If It Is Broken, Somehow He Will Fix It

            I can’t recall the last time I heard quite so many hap-hazard, near-death experience stories, as when I started talking to Ron Brame. The funny thing about that statement is that two weeks after our conversation, he told me one of his most bizarre stories to date. The text I received from him was a picture of a half-eaten donut beside a neat stack of one-hundred-dollar bills and no additional information.When I spoke with him a few days later it turned out that he had been merged into by a “Post Malone” looking gentleman in a snow-white Lamborghini Murcielago, who offered him everything in his wallet not to inform the police of the incident. This story lines up neatly against all of the other farcical tales told to me by Mr. Brame.

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    We start our day in his garage, two-bay. One half holds a silver Nissan Frontier crew cab and a surfboard, while the other is filled with a workstation, tool chest and two motorcycles. One wall displays a random assortment of items, disassembled car parts, a flip flop, to name a few, but we’ll get to that later. To have such a developed garage at 24 years old, one would think that he grew up in an environment like this, or at least inherited some of the things inside of this garage. Brame, however, is self-made in every way, appreciating things more every year and learning by earnest trial and error.

His story stems from a need to fiddle, to fix, and a natural progression from broken stereos, to lawnmowers, to motorcycles and just about any combustion engine. He is not precious, nor is he spending tine adoring patina. These are machines that fuel his ability for freedom and fun.

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    “It probably started when I was growing up in Jacksonville,” he says. “I used to drive down San Jose road in the car with my mom and on weekend mornings there would be car shows. Just a bunch of old guys in their hot rods - nothing that cool. I wanted to go but I couldn’t ever because my Mom and Dad were not into cars.”

    The fever for cars started at 11, but the fever for the combustion engine started much younger. An engineer by trade, when he was just a little kid Brame wouldn’t let his parents throw anything away until he had tried to fix it, or ruin it he says. “I was taking apart stereos, shocking myself, cutting myself taking things apart because I really didn't know how to.”

    As he got older he started evolving to larger projects; the next-door neighbors would want to know if he wanted a crack at fixing a broken lawnmower or the chainsaw. “I wanted to graduate to the big leagues when my friends started getting cars,” he says. “I started working on my best friend at the time’s shitty 90s V6 Camaro. But it was a lot of fun.”

 
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The Frontier in his garage had a life before him even though he picked out. His dad, though not a car guy himself, trusted his son’s opinion and agreed to let him pick out his new truck. And when Brame started college the coveted Frontier was finally his. “Honestly my truck [made me fall in love with Nissan],” he says. “Nissan wasn’t on the radar for me at least until I bought the truck but then I really fell in love with it.” While it may just look like another silver Nissan Frontier to most, the things that Brame loves about it are very specific. He mentions the V6 engine, and the “best truck bed on the market” though he admits he is not up on his truck market research.

“It's no EcoBoost,” he says. “It's not getting great mileage, but it will run forever. It is so buttery smooth, so torquey, it's so nice… the timing chain lasts forever,” he sighs. “It’s so good.” He calls this the secret sauce. “The bed and it’s just bullet-proof mechanically,” he says. “The whole drivetrain, the transmission, the engine, all the support systems. The interior is spartan but I like it that way.”

 
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            Brame is extremely proud of what the Frontier has accomplished in its time with him and his family. The affordable and basically unevolved Nissan helped his family during a hurricane and moved Brame personally across and the country multiple times.  He’s been interrogated by the Canadian police in it, to Mexico and back, all while hauling bikes. It's taken him through the desert into the mountains, and it's done more off-roading than it deserves to have done as a non-4WD truck. “It's done more than I should have asked of it,” he says. “And it's never once let me down.”

 He calls it an enabler, remarking on how his lifestyle seems to require a truck, but the lifestyle he lives has evolved from always having a truck. So, what came first the chicken or the egg?

“I’ve been the only one to ever work on that truck period,” he says.  “Learning how to really work on a vehicle was truly something special because I'd worked on other stuff before like my friends Camaro, but never done everything to it, all the maintenance. I just fell deeper in love as I learned more. I kind of grew with the truck.”

