semis didn’t seem to upset them too much. They were in a constant cycle of naps and begging for road snacks.

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This was my first time to Mid America Motorplex and I can say now that I really enjoyed the track. After the massive floods in the area in 2011, I wasn’t sure quite what conditions would be like, but for the most part the track was still in very good shape and enjoyable to drive on.

This particular event was put on by the guys at Find The Line. I got a chance to talk with Find The Line owner Damian Dela Huerta a good bit about the track and how to drive it. Damian has a race car of his own and was a great resource to have, and I definitely took the opportunity to pick his brain about how to find the good racing lines at Mid America Motorplex.

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Mid America Motorplex is a 2.23 mile circuit (about double the size of Gateway!) and as you can see has a lot of really great turns. There is a little bit of something for everyone at Mid America. You have two straights that are good for well over 100mph, you have a couple late apex turns, and you have two sets of slower speed technical transitions that allow the lower horsepower cars to gain some time on the more powerful cars if you get those turns right.

Some of my favorite things about the track would be turn 3 to 4 where in my car I can exit turn 3 in 3rd gear and hit 4th and have the pedal to the floor all the way through turn 4 before braking for turn 5.

Turn 5 to 6 is a sweeper that since the track sweeps outward you can carry a lot of early exit speed because you will not have to worry about going off track there. Turn 7 comes up very very fast!

Turn 7-8 was perhaps the most tricky for me to get right. As you can see you can do a “double apex” on the turn where you hit the turn apex on 7 and then hit the turn apex on 8. OR you can give up turn 7 apex and track out to the left and then late apex turn 8.

9-10-11 and 12-13-14 turns were such a joy to drive and really reminded me of my Autocross days in that if you got these smooth and efficient you could make up so much time on someone who was not very good at those transitions.

Here are some videos of my laps. Sorry about the terribly shaky camera. I tried to dampen the camera mount the best I could but the exhaust note/vibration is just too much for it. I will be ordering a new mount soon that will eliminate this problem for next time.

5-18-2013 Mid America Motorplex Open Lapping HPDE from Kohler Created on Vimeo.

5-18-2013 Mid America Motorplex Open Lapping HPDE – Session 2 from Kohler Created on Vimeo.

5-18-2013 Mid America Motorplex – Open Lapping HPDE – Session 3 from Kohler Created on Vimeo.

Here is a slideshow of the pictures of the day! Unfortunately due to how large the track is, it is quite hard to get good on-track photos so we do not have any of those.

Since there were only around 20 cars there we were able to get over an hour and a half of track time! That is about the most track time I have had at any event. The kind of focus and concentration that is required to keep getting faster and faster on the track and the heat inside the car I was quite tired by the end of the day.

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Packing up is always bittersweet because while you are quite tired and typically feeling pretty accomplished with your day, you know that what comes next is the wait for the next track day.

I hope you enjoyed the post and until the next track day I will leave you with this:

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Happy Wednesday! I’m still major de-load from my trip to Adobe MAX (which I’m still writing about — slowest blogger ever award please), but I wanted to pass along the recipe for the awesome quinoa salad Neil put together for our BBQ at CrossFit this weekend. It was a complete hit, so much so that we made another batch the next day and took it to my parents for Mother’s Day dinner.

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We found the original recipe via Pinterest, and then tweaked it a bit to make it more “us.” I think the other version would obviously be equally as good, but I’m partial to the addition of bacon in ours.

Ingredients

¾ cup uncooked quinoa
5 or 6 strips of uncured bacon, cooked and chopped
1-2 cups shredded red cabbage
1 red bell pepper, diced
½ red onion, diced
1 cup shredded carrots
½ cup chopped cilantro
¼ cup diced green onions
½ cup cashew halves
Squeeze of fresh lime

Dressing:
¼ cup all natural almond butter
2 teaspoons freshly grated ginger
3 tablespoon Dr. Braggs Liquid Aminos
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon coconut sugar
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
1 teaspoon sesame oil
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 teaspoon rice vinegar
Water to thin, if necessary

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Directions:

