Trips
The RingBunny
Ecurie Europe
Sabine Schmitz
Odd bits
Jørund Seim
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"Traffic" would be a good subtitle for this report, but we'll get
to that later. The itinerary for this trip was a bit on the hectic
side. Some might call it crazy :-) But is wasn't my fault, honest ;-)
Lenny hadn't managed to scare me off, so I was staying at Sliders
again, on Saturday night. Which was really useful, as Saturday was
going to be a long day. So far so good. The only problem was that
Euan, Chris and Nick were arriving on Friday afternoon and suggested
we meet at the Fuchsröhre. There's no way I was going to say "no",
right? As a result I drove over on Friday afternoon, then back again a
bit after midnight, up again on Saturday morning, and back again
Sunday evening.
Thanks to roadwork after roadwork (for a change at some of those sites
actual work was performed) I got to the Ring just in time to buy a
Jahreskarte at the reduced rate for the rest of the year and do three
laps, saying "hi" and not much else to Euan, Chris and Nick in between
laps. The car-of-the-day was my workhorse, the Alfa 147. Not enough
horsepower, but real easy to drive on the Ring. Also, I now understand
what Ben meant by having to learn the Ring again after upgrading to a
faster car. In the 147, a corner by corner characterization of the
Ring would be "flat in 4, flat in 2, flat in 2, flat in 3, flat in 4,
flat in 3, ..." Taking the same approach in the 964 would result in
"flat in 4, flat against the armco". Still, the 147 is good fun, as
long as there's no steep incline involved. Up Kesselchen I maxed out
at 150 km/h indicated. A marked difference to having to lift a bit in
the 964 :) On the other hand, the softer suspension allowed me to go
fast enough round some corners to have to lift because a bike was in
the way. Or a
Porsche 944 :-)
(framegrabs courtesy of Euan).

I used the time between doing laps and dinner for a quiet and private
visit to Pflanzgarten III, where
Jørund had
crashed. Bren had put some text on the track. The armco and the hut
next to the track were marked too. Somebody else had nailed print-outs
of Jørund's guest book to the hut. Somehow standing there looking at
the peaceful track really drove the reality of it home. We'd be coming
here after the Ringers dinner, but I was glad to have the place to my
own for a few minutes.
Friday night involved dinner at the Fuchsröhre. I don't know if there
was a reservation or not, but even though the place was packed we got
a table. Tom and Trish were there with the ever questioning John (nice
guy, even though he hates spinach). I delivered my first load of CD's,
blowups and video tape to Euan, and borrowed enough things from him to
make me glad I had the 147 instead of the 964 with me.
Among the CD's was a copy (strictly for back-up purposes, mind you) of
Odyssey Number Five by
Powderfinger,
which Sabine promptly nicked and put on the stereo.
A bit later we were joined by Niek, who had been at the Pistenklause.
As the evening was getting on for midnight, Euan and I invited Sabine
to our table to present her with a tasteful thank-you for the ride in
the Ring Taxi in July. We thought a bottle of Blue Nun would be highly
appropriate. It was clear she appreciated the gesture (and the humor),
but she still hit me. Twice :) Niek was kind enough to capture this
historic moment on film. After another coke I decided this was as good
a time as any to take off for home. According to the trip computer, I
made it back in 1 hour and 59 minutes, an average of 149 km/h
including parking the car. It must be mistaken though, because large
parts of the trip have speed limits that are significantly lower than
that ;-)
To come back to an old theme: the weather forecast for Saturday was
showers of all kinds and durations, so I had high hopes for lots of
sunshine. At home it was raining hard. So hard I nearly decided not to
take the 964 with its worn front tyres. A bit of perseverance, reduced
speed and a light grip on the steering wheel got me through the worst
of it, arriving at the Ring sometime during the afternoon. It had been
raining at the Ring, too. The slipperyness had caused Simon some
grief: he spun his Scooby at miss-hit-miss (a.k.a. miss-spin-hit
a.k.a. miss-hit-miss-hit). Crashing your car is never any fun, but
Simon had to deal with more than the usual hardships. Nothing was
leaking out, so he drove the car off the track at Breidscheid. Thanks
to some misunderstandings, Mr. Policeman came looking for him,
accusing him to leave the scene of an accident. It took some time to
sort things out, but it all ended well. Except of course that crashing
your car AND being a famous Ringer makes for perfect ingredients for
some impromptu carpark fun: some helpful people made sure Simon got
some safety leaflets.
Nick and Chris being condemned to doing passenger laps, I took them
out for some back to back laps, starting with Chris. The track was
still damp and this was my first lap of the day, so I took it easy.
The second lap was much faster, with Ex-Mühle to Mutkurve being
interesting: I had to work quite hard to overtake a Seat Leon there. I
sure hope that it wasn't a 1.6 :-)
Nick was next up for the passenger seat. We were following Francis in
his BMW, aiming to keep him in shot until Flugplatz and overtake him
there, as he said he hoped to be able to keep up. Yeah right. I was
barely able to keep up with him until Hatzenbach, which he took quite
a bit faster than I. Add some traffic and it took quite a while and
some waiting on his part before I saw him again. Some of the traffic
included sidecars. It looked spectacular with the passenger hanging
out, but it wasn't very quick. On the second lap Sabine came blasting
past on the approach to Hocheichen, exiting it sideways. A white 944
had done the typical Schwedenkreuz crash, damaging both left front and
left rear. The approach to Karussell was interesting in that a Volvo
estate tried to run me off the road. I was using the horn
enthusiastically enough for the horn button to fall of, so I was glad
to have Nick there to fish it up.
After a break to have something to eat I took Chris out for another
two laps, following Euan for a short while on both laps. The first lap
was pretty much uneventful except for lots of traffic to contend with.
