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Relocating the Blu Mule

July 7th, 2012

 The mid-week 4th of July National holiday in the USA presented the perfect opportunity to complete an interrupted road trip to bring the Blu Mule to California. Blu Mule is a handsome 1965, 356C, Bali Blue, fawn leatherette interior. One owner car, originally from Florida, that we recently acquired as the “mule” car to assist with development of the WEVO 356-5 Speed transmission.

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Like so many 356C’s, Blu Mule has been loved and driven, modest wear and tear openly on display, but good rust free bones and general condition. The perfect foundation for our task and a car that many will enjoy driving in the process of marketing the WEVO 356-5 Speed transmission.

The car was stored over the winter in upstate NY and I elected to drive rather than transport Blu Mule to CA, liberate serious seat time aid contemplation of a few of the technical challenges on the 356 5 Speed project and life in general. No radio means plenty of time alone with those thoughts. Including the 4075 miles logged on this trip, I now have over 20,000 miles in 356′s since September 2010. I reckon I am now well tuned to the character of the late model 356′s and how wonderful they can be for modern adventure, vintage motoring. It was also the best opportunity to explore and validate some of the concepts and ideas we have for stretching the enjoyment of the 356′s into the future.

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I did the stretch from NYC to Santa Fe in early May (2282 miles), one 781 mile marathon in 11hrs 57 minutes (63.5 mph door to door average) proving that the 356 can hold it’s own on the back roads of America’s heartlands.  Avoiding the Interstate system, I enjoyed that fantastic drive from Kansas City to Santa Fe, a little Interstate at each city that book-ended a day of farm roads and a zig-zag route across Kansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico.

I left the car in Santa Fe, while I headed back to CA for work, July 4th offering the best opportunity to finish the transfer trip. This time, accompanied by Tracey, who was about to enjoy her first long road trip in a 356.

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We picked a scenic route, with 3 1/2 travel days at our disposal, then looked for landmarks to tackle on the way – with the least amount of Interstate practical. We logged another 1793 miles and took in some fine back roads in the deserts of NM, AZ, UT, NV and CA. In addition we tackled National Parks, North rim Grand Canyon, Zion, Bryce Canyon and Yosemite. We also visited landmark sites, Los Alamos, Valley of the Gods, Monument Valley, Mono Lake, Bodie (CA – ghost town) and the Tioga Pass 9945 ft on the way home.

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The performance of the 356 was faultless and reiterated that wonderful motoring adventures can still be had in a 47 year old Porsche, mid summer with no AC – all at 31+ mpg (US gallons ~ 7.5 l/100km) average for the trip.

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The specifics of the 356-5 Speed project will be revealed in the near future. Additionally, some of our other 356 products we target to encourage 356′s to get back out there and tackle some long road trips that they can be ideally configured for. (Blu Mule was already testing some new WEVO 356 parts…… logging over 4000 test miles already……)

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Booming Classic economy down under

March 10th, 2012

As an Australian who has lived most of my adult life outside of Australia, my view of the Classic car scene in Australia is pretty limited – sort of stuck in the early 80′s. Regularly adjusted by conversations and short visits to Australia, but never fully rounded by first hand exposure to any Australian Classic Car events.

My good friend John Forcier (AKA “Fishcop”) from Brisvegas recently invited me to join him at the 2012 Philip Island Classic. With various pressures here in the USA, it did not really fit with my next scheduled travel to Australia, so I had to abandon any thought of joining John and the Porsche racing crew at Philip Island.

I suggested to John I would blog something about the event if he sent me a paddock photo. In researching the event a little for this post I soon discovered that I had grossly misunderstood the giant scale of this annual event and the important role it must hold for Australian Historic and Classic racing.

For 2012, a record 573 race cars are entered and a further 620 Classic and Historic cars are on display. Remember that Australia as a whole nation has only 2/3rds the population of California. This is an astonishing number of cars and I am sure it will make for a very busy weekend. Unfortunately I have not been able to locate a website that offers either concise entry, schedule or results, but I will update here if I do.