Now we turn to the opposite side of the garage where a pair of Japanese cruisers sit. “I have twins,” Brame says. “I am a proud mother. A 1980 and a 1981 Kawasaki KZ 440 LTD. Honestly, it was that motorcycle [that got him into motorcycles].” After seeing a friend in college cruising around campus on that very bike once or twice it was love at first sight. Brame didn’t really have any experience with motorcycles, but he had to figure it out his way.

   “I saw him riding it and it looked so beautiful, just so classic,” he says. “You don't get bikes like that, even the recreations these days. They don’t have the same noise, the same look, the same the vibe, the same rattle, you can’t replicate it.” He says it was a hot and heavy kind of passion he felt for the bike right away but had no formal training riding. “I told my friend I needed to borrow his bike, but I didn’t tell him I was going to learn on it,” he admits. “I rode to the bank and I almost flipped it over because I only used the front brake out of panic. I just borrowed people’s motorcycles to satisfy the craving all the time until I bought mine.”

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It was not smooth sailing when he eventually convinced his friend to sell him the first Kawasaki. “He could never get it running right,” Brame says. “He's more of an aerodynamics guy, not at peace with the combustion, if you will.”

The bike was still leaking copious amounts of oil and overheating when it finally came to Brame.

“I didn’t have the money or the time, at that time in my life to rebuild those problems, I tried but clearly it was internal issues, something was way off.” During those years Brame attempted quick fixes. “I ended up just buying a little temperature gauge and got to know it - like once were 400 on the temperature gauge, ooooh just pull over to the side of the road and let her cool off. That was where she got really unhappy - and she never ran right. So that’s a long-winded way of saying I’ve rebuilt the engine completely.”

It was after his first internship after college that Brame found the time and resources to devote to this task. And it was this moment that marked as a culmination on his journey from tinkering as a kid, to learning about engineering, to now taking apart a motor he would need to depend on.

 It again was trial and error and Brame says he has a lot of lessons learned from this endeavor. “It only had 20,000 miles at that point,” he says. “It’s already 40 years old [and] someone’s barely ridden it so I just decided to take my time and do it right.”

The starter needed to be rebuilt after it welded itself together on a road trip around Florida, and there was carbon buildup on the pistons and in the combustion chamber. Instead of just dealing with the problems on the top end Brame took it all the way down to splitting the crankcase; he cleaned and inspected everything and replaced the seals that were rotten and leaking oil. Brame also replaced the voltage rectifier, tires, chains, sprocket, and all of the lights.

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“Pretty much everything except the frame, the wheels, and the seat,” he laughs, “I’ve replaced almost everything and it’s still a piece of shit.” The only project with the bike he has right now is trying to fuel inject it, “because I hate carburetors, with a passion,” he says. The bike itself does look pretty clean for its age, except for the stainless steal water bottle he has affixed to it with a zip-tie to keep oil out of his air-box. “It was meant to be a temporary solution, but that was also 2.5 years ago - so maybe it will never get fixed.”

            “I am proud but also embarrassed of that bottle,” he says. “Because I did that fix on the side of the 405, but it does stem from my cheapness.”

            While this bike is his original and his daily driver, the second cruiser is, unfortunately, being cannibalized for parts. But that’s only temporary Brame says. “Oh, I have plans,” he grins. When the time is right Brame plans to make it a performance bike, fuel-injected, with a modern Ninja suspension. “The frame, powder-coated white, snow-white with some flakes in it, and the engine is rebuilt and anodized black... it’s just,” he kisses his hand. “A centerpiece. It’s going to ride like a sport bike and look like a 1980s Kawasaki.”

 
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            Now we come back to the wall. The wall that Brame has proclaimed the “wall of shit that’s almost killed me” with all of the random mechanical pieces. He tells me stories about the original chain and sprocket, a burnt-out headlight and a rusty spark plug and how one way or another they’ve all almost killed him. Always involving a highway, always barely making it out of the situation.

“There’s a lot,” he says regarding scary moments. “The truly scariest was probably when I was interning a couple of years ago. I lived on a sailboat in San Pedro at the time so I was riding up to work on the 105 north and a car cut me off.” Brame had a highway off-ramp as an escape lane but he was taking it “way too hot.”  His knee almost to the ground, hitting front and rear brakes with highway weeds stuck in his front fender he went off the road into the shoulder and almost hit the barrier. When the contenders for the scariest story including running on one cylinder during a torrential downpour on the highway in Florida or riding home on the 405 in the dark with a flashlight instead of a headlight, truly scariest to him has high regard.