The brakes started to vibrate a bit during the second lap, and I had a
nice sideways moment on the approach to Wehrseifen thanks to a bit too
much brakes in combination with a bit too much steering. Those are the
times you're grateful you learned the handling characteristics of your
car before going out on the Ring.
Between laps Simon (who can fix anything) was kind enough to assist in
copying the now famous Ring Taxi lap Euan, Francis and I did last time
onto a VHS tape. Simon provided the DV-camcorder with the correct lead
to connect it to my el-cheapo full-size VHS-recorder in the back of
the 964. We were going to give the VHS tape to Sabine later.
The final two laps of the day were with Euan as passenger, starting
out right behind Simon who was behind the wheel of Euans car. (Brave
man, Euan.) Both laps were reasonably quick (9.45 and 9.43 BTG).
The Ringers dinner was rather busy, both with people and with gadgets.
I delivered another enlargement and some vids to
Ben and left the dinner earlier than usual to walk up the track to
Pflanzgarten III. Laurens was leading the way with his exemplary
knowledge of holes in the fencing. Among the other walkers were Simon,
Euan, Mike O. and Francis, if memory serves, something you (or more
precisely, I) can never be too sure of :-)
Along Döttinger Höhe we encountered a sign Simon might have found
useful earlier that morning. I also recall some very involved
discussions about the use of the gantry. I think we didn't reach a
conclusion because we were interrupted by a UFO. I took a picture of
it, but it's kind of hard to spot. For the best description of the UFO
incident: find Simon's trip report. You should be able to find it on
Smartgroups.
In the meantime Niek had been ferrying people to Pflanzgarten III in
Euan's car (after putting some gas in the tank; it was running on
fumes). Everybody met up below the hut near the actual crash site.
There was quiet, darkness, laughter, silence, Laphroaig and Lucky
Strikes. Nuff said.
Having walked all the way up there, a ride back seemed like a good
idea. Particularly with 6 (six) people in a 328i, one of them with his
head out the window, the stereo blasting AC/DC and the engine revving
towards the redline. I think I saw the sign that indicates your speed
trying to tell our driver (I won't mention you by name, Niek) that he
wasn't going fast enough ;-)
We ended up in the Fuchsröhre (where else), with Euan and me
presenting Sabine with yet another gift: the carpark copy of the Ring
Taxi lap. Which earned the entire table a round of Tequila. I, being a
total wimp when it comes to alcohol, settled for a Coke (much to
Sabine's dismay).
Day two started out with breakfast at Sliders where I met Gary. The
weather was nice and sunny again, so I packed my things and drove to
the Ring. At about 55 km/hr, thanks to some geriatrically driven cars
on the B258. There are moments when even I would like to be on a
bike...
The first laps of the day were with Francis in the passenger seat. We
were being held up by a Ferrari 348, driven by a guy in clothes that
matched the car. Matching clothes either means bloody quick
(Schumacher matches his clothes to his car) or bloody slow (as was the
case with the 348). Still nice to see comparisons that are made in car
tests come to life: yes, a 964 will out-accelerate a 348 :-)
Lap two saw us overtaking a 996 just before Hohe Acht. I noticed the
front sliding a bit more than usual in Wippermann, so I took it a bit
easier into Brünnchen. Which was just as well, as the nose turned in
markedly less than I asked, resulting in some nice video footage of me
putting the outside wheels onto the grass with the inside wheels on
the rumble stones. Oops... Yet another moment to be grateful for big
margins. I gently eased the entire car back to its proper place on the
track and slowed right down. The 996 overtook us again before
Schwalbenschwanz, giving us a front row seat to a nice display of the
Porsche Stability Management in action: he braked over a bump while
turning in, causing the back to step out big-time. It's a pity I had
to slow down on this lap, as there had been relatively little traffic:
9.47 BTG with T13 closed.
I did some passenger laps myself as well: some really enjoyable ones
were with Francis (picture taken by Gary;
pity we were held up by the Merc from hell), Tom (my compliments to
his precise placement of the car on the track) and Ben. Tom also
demonstrated some of the idiosyncracies of the BMW's automatic
gearbox: it sometimes takes a full two seconds to comply with a
downshift command. Weird.
Some carpark highlights:
Simon makes room for the 18" wheel, Francis would love to give him a
hand, Euan's car has somehow attracted a new sticker, chatting with
Lars, spotting the French Merc 280S that appeared to have no mirrors
and barfed oil all over the place, including Ben's 968, which Francis
tries on for size (fits pretty well, I think). Ben demonstrates the
capabilities of one of his gadgets to an attentive audience, the
DTM-crowd in combination with a track closure causes a traffic jam,
and Euan test drives Tom's car.
With suitably long pauses and less cornering speed I took three more
passengers round: Niek finally got his passenger lap in an ordinary C2
(as opposed to RS's), John (still not liking spinach) had a pretty
good lap with us overtaking the F348 with a large speed differential
up Flugplatz (glad my headlights are in better nick than his mirrors),
resulting in 9.36 BTG. The final passenger of the day (just before he
was leaving and just before I was leaving) was a fellow dutchman and
Porsche enthusiast, Mike. By this time T13 was open again, making
things a bit easier at Hohenrain.
The drive home was timed to perfection: it started raining halfway,
but by that time I was on roads that tolerate water pretty well. Which
is just as well, as my front tyres are now overdue for replacement.
The insides still have some thread left, but the outside thread is
about gone. Maybe some more negative camber next time :-)
All things considered this was another good trip. Hardly a clear lap
in three days, though, but I had a lot of fun anyway.
A
comprehensive overview
of the pictures taken during this trip can be found on the
photography pages.
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