350z

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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Looking Legit

by Neil on July 23, 2012

in Automotive, Neil, Racing

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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 that this is no small feat, both monetarily and the immense time investment.

There is a good rule of thumb that says when you consider taking on such a project, begin estimating the time and money required, and when you arrive at a total, just go ahead and double it, and you will then be close to the actual time and cost by the end of the project. This has held true here.

I am been proud to say that outside of my roll cage fabrication by the epic fabricator Scott Rhea at Izzy’s Custom Cages, I have done all of the work on the car myself, and typically all by myself (Jes is willing to help if I need it). It has definitely been a labor of love, blood, sweat, tears..

Motivation is often hard to find to get down and dirty and work on the car. Especially with our lives being so busy. I have a regular 8-5 job, and then we have our freelance web development business, time at the CrossFit Gym, yard/house work, cooking, blogging, and my other hobbies such as computer gaming, hiking/backpacking, and social events with friends. It is like I am an ambitious adult or something, how the fuck did that happen?

But anyhow before this post gets too off topic I will say that progress on the car is picking up!

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Recently Jes and I painted the roll cage with some POR15 brush-on paint. POR15 is an anti-rust paint that is guaranteed to never rust. Installing it consists of 2 parts. The first coat is the POR15, a kind-of sealing paint that bonds to the bare steel of the cage and protects it from rusting. Because POR15 is UV sensitive, it then requires a “topcoat” to finish it off.

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For that purpose, we then installed several coats of POR15 hardnose paint. This topcoat earns its name as it is very tough when it dries, almost like a powder coat. You can literally take a wrench to it and bang on the metal and this paint will not chip. This is ideal for the roll cage because when you are entering and exiting the car you can often ding the cage with the metal harness buckles and other things and cause chips on a traditional paint.

Brushing on POR15 is easy, and it is a “self leveling” paint so even though it may look to have brush streaks at first, it levels itself out and turns into a smooth coat. We think it turned out great!

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This past weekend I spent some time finishing up a few little things. First I added some SFI Roll Cage Padding. This fire retardant padding is intended to soften the blow of your helmet or extremities in the event of a crash. It feels very hard at first, but when you consider the velocity that your helmet or arms may be traveling during a crash you will need something very dense to absorb that energy.

I also added the driver side window net. This keeps your body in the car in the event of a crash or roll over. The last thing you want is your arms flailing outside of the car and getting crushed or worse.

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And there you have it, the car is really starting to look legit now and that even further motivates me to get it finished.

If you got this far reading, thanks, and I hope you enjoyed the post. If you would like to see or know more about my racing or the car please let me know in the comments and I will perhaps make more posts off of the feedback. Also if you like posts like these let me know as well. I always like hearing from our readers!

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passenger side clean

If you’re new to my posts on the Z’s transformation, check out the lead-up here, here, here, and here.

After scores of weekends prepping the Z and even having to take a day off work to get it done in time, it was finally time to send it off to the cage builder. With help from a friend, we loaded it into a trailer and took it to St. Louis. The moment I dropped it off, time seemed to stop, and the weeks crawled as I received scary pictures of the messy process involved in welding huge steel pieces into what was once my meticulously clean baby.

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Wait, where is the…

Here comes the cage…

Finished! So what now? Well, there are still a few things left to do. I still have to paint the rest of the cage and the floor, as well as create some brackets for the door handles and switches. Since the car has changed so much now, it will take time to adjust to the new set-up, which will require plenty of  track time. Life has been busy in the Kohler house this year. Freelance business is booming, grad school is being finished, and we are hoping to relocate — all while trying to still have plenty of fun and live life. With all of this, I am not sure how much track time I will get this year, if any. However, my goal is to get the car out a bit at least, and have 2012 be the goal year for getting the car back on the track.

Like any car project, it will probably be forever evolving. The amount of projects and upgrades I would love to do to the car, in addition to all the tracks that I haven’t been on will keep goals on the horizon for many years to come.

This project though was definitely a dream come true for me. I have wanted my own race car since I was a little kid pushing around my little car “knight rider,” and now I have the opportunity to take my hobby to that level. I could not have done it without support from my lovely wife Jessica who puts up with all my silly (read: expensive) hobbies and OCD obsessions. I am truly lucky.

Scott Rhea at Izzy’s Custom Cages did a great job. I will let the pictures do the talking.

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The weather is finally warming up, and the days are getting longer, offering perfect opportunities for  more work on the car, and the events that I look forward to all winter. Stay tuned for updates and posts through the spring and summer! Thanks for reading, I hope you enjoyed a glimpse into my hobby!

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The Z Transformation pt 4 – The Build Begins

March 25, 2011

I think that any amateur racer, or weekend track day warrior eventually comes to a decision point in their hobby. Do you continue down the road of using your street car to do track days, maintain the status quo and stay within your comfort zone,  or do you jump in head first, take the next [...]

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The Z Transformation pt 3 – Road racing and Track Days

December 10, 2010

If you are new to my little series, check out Part 1 and Part 2 After a couple years of autocross I was totally consumed with racing fever. Autocross was fun, but I was wanting more. I did my research and found that the next step up from autocross would be Road Racing. Road Racing [...]

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A Working Weekend

November 5, 2010

The weekend is finally here, and although I’m stoked and grateful to be off work, I know we have a lot going on this weekend and plenty of projects to tackle. After several weeks of hard work, Neil’s beautiful 350z has been stripped and is ready to go off to the fabricator for its new [...]

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The Z transformation pt 1 – Prologue

October 22, 2010

Photo via Austin Strifler A quick note: This winter, not only my car, but also myself, will undergo a transformation from dabbling in auto sport racing into a serious hobby of chasing my dream to one day compete in a professional race as an amateur. I thought I would write a series of blog entries [...]

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