 
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Great (and scary) moments always involve riding with just one or two of his best friends. A big part of the experience for him is the sense of community. “It’s very personal,” he says. “I don't belong to any riding club or like a big group rides. It’s more like that one friend who likes to ride too, or that one friend who likes to work on cars, and you open a six-pack at his shop and work on his diesel truck. It's very intimate, it's very personal, and you have to find the right people but it's worth it. Because I feel like you definitely grow closer to one another and you learn a lot along the way.”

His most recent smooth day out was riding with a good friend to Vandenburg Air Force Base. “We just made a day out of it,” Brame says. “We met at my house, got some cafe con leche and then we did some canyon carving. We didn't have the biggest baddest bikes out there, he rides a little R3. We stopped in Santa Barbara, had pizza and just talked shit, cause that's what you do, you talk shit, you bull shit. Then we continued our beautiful PCH ride all the way to Vandenburg.”

            As Brame’s skills have grown unsurprisingly he is now the go-to call for many friends with mechanical problems. But as it goes with Brame there is always a story, rarely humdrum. This one takes us to Portugal, where he was backpacking alone in the middle of nowhere. He was stopped by an old Portuguese woman who needed help starting her farm truck. “It was crazy looking back at it like her sheep are there, I’m there not speaking Portuguese driving her little stick Fiat up to her farm truck. It took like 30 minutes, then she waved at me and she drove off and I walked off. It was crazy. It was weird.”

            It has been a natural progression for Brame. All of these experiences, the incidents on the motorcycle, the pushing and fixing of the Frontier, his profession as an engineer, every moment building on itself to teach him more about these machines and himself. He attributes this to the complexity of the combustion engine. “They’re not as simple as electric vehicles,” he says. “It’s like, been there done that with the stereo, been there done that with the little two-stroke lawnmower, what's new? That bug really bit me once I started learning about actual engineering not just as a hobby in middle and high school. I couldn't imagine myself in many other career paths as an engineer - because it pretty much is me, I'm always trying to build shit and learn how it works.”

Cars are simply a natural extension of his disposition and the extensions he owns provide him the ability to do anything he wants to do. “The truck will take me to the mountains, it will take me to the ocean, across entire countries - there's literally nothing I can ask of it that it won't do.” And as for the bike, “Even if it's just me and a backpack it will get me anywhere I want to go. Getting 50+ miles to the gallon, and also, it’s so fun, it is the cheapest thrills per dollar vehicle wise, ever.”

 

“It’s freedom and fun,” Brame says. “and right now, it’s more freedom.”

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More Than a Porsche Guy

On a Saturday evening in El Segundo, Calif., a silver Porsche Carrera pulls up beside me outside of Electric Dreams, maybe one of the best hidden gems in LA depending on who you ask. I normally wouldn’t bat any eyelash at the sight of yet another 911 in LA, but I know this one to belong to one Jonathan Nunez, who’s passion for not only Porsche, but more unsung heroes like Peugot and Alfa Romeo, before the relaunch, I have to respect.
Electric Dreams itself is closed today, but guarded by a swiveling motion-censor camera. Nunez has never been so we peer inside the dark windows anyway. He is amazed by what I have already seen, a small portion of a warehouse building dedicated to rows upon rows of slot cars. The additional inventory is stacked in boxes up to the ceiling in the back of the building. I’ve never seen so many in my life, and it is one of the last of its kind in the US. 

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“We’ll come back another day,” I say. For an enthusiast this is like El Dorado, and a perfect way to start a conversation with this particular enthusiast. Although I have asked him here to take photos of the 911, Nunez is more than just another “Porsche Guy” living in Southern California. He is a purist, an enthusiast. A guy who was on a pre-med track, turned chemical engineer, who worked on a race car team in college, and now works as an aerospace engineer at one of the most-coveted companies in the world.

His story starts the way many others do, holding the flashlight for his dad in the garage.  But as I have seen that doesn’t always take. Many do not make it past the critical flashlight-holding phase into the small projects and responsibility phase, resulting in those brokenhearted dads.