Philip Island is one of Australia’s most classic and historied racing circuits, it enjoys huge camp-out weekend’s for MotoGP, Classic bike racing, Classic Car racing, World Supebikes and V8 Supercar racing. Kind of like the Watkins Glen of Australia.   http://www.phillipislandguide.com/maps.html

John is there with an all Porsche crew, tending to cars in the Sb and Sc categories for ’61-’69 production Sports Cars and ’70-’77 Productions Sports cars respectively. I understand there will be more coverage on the Type 901 site in Australia, home forum for most of these racers. Content is thin so far, perhaps the post event will include more recollections and photos.

http://www.typ901.org/showthread.php?t=3659

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Philip Island is a small island near Melbourne, where the opening race of the 2012 F1 season will be held next weekend – March 18th. For a motor racing enthusiast, the back to back weekends would bookend a great visit to the area. Accommodation on the island itself is limited, so I am guessing John snapped this early morning i-phone photo, groggy eyed from his sleeping bag on top of a race trailer….

29 days and it’s all done…..

February 6th, 2012

Yes – the 2012 London to Capetown World Cup Rally is done, gone in a flash, 29 days……. Hard to reconcile that when I came back to my desk this morning, it was 7 weeks ago that I packed my last few items and took the flight to London.

In those 7 weeks I have enjoyed an intense period of final car assembly and preparation at Alastair’s house in Maidenhead, followed by an equally intense15,000km of Classic Car Rallying through 13 nations.

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Thanks to John Glynn and his capacity spin a yarn and harvest images from other sources while also interpreting my spartan SMS text contributions, I can look back over his blogjacking and see that for the most part, the story of the 35 car has been adequately recorded.

For me it is too soon to be able to divide the individual days and separate incidents into a cohesive string of adventure. I expect that will come later when I have more time to reflect after getting through some of my waiting work load now that I have returned to my desk at WEVO.

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 It was a great education and privilege to ride alongside Alastair and see him deploy his experience from over 20 marathon Classic car rallies. His capacity to instantly process the road condition and evaluate how much punishment the 912 would cope with is quite amazing – especially when you consider this is his first event in a Porsche. Metering out the potential and the durability of the car in such a way that even on the World Cup sections on the morning of the 29th and last day, we were able to push Owen and Matt in the P5 MG in a way that means they could not slacken in protection of their 10 minute advantage.  

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As John has recorded, the 912 took a real battering and required repairs on an almost daily basis. However, what is more critical is that the 912 “never failed to proceed”, unlike our competitors who accumulated time penalties when they failed to make control times due to mechanical delays.

Strategically, there were times during every day when being “on time” was more crucial and the necessary average speeds were more difficult to achieve – these are the times when the 912 was whipped along and often willfully damaged in an effort to “clean” sections and make time over other teams that slackened pace or broke their cars in the same conditions. That willful damage was carried, sometimes nursed, to the end of the day and then made right (or as much as possible) while the critical Rally clock was stopped. The only thing to be lost was sleep, or a refreshing beer and storytelling session in the hotel bar. Ironically the hotel car parks had their own vibrant counter-scene, beer and food being ferried to the car park to sustain those working by lamplight to be ready for when the Rally clock started the next morning. Several times that was Alastair and I as we worked late on the 912.

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For 29 days you make decisions about how time is managed almost purely by the Rally clock, prioritizing and deferring maintenance depending on resources, the conditions the following day, weather predictions, pursuing competition, fatigue, nutrition, etc, etc. That is part of the appeal, the need to simultaneously resolve all the variables as a team of two and your car, yet still have the reserves to deal with the unexpected – and do all this while traveling in foreign lands, with unfamiliar cultures, distracting landscapes and other travel hazards.  

For some this reads like a motorist’s nightmare, but for me this is the very essence of why the marathon events need to exist and why being a participant holds so much fascination.

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There is a back-story too, a pretty easy one to guess. The unprecedented environment to test the technical prowess of WEVO and the product design philosophy that extends through every product carrying the WEVO brand. Few companies arrange to test their products so severely or thoroughly. Even fewer are willing to do so in real-time in front of a critical and intelligent audience. Most of you reading the blog, Alastair Caldwell, car owner and super critical technician, the Rally participants at large, all scrutinizing and judging whether your gadget actually did well today or not. Finally me – perhaps my most harsh critic and least concessional.   

Technically, how did the WEVO 912 fare? There were many, many systems and components that performed exactly as predicted, some were stock Porsche systems, some were WEVO development systems, some were up rated factory parts, some were pure WEVO parts etc.

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On the flip side, there are a percentage of systems and parts that did not meet the rigors of the event. Some were the result of poor design and design decisions. Some were due to error in execution and manufacture. Some were due to lack of testing and some due to unavoidable ignorance to the severity of the conditions that the event would present. Others were the result of the “willful damage” that is described above. What is important – above anything, is that the 912 was always able to continue, often with deferred maintenance and do so with sufficient competitiveness that our class win was secure.  

