Desert Dingo Racing

Author: admin

  • More prep for the Caliente 250

    Creech dials in our new pit bike.

    A tremendous amount of work accomplished on 1107 this weekend. Crusty continued with his Passion of the Race Car theme and painted the inside of the car and de-rusted the roll cage. He, Scott, Bob and Richard worked on reinforcing the front and rear bumpers. Shawn hammered out a new front driver’s side fender to replace the one I threw off a cliff in a fit at the Mint 400.

    New for the Caliente 250 is that we can use a quick release steering wheel, which makes it quicker to get out of the car. We’ll also have a reinfored bumper to deal with trophy trucks like Bill McBeath’s that trashed us pretty good.

    Some photos from today’s work.

  • Prepping for SNORE’s Caliente 250

    That'll buff right out.

    This is why I don’t want to drive the car. I have a hard enough time with the xBox.

    The team met to map out what needs to happen to get 1107 ready for SNORE’s Caliente 250 on May 9 outside Las Vegas. Crusty got a head start and worked like a man possessed on Friday and by Saturday the transmission was out and ready to be taken to Bradford Racing for a rebuild. It’s likely we’ll have him build a second one for us so that we have a spare (our downfall at the 2008 Baja 1000).

    Richard signed us up with BF Goodrich and we’ll be switching to a new set of rear tires that have better sidewall protection (our downfall at the 2008 San Felipe 250). The shocks didn’t blow, as we previously believed, and they’re good to go for this race. And Shawn will likely paint a new driver’s side front fender to replace the one I threw off a cliff in a fit of pique at the Mint 400.

    This commercial has given me an idea for a new food delivery system. More on that later.

  • Except for horsepower, support and budget, we’re just like the Trophy Trucks

    A clip of Robert Johnson and Eric Solorzano followed by a Trophy Truck doing the same section of the Mint 400. Video from Wicked Gravity Video.

    We’re prepping for the Caliente 250.

  • Mint 400 – Race Day



    “In some circles, the Mint 400 is a far, far better thing than the Super Bowl, the Kentucky Derby, and the Lower Oakland Roller Derby Finals all rolled into one.”
    ~ H.S.T.

    (Thanks to Indigo for reminding me about this quote).

    What to say about the race? Scott and Carrie started out at a few minutes after 8 a.m. and set a fierce pace. By the end of the first 101 mile circuit, we had two blown shocks, the radio was kaput and the light bar had fallen off. None of it mattered since they’d moved us up from eighth to fourth place.



    Scott gets to work after finishing the first leg.

    Refueled, light bar re-welded, Richard and Creech tore off around 2:20 p.m. The silt was getting worse, particularly a 100-yard uphill that was stopping all manner of cars. The highlight of their leg, according to Richard, was a half hour,pitched battle with the Pump Gas team, racing side by side. Richard eased off to maintain the car.

    Crusty welding the rear skid plate. Notice the tire mark to the left of rear light cluster. Thank you trophy truck No. 91. Expect a bill for a new fender.

    Coming into the pits, the rear skid plate, which had been dragging, fell off. We knew we couldn’t go back out without it (guaranteed to destroy the underside of the engine). Imagine searching a half mile of track, in the dark, with race cars charging past us. Naturally, Carrie found it, hauled it back to the pits and Crusty bolted and welded it back in place. At 8:20 p.m. Bob took the driver’s seat and I belted in as co-driver.

    We crossed the start/finish line, the flagger waived us and we were out on the course. Two miles out, we high-centered in silt the consistency of talcum powder and three feet deep. An hour of jacking, shoveling, sticking volcanic rocks under the rear tires, pulling with a come-along, more shoveling and we were on solid ground.

    I called the team to let them know we were good to go when we got the word that we’d crossed the start line 20 minutes after the deadline for starting the final lap. Mind you, no one had mentioned a deadline at the driver’s meeting and it wasn’t included in any of the documentation, but we were officially done.

    A chase truck for a Class 15 car stopped and gave us a couple of beers while we waited for extraction. An hour later we decided to save ourselves and drive back over the course we’d already covered.

    Had we known about the deadline, we could have worked around it. Two Class 11s had gone out of the race just a couple miles up the road from us and we could have gone farther than them. But that’s racing.

    We’ll do a post-race debrief, map out what needs to be done to the car, and get to work in preparation for the Caliente 250 in May.

    Thanks to Jason and Annie Mace for finding us the perfect pit spot and for handling refuel duties out at Pit C. Thanks to our sponsors for their unwaivering support.  And thanks to the other teams. We’re having a blast doing this.

  • First day in Las Vegas for the Mint 400

    Carrie signs autographs for some of her biggest fans.

    Creech, Richard, Skid and I drove overnight from Felton to Vegas, pulling somewhere around 5 a.m. Got a couple hours of sleep, wrenched on the car for a bit and then piled into Creech’s 4WD truck to pre-run the Mint 400 course.

    We cried surrender after 15 miles of kidney-slapping driving over dirt roads, river beds, silt and other detritus.

    That evening we hauled the car into town and set up show with a good number of other teams on Fremont Street for the fan meet ‘n greet. We got Scott and Carrie suited up signing the last of our hero cards and handing out boxes of crayons given to us by the International Diabetes Federation that have the warning signs of diabetes printed on the back. (We are, as you recall, the official World Diabetes Day race car in the Baja 1000).

    Here’s a gallery of photos from the meet ‘n greet.