This is not the case with Nunez. “When I was like five years old I was helping my dad lap the valves in his Peugot station wagon engine when he was rebuilding it,” he says. 

“We never had too many ‘normal, every day cars’ so as a side effect of that my dad is always fixing cars.”

But the obsession really crystalized in college he confirms. “When I started learning about engineering and working on the race car team - learning the actual engineering behind mechanical stuff - [it] became a whole kind of new world behind working on a car besides fixing a broken things. Then I was hooked for sure.” With this new knowledge he would still go home on breaks and help his dad with his brothers sanding body panels on whatever dad was working on. “You know the usual family project,” he says.

Now, who came before the Porsche, I muse. “My first car was a dodge neon,” he says unabashedly. “It was my grandma’s car, it had like 6,000 miles on it, automatic, black on black. It actually has held up amazingly well. We’ve gotten our money’s worth out of the old thing. We drove it to Ohio [from Florida], it’s never let us down. My brother is still driving it in Detroit.”

His first real car that he bought and loved? A 1999 red Honda Civic Si, you know the one. “That thing is sweet, 8,000 RPM redline,” he says before giving me the short history of the Si. “Since I was a little kid reading car magazines, I just thought it was super cool, I didn't really know much more than that. I was just kind of shopping for cheap cars and I think more by luck than anything I ended up with the Civic Si and I didn’t appreciate at the time how cool of a car that thing was and over the years as I learned more I realized how like special it really is as like the last of the real hardcore Honda’s - it’s like a mini NSX almost. They only made it for two years.” 

“And now they’ve all been JDM’d out and turned into Fast and the Furious stuff,” he says regrettably. “Cause that car came out right around the time of Fast and Furious."

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That brings us to the topic at hand, or the car in front of us rather, the 2003 Porsche 911 Carrera in Arctic Silver. “We never had any experiences with Porsches until my dad got this $5,000 Carrera from a friend of his [who], abandoned it essentially and we started learning more and more about it as we restored it and it - whet my appetite for Porsches.” He comments that the family started going to Porsche events and getting Porsche magazines. “It kind of snowballs into you’re part of the culture of Porsche ownership. It’s really interesting how Porsche ownership is like - a really tight knit community compared to other cars. I think it’s the biggest car club in the US, the Porsche one.”

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After owning the Honda through college, and moving from Florida to California, in 2017 he felt like it was time. “I really really wanted to get a new car, from the Honda, and I was thinking about a Boxter being a good alternative kind of like in a similar class but also can go to the track, it’s faster, it’s like the entry level Porsche, right? And kind of the long story short is - then I realized I could get a cheap 911 for as much as the nice Boxter … so one thing lead to another - I got a cheap 911. I kind of figured if you’re going to go don’t go half way so I went full Porsche.”

Now he gives me the short history of the 996.2, a half generation of the first water-cooled Porsches. On paper it’s supposedly better in every way than the last air-cooled before it, he says.

But unlike the extremely popular and high-value air-cooled Porsches—the 996 is at the bottom of the depreciation curve so they’re affordable but still have the flat-six rear engine, and RWD.

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“All the normal 911 stuff,” he says. “Key is on the left.”

 “It’s kind of like a good crossover from the really really outdated air-cooled ones but it still keeps that kind of soul but with a lot more modern features.”

He shows me around the interior and you can tell it’s one belonging to a guy who cares, yet uses his car. The black leather still looks great for this almost 20-year-old car. Pretty good for a Craiglist find. “The last owner eventually admitted that he had to sell it so he could afford to renovate the bathroom for his wife, which was a noble gesture,” Nunez laughs. “and he rode away from our sale on a dirt bike.”

Although he is the third owner, he cares like the first.

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He is particularly proud of the decals he’s affixed: a Porsche Club of America Los Angeles Region, Porsche Club of America, and of course an Urban Outlaw. Not a shy guy, he’s had many a conversation with Magnus himself at various events around LA.

