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  <title>Brumath Racing --- Home of The Deuce: News/blog</title>
  <link>http://www.brumathracing.com/2.shtml</link>
  <description>Brumath Racing --- Home of The Deuce: News/blog</description>
  <lastBuildDate>Fri, 21 Aug 2009 13:43:52 -0500</lastBuildDate>
  <item>
   <description>The following is edited from a letter I wrote to 
another old friend, and one of my college 
roommates here at CU.
I&#39;m sending it along to many of you who I don&#39;t 
regularly correspond with in order to inform you 
regarding a great racing experience I recently 
had, as well as a resulting accident I was 
involved in there.
 
I recently took part in the 40th Anniversary 
Celebration of the SCCA Formula Ford (FF) racing 
class at Road America, near Elkhart Lake, WI, July 
24th - 26th.
FF is the class of car I ran when I first started 
racing back in 1976.
I was running a 1978 Crossle 32F FF that I had 
rented from Front Range Motorsports in Denver, who 
take care of my Fromula Continental car.
 
There were Lots of FF&#39;s there (over two hundred, I 
think), old to new.
I was entered in two different race groups, one 
(Vintage FF, and FF70) a sensible size at about 40 
to 45 cars total, the other (FF, and CFF) a real 
zoo with 115 cars or something like that.
Both groups combined two different classes of 
Formula Fords (FFs), based on age, equipment, and 
tires used, which, when combined with the normal, 
and abnormal (as in cheater), spread in engine out-
put, as well as driver ability, resulted in pretty 
substantial speed differentials.
This meant that one got very few &quot;clean&quot; laps, and 
caused lots of potential calamity, especially in 
the larger (FF, CFF) race group.
Many of us had close calls where we were passing 
slower cars that we thought knew we were coming 
by, only to find out as they moved over on us that 
they had NOT seen us coming.
Fortunately, I don&#39;t think there were any serious 
accidents that resulted from this, but I know I 
had several moments such as this, and it was 
disconcerting.
 
I had a great drive in the Vintage FF (1960s and 
70s FFs running on treaded street tires) and FF70 
(later 1970s era cars running on spec slick racing 
tires) race late Saturday afternoon, having 
qualified 2nd in the FF70 class, and running in 
that position to the finish.
The car worked really well, the weather was 
perfect, and the reduced traffic meant several 
clean laps trying to maximize the car&#39;s potential 
on that fast track.
My good spirits were challenged somewhat when my 
car came in 2# underweight at the post-race 
inspection, resulting in my disqualification.
This also meant that I would have to start at the 
rear (19th) of the FF70 group in the second race 
for the class on Sunday afternoon, as our fastest 
race time from Saturday&#39;s race would set the grid 
for Sunday&#39;s, and if your are DQed, your times are 
thrown out as well.
Such is life.
The guys at Front Range, who were taking care of 
the car, had calculated the weight, adding lead 
and steel sheets to bring it up to where it was 
supposed to be ( 950# after the race, without me 
in the car), but made a slight error in this 
calculation, and as they didn&#39;t have their own 
scales and set-up pad there, as they normally do, 
couldn&#39;t easily recheck it after adding the balast.
They had added enough to assume that we would be 
safely above that minimum.
It&#39;s something that shouldn&#39;t happen, but can, and 
did.
Just part of racing life.
 
I started the &quot;big&quot; race (FFs and CFFs) on Sunday 
morning in 21st of about 50 or so CFFs, and 
managed to make it through the first lap 
unscathed, which is always a challenge.
Then, just beginning the second lap, I think, I 
had two cars that I had out-qualified come up from 
behind on the start/finish straight as we 
approached turn #1.
I backed off some to let them by, but the second 
guy then decided that he was also going to try to 
pass the first guy.
He got on the brakes too hard, too late, which 
shot him onto the grass, and then into a spin 
across the front of the fist guy and right into my 
path, half way through the turn.
This resulted in a big collision, which violently 
spun and flipped my car, once on the asphalt apron 
outside the turn, and at least twice more through 
the gravel trap beyond the apron.
The first roll into the gravel resulted in the car 
sinking down well past the roll bar, leaving my 
helmet to absorb the rest of the impact, 
fracturing my T-4 vertebra.
I was aware the whole time, and felt the injury 
accur.
After the car came to a stop, up-side down in the 
gravel trap, I was able to crawl out of the car, 
but my legs got hung up on the steering wheel, 
which I had forgoten to remove before trying to 
get out.
The guy who had spun into me told me later that he 
was the one who had finally gotten the steering 
wheel off.
I had tried to but with my injury had been unable 
to do that myself.
The EMT&#39;s were on sceene by that point, and got me 
imobilized on a back board (the most uncomfortable 
part of the whole deal), into an ambulance, and 
then to the infield medical facility at the track.
 