  1. In a mesh strainer, rinse quinoa thoroughly with cold water until the water runs clear. Bring a 1 1/2 cups of water to a boil and then add quinoa. Reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes or until quinoa has absorbed all of the water. After 15 minutes remove quinoa from heat and put in a large bowl and toss to help cool. Allow to cool for 10 minutes.
  2. If you did not cook the bacon beforehand, now is a good time to fry it up until crunchy/chopp-able.
  3. Heat dressing ingredients in a small saucepan over medium-high heat until smooth. Mix dressing in with the cooled quinoa until thoroughly combined, adding water to thin if necessary.
  4. Add all of the vegetable ingredients and bacon to the dressed quinoa and fold over to mix so that the dressing coats evenly.Add cashews and fold over again until combined. Cool thoroughly in the refrigerator before serving.

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It’s the perfect summer cold salad. It’s packed full of veggies and flavor and it complements other dishes as well. I haven’t made a ton of things I’ve found via Pinterest, despite pinning nearly everything in sight lately, but I’m so happy I gave this a try. So with that being said…

Have you found any Pinterest gems lately?

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You might say we’re technies. A lot of our lives are spent online, definitely not helped by the fact that both Jessica and my professions are in information technology in one way or the other. By day I am a Network Administrator and by night I try my best to be a programmer, however my real passion lies with the hardware side of IT. Jessica is an instructional designer as well as a great graphic designer, having done her undergrad in graphic design and illustration and her masters in Learning Systems Development. She’s also trying on the programming hat for size.

WARNING: NOSTALGIA AHEAD

I have been enthralled by computers since I was 13 and our family got our first home computer. It was an ACER Pentium 1, 75mhz with MMX! It was…. awesome. I immediately got every game I could find for it through garage sales and the library. Our family was fairly poor, so almost every game was nearly free or paid for with allowance money. We also did a lot of pirating. It was too easy to “copy that floppy”. Remember when they tried to combat piracy on 3.5 inch floppy disks by not allowing you to flip the read/write slider on the back? A simple piece of tape and you were golden! Yup, all you had to do was tape over it.

Then I got my own first PC after taking a IT grunt job at 15. It was a home built PC Intel 486 100mhz with 16 (!!) MB of RAM and a great 4 meg graphics card. Awesome. That really started it all. I convinced my parents to get me a second phone line for the internet and I was off. In 1995 the internet was quite young, and if you were diligent enough you could have a field day doing anything you wanted. I hacked, I war dialed, I did everything I could and learned a lot.

LAN party anyone?

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END NOSTALGIA

Anyhow I am kind of getting away from the main point here. What I want to talk about is our home tech setup. Sometimes we get asked what kind of devices we use and why, and I wanted to have a post to point people to without boring or confusing them to death.

I want to preface this by saying that we build our own computers. Why? Because they are above and beyond better than any retail PC or MAC you can buy. People often assume that because of our backgrounds, especially Jessica’s that we are a Mac shop, or that only macs will work for what she does. That is simply not the case. The computers I have built for us are far more powerful and of better quality than any Mac she could buy for the price.

Our PC’s

Jessica’s Setup (almost 3 years old!):

My goal with Jessica’s computer build was to give her a very stable setup. Fast Intel processor that does not need overclocking in addition to plenty of speed with the solid state drive that I believe is a must in any build these days. To complete the build, I selected an IPS monitor for the color accuracy she needs for graphics and multimeda. The graphics are overkill for her profession but we are gamers as well, so game on!

Neil’s Setup (also almost 2 years old):

With my PC setup I went a bit more budget-friendly, but above all I wanted it to be stable, cool running, and quiet. I decided on an AMD build for cost savings, however I went with a very nice case that allowed for really good cable management, and a very nice water cooling system. By water cooling the CPU you really eliminate a lot of the big CPU fan noise. I built this in 2011 and it is still very quick.

To complete my build, I opted for a 120hz monitor because I do game a lot on this PC. The 120hz refresh rate makes things smooth, not only in gaming, but also in windows. The cursor and input movements are just amazingly fluid. If you have never experienced a true 120hz monitor, I highly recommend them… they are worth the extra $$$.

