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Not Tech - CVAR Fall Festival notes

To: jwilt@leighengineering.com, fot@autox.team.net
Subject: Not Tech - CVAR Fall Festival notes
From: N197TR4@cs.com
Date: Fri, 27 Oct 2000 16:49:05 EDT
Yup Jeff...it is about friends and family. This was a good one. I can't count 
the ways. We had visitors all weekend telling us how much they appreciated 
our appearance and our Triumphs. Special.

The facilities and the track were well beyond my expectations...

We will be back...and will try to drag some other crusty TR guys with us... 

....but keep that cranky cheatin' dog spec sprite guy away me.  He came up to 
me after the last race without introducing himself and said..."I dont mind 
you Triumph Guys racing with each other, but....." it went downhill from 
there, especially when he caught up with another FOT.  
 
Thanks Messrs.. Wilt, Kramer, Summerville, Hardison, Barnard and CVAR....

Regards,

Joe 



<< Good Racing, Good Coffee in The Haus of Racing
 Texas World Speedway, College Station, TX,  CVAR Fall Festival, Oct. 2000
 
 Jeff Wilt, 1959 TR3A #39
 
 It seems I have a duty to talk about CVAR Group 4 (Vintage) and Triumph 
 racing in general for the Friends of Triumph (FOT) and the Red River 
 Triumph Club.  My capacity to talk may have had something to do with two 
 Triumphs and a third car-less FOT pilote coming from the ends of the earth 
 (Wisconsin and thereabouts) to our big event.  In looking for the unifying 
 theme - this has to be about the next generation of vintage racers, first 
 and foremost.
 
 The next generation, from my perspective, looks good.  Group 5 in CVAR is 
 the exhibition event each day.  Sundays' run was something special in that 
 two sons ( a.k.a less-than-vintage drivers) of current drivers 
 (more-vintage-like gentlemen) took cars to the track for, I understand, the 
 first time.  None were Triumphs, more about that later, but Austin Taylor 
 took out his father's DP - MGB, and young Master Walton apparently took out 
 his father's BP 65 Mustang.  There was not another car on the track.
 
 We happened to be loading-up where and when Master Taylor pulled into the 
 garage area after his run.  The look on his face - pure joy, huge grin, and 
 oh-my-gosh -  well it brought tears to Mrs. Wilt's eyes.  Nearly got me. 
  His Dad?  "Have Fun? Great!  Now give me the helmet, get out of the way, 
  -  I have the enduro to run in 3 minutes."  AJ would have been proud! 
  Then my daughter pipes up with "That's me in 8 years!"
 
 While not a new generation, Tired Dog Racing is new to this stuff, 
 completing our Rookie Year in Class VB in 2nd..  Can't describe how much 
 fun we had as a family, how much we learned, and how tired I am of seeing 
 the rear end of Orlie's Porsche.?.  This was the first time I have competed 
 in motorsports of any kind, and a first for the family in supporting 
 someone who has the fever.   Need I say more. If racing is a disease, that 
 explains why I'm already in search of an overdrive transmission.  I know 
 owning a TR is one, as nobody owns just one.  Special thanks to Furlows 
 Junior and Senior, Bob Kramer, and everyone else.
 
 An encouraging word to the FOT crowd about Triumph reliability - it can be 
 done!  My engine (a 1999 Kramer special) ran flawlessly throughout the 
 entire season of 2000.  I never even pulled a spark plug.  Couldn't tell 
 you what is under the valve cover (yet).  Changed the oil.  Twice. 
  Tightened a belt - once.   See thanks to Kramer, above.
 
 I bragged, out loud, about this reliability on Sunday after the first race. 
  The water pump seized on the first lap of the very next race.  I should 
 learn something here.  Welcome to the sophomore blues.  I'm glad Sunday's 
 events were between seasons!
 
 My wife, Beth, wanted to become a part of this year's new generation of TR 
 drivers.  On Saturday, it was raining lightly and there was this bright 
 green IROC Camaro on the Group 5 grid - somehow postponing her first outing 
 with the TR until Sunday.  On Sunday, the water pump failed.  Some accused 
 me of doing anything to keep her out of the car, some just wondered how I 
 got it to rain!
 
 Group 4 (Pre 1960) provided the ability to run with some wonderful machines 
 this weekend - 19 cars in all.  Imagine getting passed by a '54 Porche 
 Cooper down the front straight, then passing back in the tighter turns. 
  Ever run (however briefly) beside a '56 Lister Jaguar?  (The Fiat Abarth 
 lives in the neighborhood so I see it all the time - going the right 
 direction.) Healeys.  Porcshe Speedster.  Elva Formula Juniors. 
  Stangellini.  Bandini. Bugeye Sprite.  MG TD.
 
 And did I mention the red TR3 from way up north (defined as anything north 
 of Dallas) driven by Kent Howard, relatively new to TR racing and a TWS 
 newbie.  We had a blast all Sunday morning and traded positions for 20 
 minutes, letting those big beautiful cars with too many cylinders run off 
 by themselves.  Afterwards, Kent kept mentioning my Big Texas Lasso, or the 
 Star Trek tractor-beam when discussing the esses and how he stayed on 
 course a couple of times.  Heck, I showed him most of the line through 
 there.
 
 FOT was represented in the faster , newer Group 2 by a brace of red TR4. 
  Joe Alexander - teamed with wiley strategist Uncle Jack, and Bob Kramer 
 ran well together all weekend.  I heard Bob ask where Joe's tractor-beam 
 was when he needed it most, but that is another 'Tractor Story' best told 
 by others.  We did get a good TR shot of the 4 cars for the FOT. 
   Hopefully we can have more TR on track next year. That invitation was 
 aimed at YOU !
 
 Remember Andy Griffith in the Ritz commercials, "Good Cracker!" ? (Don't 
 you know that "next generation" has no idea what we're talking about!) 
  This weekend it could have been "Good Coffee" thanks to one of our 
 sponsors, if not just "Good Racing."
 Yessir, Good racing.
 
 
 Jeffrey Wilt, PG, CPSM
 Rone Engineers, Inc.
 8908 Ambassador Row, Dallas, TX 75247
 V: 214.630.9745  C:214.729.8475
 F: 214.630.9819
 
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