Wahoooo!
Great job Reid Hazelton.
Wahoooo!
Great job Reid Hazelton.
Sweeeet!
Times? Link please.
Thanks ... Jay Novak
313-445-4047
On my 54th year as an SCCA member
with a special thanks to every SCCA worker (NONE OF US WOULD RACE WITHOUT THE WORKERS)
Anyone know anyone who has/is posting pics of all the cars? Would love to see...
only 2 laps? ors something wrong with the app?
Kautz actually managed to hang onto his tail until the last lap or two today. Compared to yesterday when Reid just ran away and left everyone by a gap I informally timed over 15 seconds only a few laps in. Watching him (and Kautz, for that matter) from the grandstands as they flew through Turn 1 was a real pleasure. Nobody else looked so well hooked up.
Caldwell D9B - Sold
Crossle' 30/32/45 Mongrel - Sold
RF94 Monoshock - here goes nothin'
Not direct knowledge but I understand that someone may have oiled the track just past the kink. One car lost it and hit the barrier, bounced back onto the track and collected several more cars. One driver described it as a "debris field" and had to go onto the grass to avoid parts and pieces. Don't know about the condition of the driver but apparently someone had to be cut out of their car although he was reported to be sitting up and talking to rescue personnel while they worked on him.
Nice run Reid
Thanks everyone. It was really great to be back - not just in the car but back at the track and seeing all our old friends and making new ones. I'll have a write up in a day or two.
The race was only about 3 laps. The track was drying, and given all the different asphalt colors over the years it was really hard to identify the wet spots. It's been a decade or more since I was in a drying condition and Tim was way braver than I was the first two laps.
On the pace lap I was thinking this wasn't going to end well when the entry to the carousel was wet, but the exit was dry and the entrance to the kink was dry but the exit was wet. From what I heard a car went off in the Kink, and got collected by a car or 3. There were 4 cars, all with heavy damage, when I want through. Smartly, they called the race. It looked bad, and I am very happy everyone was ok.
Last edited by reidhazelton; 09.16.19 at 8:42 AM.
Video shows there was a substantial puddle on the edge a little past the apex of the kink, inside the racing line but still available to cause trouble.
Caldwell D9B - Sold
Crossle' 30/32/45 Mongrel - Sold
RF94 Monoshock - here goes nothin'
Stonebridge Sports & Classics ltd
15 Great Pasture Rd Danbury, CT. 06810 (203) 744-1120
www.cryosciencetechnologies.com
Cryogenic Processing · REM-ISF Processing · Race Prep & Driver Development
As I approached the kink on lap 2, sitting approximately 20th place, yellow was out. A Crossle had apparently gone wide on exit of the kink, bounced off of the outside wall, then the inside wall, and was sitting on track, drivers left of center, facing traffic, no wheels or nose bodywork on the car, waving frantically. (There was no oil on the track, just the puddle off line on the inside of the exit of the kink. The track was still slightly moist in that area, so not at maximum grip.) The 2 club cars in front of me and Mark Davison behind me all immediately moved drivers right and cleared him. There was a line of cars behind us with limited visibility, and I suspect that someone did not see the Crossle until it was too late. Tim Koch said that by the time he got there, in 30th to 40th place, there was a lot of smoke, no visibility, and the track was blocked by 3 cars.
Has anyone heard how the driver is who had to be extricated from his car?
Gary Godula
'88 Reynard FF88
SCCA Club Racing / Solo #57 FF/CM
Caldwell D9B - Sold
Crossle' 30/32/45 Mongrel - Sold
RF94 Monoshock - here goes nothin'
Congratulations Reid!
Got to meet him face-to-face for the first time and just like his posts sound, he's a great guy with a cool dad!
His car is beautiful too (although I'm not a fan of the cheese grater rotors - I had to diss ONE thing or he might get a big head)
Regarding incident, I started 11th and was around there trying to get by the 5 cars battling in front of me and the first time we went through the kink and back straight, I saw some spray. The orange car was pointed at us and there was debris in the road that Bob Haitle ran through as people in front of him dodged the debris at the last second. I guessed right and missed everything. I don't remember seeing any other car at that time but hopefully my video worked and I can see for sure. Lot's to do now that I'm back at work after another long vacation!
Last edited by Garey Guzman; 09.16.19 at 5:28 PM.
