Desert Dingo Racing

Category: Technology

  • Ok, let’s have a contest

    There can't be this many people interested in us
    This is about as close as we get to science.

    Sometime this morning, probably while I was trying to un-jam the photocopier, we topped 7,000 downloads of the Desert Dingo Racing iPhone, iPad and Android mobile apps. I find this mind-boggling.

    So here’s what I’m going to do. For the first 20 people who email me a photo of themselves holding their mobile device showing the DDR app, I’ll snail mail you one of our hero cards. I know this probably requires you to have a camera or you’ll do something creative with a mirror, but what I’m looking for is your face and your mobile device showing the app.

    I’d like to publish some of your photos, so you probably don’t want to be in a witness protection program or anything like that.

    So take that photo and email it to me at jim@desertdingo.com . I’d like to get your first name, city and country you’re in, and maybe a quickie explanation on why on earth you’re following us.

    If your photo is particularly creative or funny, I might toss in one of our coveted DDR stickers.

    And, lastly, I’ll publish everyone’s first name, city and country in a future blog post and everyone’s name will be carried in the car at our next race.

    How’s that?

    P.S. If you’re the one person in Durban, South Africa or Horizonte, Brazil, who follows us, and you send in a photo, you’re a guaranteed winner.

  • Our new race radio antenna

    I have no idea how this stuff works
    It sort of works.

    So we’ve had a pit radio, exactly the same as what’s in 1107. But it’s been worthless because we’ve never been able to use it to talk to whomever is in the car. That is until I got schooled on how radios work, when, couple of weeks ago, I asked my mentor, 90-year-old Frank Adamson, “How do radios work?”

    Frank, who’s led such an amazing life I can’t even talk about it, said “I’m taking this on as a project.”  This was Saturday. Sunday he calls and says “I have an antenna for you.” So I go over and he hands me something that looks like a pointer you use in a PowerPoint presentation.

    “Don’t you have something bigger, like a satellite dish?” Thankfully, Frank appreciates me for what’s on the inside.

    End result, he hands me this antenna, which Skid immediate recognizes as something that will allow us to communicate with race teams on other planets – an ANLI AL-800. He procures a mast from Ham Radio Shack and cable that is coated with five years of playa dust and we have all the makings of a long distance UHF radio.

    Richard delivers an 80-lb. base, which we can drive the support truck on to, and we are ready to broadcast.

    Last night I put it all together and had Richard put his helmet on across town at his place (where 1107 is now). End result – I can hear him, but he can’t hear me. I’m confident we’ll get it sorted out in time for the Hawthorne 250 Labor Day weekend.

    I have no idea how this stuff works

  • We top 5000 downloads of our Desert Dingo Racing iPhone and Adroid app

    There are lies, damn lies and statistics
    Who are you people?!

    For a while there, iPhone downloads had a slight lead but for whatever reason, Android downloads have gone through the roof. Here’s a special shout out to whomever is following us from Campina Grande, Brazil.

    Team meeting tomorrow night at Bob’s place. Something interesting might come of it.

    There are lies, damn lies and statistics

  • “Flying” the VORRA Fallon 250 desert night race


    This is what will be running on my laptop for the next four days.

    About a week before a race, the organizers drive the course with a GPS unit that records their track. That file gets loaded online for teams to plug into their race car GPS units. This is particularly helpful when you’re driving as fast as you can on dirt roads at night in the middle of the Nevada desert. Which is what we’ll be doing Saturday night.

    I take VORRA‘s file and reformat it for Google Earth, and will spend the next few days “flying” the course. You can download the Google Earth KML file here. This course looks fast. Very fast. With a little bit of technical stuff, mostly at the end of each 62 mile lap.

    We depart Felton Thursday afternoon and arrive in Fallon Thursday night. Friday around 11 a.m. we pre-run the course. Race starts around 6 p.m. Saturday night and we have nine hours to do four laps of the 62-mile course.

    Here’s our tentative driver / co-driver line up.

    Pre-run Friday morning
    Richard / Bill in 1107. Scott on motorcycle.

    Lap 1 – Scott / Bill
    Lap 2 – Richard / Bob
    Lap 3 – Crusty / Scott
    Lap 4 – Bill / Jim

  • Desert Dingo app on an iPad


    Our team app on an iPad.

    Wylie W. send me a screenshot of the Desert Dingo Racing iPhone / Android app on his brand new iPad. Yes, I need one.

    I just checked iSites. We’re at 1,960 downloads. Who are all you people? Thanks, also.