Desert Dingo Racing

Category: The Car

  • It’s finally starting to look like a race car

    I don't care if it rains or freezes

    If it weren’t for the last minute, nothing would get done.

    One week til our first race of the season and 1107 2.0 is finally starting to look like a race car. Body is welded in place. Transmission is in. Air filter is in. Dash is in. Billy came by on Sunday and handled all the wiring. Shocks are in. Oil cooler fan is installed. Fuel cell is installed. The battery and case are in place. Pressurized oil sump is in. I dropped off the newly repainted steering column, side mirror nerf bars and the engine deck lid. I would have dropped off the trunk lid but for the life of me couldn’t figure out how to wedge it into a 2002 Golf. Yesterday I primed six fenders and assorted bits and bobs. Tonight I paint fenders and prime the wheels. I think the engine goes in today or tomorrow, too. We depart for Yerington around noon on Friday for the Yerington 300.

    Here are some pretty boring photos of unpainted and painted car parts from this weekend
    .

    On a serious note, we want to wish the best for the family of Paul Lukey (our sponsor with TrailGlow), who were caught in the tornado in Joplin. Everyone survived and we’re waiting for the result of Paul’s father’s surgery.

  • Rocket runs to MasterCraft Safety, Bilstein and Metalcraft

    The folks at Mastercraft Safety are miracle workers

    Scotts Valley (holla!) native Shelby Lynn Reeves shows off our completely refurbished Comp 4 racing seats from MasterCraft Safety.

    Thursday was driving day for Bob Russell and me with Bob headed to MetalCraft Motorsports and Transmissions in Sanger to have master transmission guy Scott Sebastian rebuild our race transmission and me hitting Santee and Poway to have MasterCraft Safety refurbish our racing seats and confab with the team at Bilstein, who take good care of us in the shock absorber department.

    Me first. I departed Desert Dingo Racing HQ around 7 p.m. Wednesday southbound, pausing for sleep breaks at a truck stop, residential cul-de-sac and an oceanside rest area, arriving in Santee in time for an 8:30 a.m. Thursday meeting with Shelby Lynn Reeves, Safety Apparel Product Manager and Marketing Assistant with MasterCraft Safety.

    Because I’m an idiot, I gave her the wrong model name for our seats. Being the professionals that they are, Shelby said, “Give us an hour and a half.” With that I was on the road to Poway to meet with Joel Ward and his team at Bilstein.

    Joel and Juan giving me a shop tour at Bilstein off road HQ in Poway.

    Joel and his team have been helping us out since we started our race effort back in 2007. We were constantly blowing out shocks because we were idiots (you’re seeing a pattern here) until we got our suspension dialed in and now 1107 rides like butter. Despite all the aggravation we’ve put them through, Joel’s team added us to their hall of fame.

    Bilstein Hall of Fame

    What the?! Someone else’s car photo is bigger than ours? This aggression will not stand, man.

    In appreciation for all the work they’ve done for us, we’ll be flying a Bilstein flag from our radio mast at our races, starting with Yerington in a week.

    Bidding Bilstein a fond farewell, I raced back to Santee to meet again with Shelby and our too-pretty-to-install-in-the-car race seats. It was like that softball-sized hole we sort of burned into the driver’s seat at the Mint 400 never existed. I also grabbed MasterCraft logos to run on 1107 for the season. Thank you Shelby and MasterCraft.

    With that I was out the door and northbound to home, dropping off the seats with Crusty around 9 p.m. and actually back at Desert Dingo HQ at 9:30. Total elapsed time, 30 hours. Total mileage, 1,030. Average speed, including sleeping, sitting in line at fast food drive-throughs and taking meetings, 34 mph.

    While I was being wined and dined like a big shot, Bob Russell loaded five VW transmissions into Scott Anderson’s Honda Element and drove them to Sanger to have Scott Sebastian of MetalCraft Motorsports and Transmissions work his magic on them.

    It took us a while to learn that one thing you don’t want to skimp on is transmissions and since we started using Scott Sebastian and Metalcraft, we’ve never had an issue.

    Smart Class 11 racers, like Robert Johnson, who was also at Metalcraft, rebuild their trannys after every other race. Not us. We went seven races, which Scott wasn’t all that keen about. Anyway, Scott rebuilt our primary race transmission (it showed remarkably little wear and tear), he will build a second race transmission out of three additional transmissions Bob delivered, and he’ll do some work on Bob’s bus transmission. So Bob departed with five trannys and returned with one. Here’s what it looks like:

    Pretty!

    A whirlwind of work planned for this weekend. More photos to come.

  • Desert Dingo Racing featured in Gearbox Magazine

    Get a haircut, hippie

    Someone needs a haircut.

    Gearbox Magazine editor Brian Driggs got it in his head that it might be interesting to do a piece on Desert Dingo Racing. We bounced emails back and forth and this is the result. I love my Stig shirt.

    Desert Dingo: A True Story of “Dust to Glory”

    For those who haven’t seen it yet, “Dust to Glory” is an epic movie about what it takes to run the Baja 1000 in Mexico. There probably isn’t a gearhead on the planet who hasn’t watched that flick and thought, “OMG. I wanna do that.” Jim Graham is one such gearhead, and OMG. He actually went out and did that.

    Read the rest of the story…

  • The last quarter inch takes the other 90% of the time

    Crusty welding on our pristine paint job

    Crusty doing what he does best. Which is, basically, everything.

    Yesterday, Crusty and I spent the day shouting the back end of 1107 into place. Today, we reprised that role with the front end. By the end of the day we had the front end bolted on and Crusty had what he needed to to cut the pan for the fuel cell and make some general tweaks that put us in position for final interior painting, electronics and everything else.

    For the love of Pete, don’t click on this photo gallery link unless you’re honestly thinking of building a Class 11 because…boring.

  • The last inch takes the other 90% of the time

    Dump run

    So much for Shawn’s awesome paint job.

    Scott, Bob, Crusty and I met up Saturday morning to move the new body over to the old pan on the other side of the county. The body mostly fit in the trailer and there’s nothing that 800 grit sandpaper and a roller brush can’t fix on Shawn’s paint job.

    The easiest (and I mean “relatively”)  way to mount a VW body on a car is to cut the body in half, slide the back half on, then repeat with the front half. We needed a cutting torch, sawz-all, crow bar, a smaller crow bar, a couple of hammers and a healthy amount of invective to get the back end in place. The last inch easily took the most time and I’m pretty sure we made cuts in at least nine spots on the car to get it to snug down.

    Scott delivered a handful of sleeves we’ll use to re-attach various portions of the roll cage. Things will be coming together pretty quickly moving forward.

    Here’s a gallery of roughly 60 photos of different angles of the roll cage and body, among other things.