Right; had a bit of a rollercoaster of a few days before the weekend.
With less than 24 hours to go before the test day I still did not have the dash working with the ECU which was slowing down getting the rest of the items on the list ticked off.
Anyway, Thursday evening I finally received an email from Emerald explaining that AIM had updated their firmware which negated the "AIM" setting in the Emerald software and the solution was now to reset the ECU back to the generic Emerald CAN output. Bingo, that did it!
Then, when finally loading the car on to the trailer it cut out for no apparent reason. Resetting the PDP got the car going again but it happened a couple of times which left me scratching my head as I prepared for the test day that evening.
The trip up to Snetterton was uneventful and I was unloaded and in a garage by 7.30.
Not knowing what the tripping out was being caused by I decided to take the car out on to track to get the measure of it.
2 corners in and the car was cutting out everytime I gave it the beans.
Back to the garage for more head scratching. Unfortunately Ryan, my co-driver on occasion has no technical knowledge so was only good for making tea while I dived into some wiring.
After 15 minutes or so I had diagnosed the swirl pot pump as being the culprit and causing an overcurrent on the ignition circuit. After swapping it onto the main +ve busbar the car was good to go and I went out and finished the session without incident. Not setting any records, as the plan was to start dialing in the suspension throughout the day. However, the car felt very quick so I was happy.
Sadly, suspension became the least of our worries as the electrical gremlins decided to return with reinforcements.
This time the car was only starting intermittently. Most of the time there barely seemed to be enough juice to crank it over with the starter not engaging properly. When it did start it would not idle properly and eventually developed a misfire.
A coilpack change and a swap on to some spare HT leads signalled desperate measures all to no avail. Although at one point it did fire up and behave itself long enough for Ryan to get some laps in before a red flag brought him in only for the car to die again.
So, that was how the day ended for us. 12 laps in total and lots of time in the garage.
Coming home I made a list of things to try...
I'm fairly sure the problem is either earth related or poor cable. The main lead from the battery isn't new and I wonder whether it is breaking down. I'm also not sure the Cartek XR isolator is right for the car. The kill signal that it uses to kill the ECU doesn't work with the Emerald so it already needs modifying. I may sell it on and use their GT isolator instead.
The car also needs some new HT leads. Although these were new last June, 2 of them had broken inside the coil pack and there was evidence that one of them had been sparking and getting hot.
So, 2 weeks to the first race and I'm not where I wanted to be. I also have very little time to work on the car over the next couple of weeks so Snetterton has a big question mark over it at the moment.
Finally, a friend of ours graced us with his presence at Snetterton, turning up in his historic, 1957 Porsche 956 rally car.
And there was some nice machinery out on track too.
And finally new race number for this season..
To go with this.... Which I'm happy with considering I only entered half of the races last year!