I spent the next four hours in emergency vehicles 
and the ER at St. Nicholas Hospital in Sheboygan, 
and then, after they had seen the x-rays, another 
hour plus in an ambulance to Froedtert Hospital in 
Milwaukee,  where I was in the ER until the doctor 
there finally released me to a room at 12:30 AM.
I spent most the next day there, still flat on my 
back, before getting fit for a back brace, re-X-
rayed, and then another day before they released 
me after making sure I could walk, and descend and 
climb stairs. 
 
I recouped at my sister Becky&#39;s house on Pine Lake 
for the next week and a half, before feeling up to 
the flight back here to CO.
I will see a local spine specialist here on the 
20th for the next evaluation and X-rays, but the 
prognosis is good, although they told me at 
Froedtert that I&#39;d have to wear this brace for 
about twelve weeks.
All things considered, I&#39;m lucky to be here.
I hurt, but it&#39;s getting better daily, and it 
looks like I&#39;ll make a complete recovery.
 
I have raced for 33 years, give or take, and 
although I have always known something like this 
could happen, despite all attempts to avoid such, 
I have obviously been fortunate that this is the 
first time, and that the outcome wasn&#39;t worse, 
which Dr. Rao at Froedtert said is often the case 
with this type of injury.
 
I was wearing a HANS (head and neck support) 
device, which I believe, after having seen both my 
helmet and the car since the crash, not only saved 
my life, but also prevented a more serious injury.
This is an optional safety device, and I have worn 
one since my last serious crash at TWS in Texas 
back in 2001, which I was lucky to come out of 
uninjured.
Dale Earnhart Sr. was killed in a crash the day 
after that in the Daytona 500 that didn&#39;t seem to 
be that serious, and that also influenced me to 
start using a HANS.
 
That&#39;s it for now.
I hope you are all having an enjoyable summer.
 
John
</description>
   <title>Lastest race</title>
   <pubDate>Fri, 21 Aug 2009 13:43:52 -0500</pubDate>
   <link>http://www.brumathracing.com/2.shtml/4edde29e02b7ed87e82c6f80cc544c77_4a8eeae8.writeback</link>
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   <description>At Cleveland John finally got to race on a track 
this season that he had competed on previously, 
having raced there in 1990 with the Trans-Am 
series, and in 1992 in a one-off Indy Lights deal. 
That was a while ago, but the track has not 
significantly changed since then. 

It&#39;s a fun track to run, and since it&#39;s actually a 
municipal airport with nice wide runways, there is 
plenty of room to race, often on multiple 
racing &quot;lines&quot;, and room also in most places to 
make mistakes without paying severe consequences. 
There are a couple of turns with concrete walls at 
the edge of the track though, so one can&#39;t get too 
complacent. 

The weather was great, with temperatures in the 
mid to high 70s to the low 80s all three days, 
along with some welcome cloud cover, and a nice 
breeze off of Lake Erie, which borders the Burke 
Lake-front Airport grounds on the north side. 

Center stage for the weekend was the Champ Car 
Series, with support races for Fromula Atlantic, 
Pro Formula Mazda, Pro F2000(our race), Pro Spec 
Miata, The National Skip Barber School Series 
(also formula cars), and a Drifting car 
exhibition. Of the 45 cars anticipated for the 
F2000 group, only 41 or so showed up, but that&#39;s 
still almost double the car counts the Front 
Rangers have seen at the West Coast Zetec Pro 
Series races they have run. This higher car count 
is a result of the east coast organization&#39;s rules 
that allow the SCCA club FC class (Ford 
Pinto/Capri 2 liter SOHC carbureted engine) cars 
to be more competitive with the Zetec (Ford Focus 
2 liter DOHC fuel injected engine) pro spec cars.
 
The chassis are to the same spec for both types, 
while the Zetec engines must run inlet restrictor 
tubes and a restricted fuel program in their ECUs 
to make the power out-put similar to that of the 
Pinto engines. Wheels and tires may be either the 
FC 6&quot;(f)and 8&quot;(r), or the Zetec 8&quot;(f) and 10&quot;(r). 
This has been somewhat controversial, so next 
season the east coast series will require the 
narrower package to avoid any grumbling about any 
possible unfair advantage. 