Garey Guzman
FF #4 (Former Cal Club member, current Atlanta Region member)
https://redroadracing.com/ (includes Zink and Citation Registry)
https://www.thekentlives.com/ (includes information on the FF Kent engine, chassis and history)
One of the guys who was in out pit was involved in the incident. He said that the car was stopped in the middle of the track pointing the wrong way. He clipped it with his front right, ripping it off. The next car hit it head on nose to nose at very high speed. The stationery car was a total wreck. He said he has video, but he is in transit now, he probably won't get a chance to post it soon.
We heard later that he had a broken leg or ankle. Sounds like it could have been a lot worse.
Driver of the red Zink did suffer a severly broken lower leg (both bones broken, plus a very badly fractured section.) Good guy from Colorado. I haven't talked to him, but he was alert enough in the ambulance to request they stop and open the door when he saw one of our other Colorado drivers walking in the Paddock,as he wanted to tell him where they were taking him, etc. (Hospital in Sheboygan) We did not get the story from him as to what happened. The only video I have seen was from a car well back from the incident. Yellow waving wildy at the Kink as he went thru, a bit of smoke up ahead and then suddenly a LOT of smoke and debris in the air. And yes, the puddle just past the exit of Kink was there, off line to driver's right, but there nonetheless. I saw three other badly damaged cars in addition to the very badly damaged Zink.Steve
And Congrats Reid. I was looking forward to seeing a full length race of course, and I'm sure you were too.
Steve Barkley
1969 Palliser-Winkelmann WDF1 FF1600
I was one of six people who witnessed the accident after the exit of the kink. The driver never hit the outside wall, just losing control on the curb and spinning backwards to the inside wall, then bouncing back on to the track facing traffic. No apparent oil or blown hose; just seemed a mistake on a still slippery track. The next 20 seconds or so were awful, as we saw cars still at speed trying to dodge the stopped driver, frantically waving. As people avoided him there was more contact and the debris field developed. Cars continued to arrive at speeds not commensurate with a waving yellow. My wife was one of the other 5 spectators and was sure upon hearing the near head-on impact of a speeding car to a stopped one she had witnessed a tragic accident. Fortunately - maybe miraculously, that was not the case - but there is a driver with serious injuries largely due to unlucky and avoidable circumstances.
Lots of things could have prevented this outcome. A runoff area to collect cars that make this type of fairly common mistake is one. Displaying a waving yellow two stations before the incident may be another. A third is that perhaps a standing yellow for VSCDA needs to mean more than "no passing", and include a requirement to slow down - a difficult judgment call for racers.. One thing that is clear is the current protocol is insufficient to protect us from what ought to be avoidable harm.
I'm also a bit curious how the two race leaders came back around to the crash area when the track went red. it seems they should have been stopped before that point.
I don't know the answers, but know what I saw didn't work well. Ignoring this, it could be you or me the next time. We can certainly do better.
Checked out the video.
He was ahead of our group and yes, yellow flag started waving in the kink as I approached, spray still coming up. The car had just come to a stop facing us on the left third of the track with it's left rear corner missing, driver waving people to the our right. Nothing visible from the back camera as we went out of site.
Garey Guzman
FF #4 (Former Cal Club member, current Atlanta Region member)
https://redroadracing.com/ (includes Zink and Citation Registry)
https://www.thekentlives.com/ (includes information on the FF Kent engine, chassis and history)
I can add to this part. Tim and I were the only one through the accident (I think), as by the time we went through T5 the board displayed there said 'Continue around'. There was a good gap from Tim to 3rd, and at that point they decided (rightly) to pull people off at T5 than have 50 cars try to snake through there and slow the EMT response.
On way into the Kink on what I think was the 1st lap (I started 19th but was up a few by then) a car 3 cars ahead of me most definitely blew something at entry to the Kink! My entire visor was coated instantly, looked like oil to me. Large billow of some smoke and the driver entered the pits that lap. The accident occurred after I went thru, and the next time around I saw the single car in the track sitting counter race - poor fellow must have been terrified. After I went thru, the secondary accidents took place and I am told the track was blocked and the race ended. I think scoring went back to the last completed green lap (2nd), hence the results you see.
I hope the injured driver is ok
best
bt
I've seen a couple of pictures of Reids car showing the very different high exhaust and the wrap-around cockpit sides. Is that something you've developed just for this car?
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