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He also shows off the mesh he’s added to the front grille to prevent leaves etc., from getting in and rusting the AC condenser. He tells me that it’s chicken wire, and right after he did it he found out that there’s a $300 accessory Porsche sells. He laughs, “But it’s basically chicken wire and on my car its literally chicken wire. So every little thing has become its own market. You know?”

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I ask him what’s so great about this car. And he tells me it’s the little things. The Carrera has the front end from a turbo, which makes it little different from a normal 996, but it’s Nunez himself that makes this car great. “I think what makes mine special that I like is the modifications I made myself. I would like to say I’ve done more, but I think the most valuable asset of having a Porsche is the sound so I really wanted the car to sound like the race cars I used to hear as a kid at Sebring. So I made a modification to the muffler where you bypass it with a pipe. I welded it in myself and now it has like a nice growl to it. But the sound is definitely unique to mine cause I made the muffler myself. And then just a short shifter and really basic maintenance stuff not really too many modifications.”

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The 996 isn’t perfect. Nunez tells me of the issues with this first water-cooled engine, and it looks rather sedated compared to the angrier looking Porsches of today. However, it is still to be taken seriously. On scary moments Nunez says there’s a long list, but mentions one in particular. “I think coming off a highway off ramp when it was wet - I think you know where this is going - I took a right turn and immediately the tail just stepped out almost uncontrollably I had to catch it 45 degrees over and somehow did not spin out, so I have not spun it out for the er, record. But that was definitely the scariest so far.”

After the incident, “I got new rear tires after that and new underwear,” he says matter-of-factly.

But the risk of imminent danger is what he likes about it. “You can take it to the auto cross and push it to its absolute limit. It’s a real sports car that you can take to the limits and it will punish you when you make mistakes. And I really appreciate that about it.” He calls out the online haters who say the 911 street car just understeers. “They just make these cars understeer for people on the street so they don't kill themselves,” he rebuts, “It will understeer and spin out in a second if you’re not on top of it the entire time.” He restates what he likes about the car is that it doesn’t baby him, “Theres no traction control, and the engine is out in the back so you have to be aware of it at all times.”

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Nunez enjoys riding out with friends to Angeles Crest or auto-crossing with his roommate, but day-to-day he says it’s just a normal car. It’s benign if you know how to handle it. He keeps it as his daily driver, and manages that by doing most maintenance himself. But he is one of less and less each year who chooses to daily a manual, N/A, two-door sports car. The sentence altogether sounds ridiculous in 2019, unfortunately. He questions what I question, “Why do you even bother with a manual?” With most of the “sporty” popular cars on the market being twin-turbo-4-cylinder-hatchback-sport-ready-crossovers complete with dual sport transmissions that lap faster than the poor manuals. “For me it’s just the connection with the car that you cant get any other way,” he says.

“You’re driving the car. You’re not just a passenger in an appliance,” he continues. “Driving a manual rewards when you get it right and it punishes you when you get it wrong. It’s so satisfying because it’s so hard and you just don't get that from downshifting with an automatic car.”

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He leaves me with this and it makes my own crotchety-purist bones tingle.

“It’s not always about going fast, it’s about driving, the driving experience.”

2019 Acura Gran Prix of Long Beach: And We’re Off to the Races

Heavy on the Nissan commentary, light on the event coverage

I was having a conversation with a co-worker prior to the Gran Prix of Long Beach, someone who I consider to at least have an appreciation for motorsports, and he said to me “the only motorsport race I’d be interested in going to is F1.”

I brushed the comment off, as it didn’t seem like there was much point into giving this guy a short history of motorsport, but the comment really sat with me for the rest of the day. 

Now don’t get me wrong, I hold no delusions about the future of motorsport, or that most people you talk to will only barely recognize the names of either F1 or NASCAR in a decade, but as a crotchety old purist it peeved me that someone would look down on a class of motorsport that I’d grown up with and still holds more of my respect. Prototype-endurance racing is still my favorite motorsport, and one of the only ones left using pretty much pure combustion engines.

The Gran Prix of Long Beach weekend consists of a lot of different racing events, but my main goals were to see the IMSA race and the classic IMSA GT cars. Now, it serves me right that I hadn’t done much research about what was going to be at the event this year, but the day before the race when I went online to get my ticket I saw that the 90s IMSA champion 300zx TT GT car would be present and RACING. 