The technical lessons are all proprietary, the legacy of a costly endeavor for our business to accumulate these direct and first hand experiences. Over time, that proprietary knowledge and experience will filter into WEVO products and future WEVO built cars, assuring performance headroom and quality of design that you expect from WEVO, with credentials validated by this super harsh test environment. 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

Competitively, how did the 912 fare? Draw your own conclusions. 1st in calss for the under 2 litre Classic category. Sixth outright, lead home by three modern 4WD vehicles – (two of them over-boosted turbo diesels) an exsquisite Tuthill prepared and fully supported Porsche 911 and a modern MG hatchback (only 1600cc) some 35 years or so newer than the Caldwell / Burvill 912.

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I should close by saying that the team – being Alastair, the 912 and I are all inexorably linked in this achievement. The car over-achieved given the severity of the event, Alastair did a masterful job of piloting the car every day and keeping us out of more extreme trouble that delayed others and I filled my role as Technician and Navigator to keep this simple 4 cylinder Porsche going in conditions that many would walk away from. I am enriched by the experience, the 912 is made from steel and can be re-constituted as soon as it reaches British soil and for Alastair it is yet another Classic marathon Rally plate and notch on his garage door posts.

London to Cape Town: The End

February 3rd, 2012
By John Glynn (first 3 pics by Gerard Brown)

It’s my last blog, following this epic journey from Northern Europe to the Cape of Good Hope. The chequered flag has dropped, the rally has finished and the competitors have all gone home, but memories will live on for a long time yet.

Final position for the WEVO 912 was 6th: confirmed by the organisers but not acknowledged on the official timesheets. The Tuthill 911 (below) finished third, but should have won it by some accounts: the speed was incredible and it cleaned a stack of stages…

Francis Tuthill arrived home last night and I had a chance to chat with him today. Though he had issues with the official timing, and objected to how the severity of the terrain was underplayed to competitors in advance, he had a grin as wide as Africa when he remembered the good times.

No doubt Hayden and Alastair will have more stories of good and bad to share when I catch up with them later in the year, but I’m sure neither will have lost their appetite for road: that need to leave the daily grind behind and go do something primeval, and on four wheels.

These last two pictures of Hayden (with the 912′s cooling bucket and a very funky tree) were sent to me by Alastair as he was boarding the plane leaving South Africa. As I look at them, all I feel is the ache of a slow news day. What to do with my time now? When’s the next event?

Even for awestruck spectators like me, racing is life. Anything else: that’s just waiting.

Zen and the Art of Rally Porsche Maintenance

January 25th, 2012
By John Glynn. Pics by Hayden

We are into the last week of the London to Cape Town rally. The Porsche 912 of Burvill and Caldwell is in 7th position, one hour ahead of its nearest class competitor. Between the 912 and the lead lies three 4x4s, an MG and a Porsche 911.

Thoughts now turn to reaching the finish.

The 912 has been reliable, but it’s taken a pounding on these tough desert roads. Pictures from the event show an emerging collection of dents on the previously straight body, which is to be expected when pushing as hard as this. Hayden and Alastair have recently been applying themselves to ongoing maintenance with the aim of crossing the line not first in class, just in fact.

I’ve just had some pictures from the Australian showing the sort of stuff he’s been up to: pretty funny if you know Hayden. Looks like pretty hard work whether you know him or not! We’ve also got a video of Alastair carrying out contemplative adjustments to the 912’s front skid plate while the tank was out being welded.

Oh, the joy of Rally Porsche maintenance: I can sense the Zen from here. Here’s Hayden’s latest texts:

Did the nightly list in Lusaka. Had the tank out again to reinforce the top of the front X-beam mounts. Francis gave good advice on how to tackle it and we are at a great shop called McFarlanes. AC had the night off, fighting fatigue and road weary. I helmed the ferry for 450km that morning to take some load off. Short World Cup section that afternoon. 11km, we dropped 43 seconds off target time, I doubt it did anything for the results, or the margins in the classes.

Our Yellowbrick was stolen by a snatch and grab in the Lusaka traffic yesterday. We have another unit in the car now, but I don’t know if it is associated to our car number yet. Our original was last tracked at 0430 in Lusaka, but forensics were not on today’s agenda. (The new GPS is working: JG)

Job for tonight is raising rear ride height. We have accumulated some middle distance sag, not uncommon. Simple job, just knocking it out to the melody of Vic falls and the tourist choppers overhead.

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