The Front Range Motorsports cars were all three on 
the wider set-up, as buying enough additional sets 
of wheels is prohibitively expensive. It didn&#39;t 
seem that the wider tires made any big difference 
in the relative performance of the cars. 

The Front Range Motorsports(FRM) team for the 
event was made up of veteran drivers Dwight Rider 
and John Brumder (aka; the &quot;old guys&quot;), and, once 
again, their new young gun Max Hyatt (aka: The 
Kid, aka: &quot;Super-Max&quot;). 

The crew consisted of: J.D. McDermott (the 
Boss); his brother and full-time Front Ranger, 
Joshua (aka: Josh) Kerrigan; race Guru and 
mechanic exrodinaire Wendell Miller; guest 
mechanic Dennis Thompson; Dennis&#39;s brother, and 
transport rig driver, Jerry; our computer data 
expert and mechanic David Irwin; and Max&#39;s dad, 
Mike, who John had competed against in FCs in the 
previous century, and who was there to cheer on 
all of the Front Range drivers, but especially 
Max. 

The F2000s ran a practice session early Friday 
afternoon (1:45 to 2:15 PM), and then their 
first of two qualifying sessions for race #1 that 
evening (7:40 to 8:10 PM). 

They ended the day with Max qualified 4th 
(1:17.983) of the 39 cars remaining (there had 
already been a few terminal mechanical failures 
and crashes), John 17th (1:19.487), and Dwight 
24th (1:20.315). 

(The fastest overall time was a 1:17.325) The crew 
had to work a bit late repairing Dwight&#39;s front 
wing, which had been damaged when a traffic cone, 
many of which are used to help outline the course, 
jumped out in front of him. The second qualifying 
for the F2000 cars took place from 8:10 to 8:35 AM 
on Saturday morning. 

Needless to say, that made for a very short night 
for the Front Rangers. 

The results from this second qualifying session 
would be combined with those of the first, with a 
driver&#39;s fastest time from either session 
determining where he/she would start the first 
race. 

In this second qualifying session Max jumped 
up to 2nd(1:16.534), John dropped to 24th 
(1:19.840), and Dwight to 27th(1:20.684). 

(Fastest time was a 1:16.449) The resulting grid 
(starting) positions for race #1 were: Max 2nd, 
John 21st, and Dwight 28th. 

Now all they had to do was wait from about 9;00 AM 
unil they had to have their cars at the pre- grid 
at 4:30 PM for their first race. 

This was actually nice, as it let them watch some 
of the other groups on track, and let those who 
needed it nap a bit. 

It also allowed the crew plenty of time to get the 
cars ready, which in at least one case also 
involved replacing yet another nose, and front 
wing, which had suffered from a cone &quot;attack&quot;. 

We won&#39;t say on whose car that was, but it has 
elevated that driver to &quot;ace&quot; status in number of 
cones taken out so far this season. 

The race went well, with about the normal amount 
of contact, mechanical failures, and spins, and 
although each of the Front Range drivers lost 
several positions early in the race, they all 
managed to finish in at least their starting 
positions, with Max 2nd, John 15th, and Dwight 
28th, with fastest race laps of 1:16.353, 
1:18.467, and 1:19.295, respectively. 

(Max also had the overall fastest race lap.) Since 
starting positions for race #2 would be based on 
these fastest race laps from race #1, Max would 
start from the &quot;pole&quot; (1st), John 15th, and Dwight 
21st. 

The F2000 cars had a warm up Sunday from 8:30 to 
8:45 AM, and then would once again have to wait 
until later in the day (4:15 PM) for their race. 

They lined up on the pre-grid at 3:45 PM with high 
expectations. 

As the cars started up to leave the pre-grid for 
the staging area in the F2000 hot pits, John&#39;s car 
refused to fire. 

As the field moved to the staging area, the FRM 
crew tried to push start John with no success, at 
which point the Sinclair Motorsports team (another 
F2000 team) offered to try to tow start the car 
behind their golf cart. 

This finally succeeded, but by the time John got 
out onto the track the field was more than half 
way around the track on it&#39;s second of two pace 
laps, and got the green flag with John about 3/4 
of a lap behind the field. 

Not the way you want to start a race. 

Max had a great start and took a commanding lead 
that he would not relinquish, while John drove 
hard trying to catch as many cars as possible. 