Tangent: why is this so important? Besides the fact that Steve Millen’s 300zx TT GT car hung on my wall as a kid instead of the typical BMW or Countach, and still resides on my living room wall now, this was REDEMPTION. 

Redemption from a missed opportunity at Monterey Car Week last year. I was there for work for not even two days, and at the Quail realized that Nissan would be the feature marque at the Monterey Historic races. I had driven a work-Lexus up from LA and would have had to find somewhere to stay to extend my trip and the whole thing just felt daunting at the time. Of course I regretted not trying to extend my stay in Monterey immediately, when I saw all the big guns that Nissan and the Nissan legends like Steve Millen himself had pulled out for this. 

The fomo was so real (yes, yes.) for me that I didn’t even want to see any of it on social media and just tuned out the rest of Car Week. 

But now, this, unexpectedly was my opportunity to meet a hero (the car of course) in real life. 

Leading up to the race I did take a look at the IMSA stats, and was disappointed to see the dissolve of the Tequila Patron Extreme Motorsports Team headed by Scott Sharp. At this point I barely ever have any skin in the game, since Nissan is really only interested in heavily participating in Formula E. Tequila Patron, a long time sponsor of not just ESM but IMSA, ALMS, WEC, pulled all of its investment out of racing (similar to Williams losing the Martini sponsorship.. is this the end of heavy alcohol sponsorships? First cigarettes now this?), though they maintained a presence as a hospitality tent at the race. 

Ultimately ESM dissolved after not procuring a new title sponsor and sold their Nissan DPis to CORE Autosport, who only had one car competing. However this one car displayed a beautiful heritage Nissan livery, utilizing the red, white and blue scheme, not the classic Nissan blue, but rather the electric metallic blue seen on the R89c.

Saturday morning I ripped down to Torrance via the 405 in the Z to pick up my friend Ian and off to the races we went. It was full circle from last year and I felt a little bad, because last year he drove me in his now defunct Cayman. For me it was the first time ever I’d been able to drive MY sports car to a race. It’s always been a rental, or riding shotgun, or riding in our family car. Being able to experience car cultural with a sports car was truly a surreal moment.

That race day feeling: wow there’s just nothing like it. I don’t think Long Beach is one of the most amazing races I’ve ever been to but there are some pretty cool perks. There’s free access to the IMSA paddock and they let you just stand there when the cars start rolling out onto the track. It’s just a frenzy full of spectators, teams and these giant prototype cars in a tiny space. All of a sudden the engines start and the staff leisurely scuffles people out of the way. But even then were still talking your foot could get run over - I love it. 

We got separated from our larger group, who ended up at the grandstands by the starting line. At this point, we were all the way on the other side of the track and the race was about to start. We decided to stay where we were, and boy, am I glad we did. Spoiler alert: somehow my friend and I had front row seats to all of the major accidents.


 

Starting on pole were the two Acura DPis one first and third, (I mean, how much money did Acura spend as the title sponsor?? They better be) with one of the six-Cadillac-powered DPis (Whelen Engineering) in between. We were standing on the inside of turn six and in only the second lap the Nissan hit the tire wall. At the time we weren’t sure what happened, but it was self-induced by driver Jonathan Bennet. 

 

IMG_0815 from Erika Canfijn on Vimeo.


Having never really seen an accident this close up it was kind of horrifying. It felt like it took an eternity for them to call out caution on the track. As spectators we just stood there watching the Nissan attempt to back up and rectify itself, hoping it could move out of the way before the other cars came racing back around. He started to finally move backwards just as we started to hear the other cars come racing back around in the distance, only they weren’t slowing down - and he was still backing up! They passed him at speed with clearance of about a foot. It was scary to watch. And as much as I was devastated that the Nissan was out so early, it was exciting, having skin in the game for once, even if that skin left me feeling let down. 

The next accident we saw was one of the Cadillac-powered DPis hit another tire wall in turn 8, struggle like the Nissan did, but ultimately recover and continue the lap. 

 
I know this is the #4 Corvette

I know this is the #4 Corvette

In the last lap of the race, again, coming out of turn 8, my friend and I witnessed one of the Corvette’s fighting for second with one of the Ford GTs and slamming into the back of it. We barely saw the GT spinout under the bridge and into the wall. 

