Post Number 55.
Croft / Snetterton / Bedford Trackdays.
We had 3 trackdays coming up in fairly short succession with aim of getting some miles on the car. We had hoped these would go pretty smoothly but sure enough a few small annoying things occurred which reduced the amount of running we got.
First up was our local at Croft.
Spotted a bit of an oil leak which we thought was coming from the inner LHS drive shaft boot. Had spare shafts so swapped the LHS shaft out and went back out. Still leaking. After a bit more of an investigation however we noticed it was actually leaking from the gearbox 5th gear end cap. It was then obviously just being blown onto the CV boot, hence why we initally thought it was the driveshaft issue. Very stupid of me but I reused a seal even though it was new the previous year it still leaked. Pretty sure unless you keep the seal in the exact same spot theres a risk it will leak. So for the sake of £7.50, buy a new genuine seal. Second time we have done that. We should have really learnt our leason there.
The other very silly mistake I made was to not properly lock off the throttle stop bolt. Slowly wound itself out throughout the course of the day and by the end we were only getting 75% throttle. Did think the lap times seemed a bit off. Even though I had specifically put individual throttle and ITB position bars on the dash neither of us spotted that one until James went through the data later the next day. Atleast an easy fix for Snetterton.
We stopped early on in the afternoon as the gearbox leak was just getting worse.
Next up, Snetterton.
Airbnb the night before worked a treat! It’s a long drive for us from Newcastle so drove down in the afternoon to get there just in time to stick a curry in the oven! Much much better than camping like we did the previous year.
All was going well at snetterton until yet another covering of something underneath. This time is really was a driveshaft. Thought we had sorted this one long before, nothing had changed with the driveshafts either but somehow one of the edges got caught and nicked the boot. So another driveshaft change later and we were back running. After this we decided to give the shafts a bit of TLC, obviously replaced the split boot with a thermoplastic one and also re packed both sets of shafts with Redline CV2. Previously had just used the grease which came with new joints/boots. Since running the CV2 however we have had no more issues so going to stick with that combo in future.
Later on in the afternoon the red flags came out. Was waiting for James to come back into the pits but no sign of him. So gave the car a call to see what was going on (the benefit of having the stilo verbacom system. Sure enough the car had died on track, all electrics had gone and wouldn’t turn back on.
After a few minutes he was having the tow of shame up the pitlane. He did manage to get off the track prety quickly and no oil spilt so was back underway pretty quickly.
I got the laptop out and plugged the car in to see what was going on. First think was an under voltage error, this would have been why the power was killed to the car to protect the battery. Second thing I checked was the voltage log. Turned out James had been driving around for the previous 10-15 minutes without the alternator, oops! Even though there is a nice low voltage warning on the dash he was too focused on just smashing the laps in. another lesson learnt really, pay some attention to what is going on with the car. But also made the warning more obvious for the future too.
Decided to call it a day. By the time we would have changed the alternator there would have been very little time left in the day for any more running. We both had done quite a few laps by this point too so were both happy. New alternator on in time for Bedford and job done.
Bedford.
Same process as for Snetterton. Airbnb and a curry the night before. Makes you feel much better than getting up very early in the morning and doing it in the day.
Within a matter of the first few laps at Bedford the replacement alternator had gone. But we had yet another spare alternator to put on the car but there must have been something wrong with the wiring to keep causing them to stop working. So swapped the alternator over and made a change to the wiring. Wired the control wiring pin of the alternator to 12v. Hadn’t done this with the previous alternators and have never had a problem but perhaps the type we moved to to fit under the ITBs needed this to be connected. Was worth a go. Long story short after connecting this we haven’t had a problem since.
Got the car back up and running just before lunch, didn’t mange to get out on track but managed to give the car a run down the access road to Bedford and checked the logs and all seemed fine regarding the voltage level.
Got out on track after lunch, was surprised by the track actually was really quite a good layout. Unfortunately soon got blacked flagged, thought I had been well behaved too so was curious to see what I had done. Turns out it was noise. Must be the ITBs which just pushes it over the limit. Bit annoying but had to lift at 3 locations during the lap where they had the microphones.
So good track but wont be going back. However, think its perfect for people taking road cars. Lots of open run off and was pretty quiet.