The leaders gradually worked their way past John, 
and he spent much of the race watching his mirrors 
and altering his speed, or racing line, or both, 
in a effort to stay clear of cars that were racing 
for position on the lead lap. 

This brought back memories of a similar kind of 
race when he ran in the Trans-Am series at 
Cleveland in 1990. 

All he could do was try to make the best of it and 
not make any mistakes that would drop him back 
even farther, or end his race prematurely. 

He succeeeded in this until the eighth turn (of 
10) on the last lap, when he spun while trying to 
overtake a car that had slowed with a mechanical 
problem, which caused him to alter his line 
through the previous corner more than the laws of 
physics would allow. 

Fortunately, the spin carried a full 360 degrees, 
and ended up with the car still on the pavement, 
pointed in the right direction, so John could just 
shift back into 1st gear and get back under way 
without losing any significant time, or any 
positions. 

Dwight had a couple of similar mishaps during the 
race, also spinning to avoid hitting other cars 
that had spun in front of him and had stalled on 
the racing line, and ended up finishing in 25th, 
with John just behind in 26th on the track. 

Both, however, moved up one spot in the final 
results when another driver ahead of them at 
the finish was disqualified for unsportsman-like 
conduct in the paddock after the race ended. 

Since that driver&#39;s fastest overall race lap 
(1:15.874) was also negated by this action, Max 
ended up with the official fastest lap (1:16.167), 
while Dwight had fastest lap of 1:18.749, and John 
a 1:18.855. 

So all in all, it was a good weekend for the FRM 
team, with Max getting a 2nd place Saturday and 
his, and the team&#39;s, first pro F2000 win on 
Sunday, and John and Dwight having solid races 
both days and bringing their cars home in one 
piece, which is always a challenge in competitive, 
close, open wheeled racing. Max also moved to the 
top of the time sheets during the weekend, while 
Dwight and John both ran closer to the fastest 
times, relatively speaking, which is a sign that 
they are also improving. 

On Saturday John was faster then Dwight for the 
first time this season, which was both encouraging 
and at the same time difficult. 

It&#39;s always nice to show that you can be faster 
than other drivers, but when you like your 
teammates, it&#39;s hard to do this without also 
feeling bad for them, as you know that luck, and 
the timing thereof, have a lot to do with how 
things can work out on the track. 

This holds true in relation to other competitors 
as well, but you don&#39;t tend to feel quite as bad 
for them, simply because they are not your 
teammates. 

JD has found a renter for John&#39;s car for the 
Miller Motorsports Park West Coast Zetec pro race 
in mid July, so John can instead focus on getting 
ready for the move to Virginia in early August. 

John will also drive to Tucson, AZ the second week 
in July to pick up a used Ford Probe SCCA GT-3 
class race car he has agreed to buy, with plans to 
perhaps take it back to Virginia to race there at 
SCCA club events this fall and next spring. 

We hope to have photos of the Cleveland race 
weekend posted soon. 

Stay tuned. The Deuce 

Posted by John Brumder 
</description>
   <title>Cleveland, city of lights, city of magic.</title>
   <pubDate>Mon, 02 Jul 2007 13:26:32 -0500</pubDate>
   <link>http://www.brumathracing.com/2.shtml/daec09abfd6ccb423d53137745c51b06_46894358.writeback</link>
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   <description>May 25, 26, 27, 2007
Miller Motorsports Park, Toele, Utah
SCCA Double National.

This might be my next race, but the situation 
resulting in Billie being back in Virginia may 
mean missing this one so I can spend more time at 
home taking care of things there.

The next Zetec pro series race is one we will run 
with the East Coast Series, rather than with the 
West Coast Series, three of whose races we have 
run so far.
This East Coast race will be at Cleveland, Ohio, 
and will be a support race for the Champ Car 
Series.</description>
   <title>Miller Motorsports Park SCCA Double National</title>
   <pubDate>Sat, 12 May 2007 17:01:31 -0500</pubDate>
   <link>http://www.brumathracing.com/2.shtml/6031bdddfbc3322d2a9632fd59f897d5_4646393b.writeback</link>
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   <description>I will be posting information about my races and 
you will be able to respond in the comment section.</description>
   <title>This Page is for Sharing</title>
   <pubDate>Tue, 24 Apr 2007 12:21:41 -0500</pubDate>
   <link>http://www.brumathracing.com/2.shtml/e42576a6d6f25ec973a00b60582c2389_462e3ca5.writeback</link>
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