People will tell you that the #3 Magnussen Corvette was not at fault, and in fact try to skew it like it was actually the GT who was at fault, not accelerating fast enough out of the turn, but we know what we saw. We saw them both start accelerating out of the corner, the Corvette starting to inch on the back of the Ford and even if it wasn’t accelerating at the same rate, Magnussen didn’t even try to avoid him. 

 

Okay, that’s enough for real event coverage. 

I’ll spare you the maneuvering into the vehicle.

I’ll spare you the maneuvering into the vehicle.

We met the owners and drivers of the two heritage Nissans inside of the conference hall where all of the classic cars had their paddocks. Admittedly, neither knew much about the cars’ restoration process, besides the fact that they had both had they original paint until about two weeks prior. The #002 chassis 300zx had all of its electronics switched out for MoTech, as the original electronics company was defunct, and was driven by the owner’s son-in-law. More interestingly, the driver of the GTU 240sx let me and my friend sit in the car. Honestly, I don’t think I’ve ever actually sat in a race car and usually I’m pretty uncomfortable about it. But it was pretty cool. I consider myself pretty nimble, but it was difficult to get in and out of and I don’t know how a guy in his 70s is doing it. They modified it so that it was a 4-speed transmission, and it still just had a traditional shifter; I tried to depress the clutch but barely could get it to the floor, it felt like 80 pounds. All of those things combined with the poor visibility, I just don’t know how drivers did it back in the day. 

I’ve been to my fair share of races, and I’ll admit that I haven’t always been able to witness a lot of accidents, which everyone who follows racing pretends they hate but really love. Yes, we want everyone to be safe, but it’s exciting! Generally at these larger endurance races there’s not a lot of screens or PA’s to let you know what’s going on, so you’re just standing there thinking “Hmm, I haven’t seen the such-and-such car in awhile,” and then find out 10 laps later it’s out. 

I have to say I do prefer a longer endurance race, an hour-and-a-half just is not enough time to walk the track, get photos, and not feel rushed or like you’re missing something. Also, longer endurance races are just more riveting, pushing those cars to the absolute limit.

Besides great crash views, the thing that really made this year’s LPGP so memorable for me is actually being able to see the #76 Nissan 300zx race. It started on pole, sounded amazing, and led the pack by a good margin for the entire 20 minute race.

It was a culmination of a life’s dream.

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P.S. Some complaints on the new IMSA logo: 

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I’ve had an IMSA decal on my car for as long as I can remember. I looked for merch after the race, and truly wanted to purchase some 50th anniversary of IMSA merchandise, but it was abundantly clear that they have the same design department working on the IMSA logos, and the NASCAR influence is in there. So that was a pass for ole’ EC. 

Keeping Up with Le Mans Weekend

So for my first blog post I'm stealing my own headline. The 83rd annual 24 Hours of Le Mans starts 5 Hours 8 minutes and counting. From the last time I checked Twitter the teams were still just warming up as it is nearly 10 a.m. in France.

For a person without cable, I thought keeping up with the race would be more of a challenge. I know every time I've been to the 12 Hours of Sebring trying to keep up with what is going on is a nightmare. Maybe it's because I've been at the race and wifi has been terrible and I've just been frazzled.

But the 24 Hours team seems to be doing their best to provide ways for us not so fortunate as to be in France ourselves to watch and keep up with the race. I just downloaded the 24 Hours app from the App Store and it's actually pretty great. It hasn't crashed once for one. It's also pretty fast and has a nice layout.

The home screen on the app shows highlights of what's currently going on at the track with a featured video, the entry-list according to starting position, a count-down to the checkered flag, and of course the 24 Hours Rolex to keep you in time with France. 

I'm really enjoying the app, you can check the best lap times for all the practices and warm-ups thus far, standings for other races, and more videos. There is an option for a live cam, which is pretty neat but it requires a $9.99 subscription. 

According to the 24 Hour website there is also a podcast from radiolemans.com, which I have yet to listen to. 

Fox 1 and 2 will be covering the race, but that doesn't really help me and I have no intention of paying for their subscription service so it's off to find a live stream somewhere else.

Happy race day!