I expect our rigs to last us well over 5 years, and beyond that because they do allow for small upgrades along the way. Typically after 5 years a commercial PC will be excruciatingly slow and require complete replacement. Not so much with the right custom built devices.

Our home network LAN setup:

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Four our home network I decided to get a bit geeky and focus on an enterprise setup. Because by day I am an Network Systems Analyst, I tend to desire a bit more control and network analysis than an average Linksys or Netgear all-in-one consumer product will give me.

During our home electrical update to replace old aluminum wiring with new romex stuff, I had the electricians pull cat6 cabling to a few rooms so that we could house all of our network and server devices down in the basement. Storing everything in the basement not only keeps the equipment nice and cool, but it also eliminates the presence of bunch of devices sitting on shelves with cords running crazy. All of our IT is now centralized on a wall mounted rack where it stays exceptionally well organized.

The dedicated wireless access point allows us to place it in the middle of the house because it does not to be directly connected to the modem or router. Since it’s only function is to provide wireless access it really is a night and day difference when it comes to signal strength and quality. It really blows the all-in-one devices out of the water. The system also allows us if needed to place more than one access point in the house to expand our wireless network while using the same SSID and network security. It is quite slick for the price.

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We recently got our act together and purchased a NAS storage and backup system. Before we had kind of a pieced together storage and backup solution. Considering how much invaluable data we have for both ourselves and our clients the new NAS was long overdue.

Synology offers a great product with a TON of features. The Synology not only functions as a NAS but it can also be a syslog server, web server, PHP server, cloud server, music streaming server, and so much more. You can even develop your own “apps” for it. It has been well worth the money so far.

For our setup I have the system running RAID 1 with a nightly backup to an external USB drive hooked to the back of it. That gives us 1 drive failure redundancy as well as a secondary data backup. I also have our Cisco ASA sending its syslogs to the Synology so that I can analyze if necessary.

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I decided to get a Cisco ASA 5505 Firewall/Router/DHCP appliance because not only am I working on some Cisco certifications currently, but I use these in my day job almost daily. These appliances can be very powerful and rock stable if you know what you are doing, however they tend to have a fairly big learning curve. They are certainly not your plug and play home router. You should probably know a decent amount of Cisco CLI as well as Cisco ASDM and have a pretty decent knowledge of networking in general in order to have much success with the ASA. Fortunately I do, so this thing is a blast to mess around with and is very secure and stable.

In the end I feel our setup really combines some enterprise level technology and reliability with affordability. We also maximized the performance in our work rigs by building them ourselves and will incur much lower upgrade costs in the years to come since we will be able to upgrade components easily by ourselves.

I felt this post was important to write not only as a reference for what we’re doing, but because so often bloggers focus on software, apps and what computers they are using, but I wonder if they’ve given serious thought to their storage and backup needs. All data, even if its just pictures or old school papers, is worth securing for the long haul.

If you have any questions or comments on anything feel free to give us a shout below!

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I am back! Track day at Gateway Motorsports Park

March 25, 2013
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After the better part of two years I am finally back in my race car! Why the hiatus you say? Well for the past two years I have been working hard in turning my once daily driver; a 2003 Nissan 350z from a nice weather sports car to a dedicated full time race car. It [...]

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How-To: Smoking Meat on a Weber Grill

October 4, 2012
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Earlier this spring when we were contemplating what to replace our old worn-out grill with, I found myself a little torn. While we grill pretty traditionally for the most part, I really wanted to be sure we could also smoke with whatever we ended up buying. We looked at Green Eggs, traditional barrel smokers and [...]

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Looking Legit

July 23, 2012
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It has been a while since I did a car post, so I guess I will take a moment to explain why. In 2011 I took the year off of racing to transform my 2003 Nissan 350z from a street car into a full-time track car. If you are an automotive enthusiast you will know [...]

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CrossFit: Memorial Day Murph!

May 29, 2012
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Over the weekend, our CrossFit Box undertook the brutal “Murph” workout. Just look at it! A 1 mile run, followed by 100 pull ups, 200 push ups, and 300 air squats? Insanity. And to top it off, just when your legs feel like rubber from the 300 air squats, you have to finish the workout with [...]

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