Friday, December 26, 2014

Wet "Testing"

It rained the other day so we took the Mx-3 out for some "testing." Nothing too crazy just a fun drive with slightly slippery dirt roads.  Jump a head to about 1:30.



Friday, December 19, 2014

New Blood






     Nothing too major but figured it was a good idea to change the oil. So far digging through nothing big has been wrong hopefully our luck continues. Another bit of good news, I was able to get in touch with some one else running an MX-3 at rallies. A bunch of great info has been shared our way, it should make things go a little smooth to have access to such useful info. 

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

The Newest Member

The newest member of the Valenzuela Motorsports family is an Awesome 93 Mazda MX-3. Obviously there is a long way to go but we have high hopes. Update will come as work progresses.

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Learning: Co-Driving

Rally is unique in motor sports, in that you have a Co-driver sitting next to you feeding you information on the course as you go. By following a set of notes created prior to the race the Co-driver attempts to give the driver a clear view of the stage ahead of their current location.
Travis Pastrana Mt. Washington
The J-turn Scion Xd
All About Co-driving

Friday, November 7, 2014

Moab 2014: First Rallycross

Photo by Randy Bolen
For me my Rallycross experience began the night before. I had to get all my stuff packed and my car prepped as best as I knew how at the time. The event was being put on by Utah Rally Group(URG) and was out in the desert about 25 Minutes from the nearest town. For me this meant if I didn't bring it it wouldn't be there. The only exception was some food being provided by event organizers for a small fee, that was a no brainier for me and I hopped on board with it.

Photo by Randy Bolen
The morning of the Rallycross I woke up early around 430 so I could get on the road and make it in time to get checked in and go through Tech. Normally waking up that early would have had me dragging but I was feeling wired with excitement. I was excited to meet new people, I was excited to find a new hobby, mostly I was excited to be told to go as fast as possible. My only worry was getting lost on the way down there and missing out after a 3 hour drive. Luckily even though it was in the middle of the desert it was easy enough to find.

Pulling up and seeing all the cars made me even more excited. I have no problem admitting I have a soft spot for Subaru especially the Imprezza WRX/STI's, and they were every where. Feeling slightly out match I had to remind myself we would be broken up into classes and I would most likely just be watching the Subaru's not competing with them. I picked a spot and parked my little Scion xD.

Once I was parked I just sat for a minute before getting out of the car. Finally I got out and started talking to the guys who were standing around. I got a quick breakfast before talking with a couple of the more experienced guys. They got me pretty lined out so I would be ready to go for the Tech inspection. pretty much everything had to come out of the car including the spare tire.

After Tech we had a quick drivers meeting and got cars rolling. The Modified class was first to go which meant I was out working on the course. It was awesome to watch cars fly by and be able to see the driver in the car working to stay in control and keep going right where they wanted. I got more and more excited each time a car would come past. Then I started to see ruts developing as the ground got more and more tore up. As the Modified cars started to really have to work to make it around the course I started to get worried. Would my little xD even be able to make it around?
Photo by Randy Bolen

Pretty soon we were called in from our stations on the track and told to get our cars ready to go.I just followed the lead of the guys around me. Warming up my car, getting me helmet on, checking camera alignment, and finally getting in line to do a parade lap.


My first few laps were nothing to write home about. I was still trying to learn what my car could and couldn't do as well as figure out how to get grip on the loose dirt. Eventually though things started to come together. That's not to say I had amazing lap times but I was improving my times each lap. Surprisingly my little xD wasn't doing half bad. If I could get the right lines it would hook up when I needed and even slide around and be fun some times.

After a short break and lunch we started the afternoon runs. The course had been adjusted to keep things interesting and avoid ruts that were developing. As the afternoon went on I got a tiny glimpse in the world of stage rally. It seemed like in between each run the course had to be adjusted because the loose soil was getting more and more rutted. This meant that instead of knowing what turn was coming next I had to be looking a head for pointer cones and ignore the old tracks that had be worn into the ground. After every one had their four runs we shut down till dark.

Photo by Randy Bolen
After dinner and night fall we started up again. During the day it had been relatively easy to see each cone and tell where we should be headed, in the dark though everything was different. If the cones were to far one way or the other they were hard to pick out, on top of that dust became a curtain blocking vision. A couple times I came out of a turn with zero visibility due to the dust in the air. This meant making a guess based on my memory of the course from a previous run. A couple times I guessed wrong and turned early completely missing a gate.
Over all my first Rallycross experience was awesome. A few things I'd change but nothing major. Something to set all the stuff from my car in, a way to store some small stuff down by the course, just little things like that. Also something I hope to remember, Cone penalties add up quickly. Hopefully I'll be able to find something a little more suited for Rallycross but for now the xD is going to have to do. 














Photos by Randy Bolen

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

1st Rallycross Moab 2014

My first time out Rallycrossing. Video for now more to come later.


Thursday, October 16, 2014

Joys of working on an XD

About a week ago I dug around on-line for a few hours until I found a new intake for my XD. Needless to say I was stoked to swap out the stock air box. I placed my order and not so patently tracked its shipment to my front door.

When I got home last night I was excited to find a K&N box sitting in my front room. I went out cleaned space in the garage, got some music going and set to work. Started pulling out the old air box and snapping pictures along the way to be able to document my progress. Then suddenly every thing came to halt.

The directions called for me to remove the Mass Air Flow(MAF) sensor housing from the air box and hook it up inline with the new intake. I grabbed my air box and was stumped. Apparently in 2013 Scion decided to make the air box and MAF sensor housing all one solid piece. So now I'm in the hunt all over again. Only now I'm looking for an air box from a pre-2013 XD.

The joys of working on a Scion XD.

Monday, October 13, 2014

Stage Rally

Long but a good watch...


Some Inspiration





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GRC

The Pros

Getting started

This is my attempt at keeping track of my adventure into car racing. For me racing has almost always been around in one form or another, everything from NASCAR to dirt ovals. I always thought it would be awesome to have a car of my own to run but the cost of getting involved has always kept me away.

A few years ago I saw Rally Cross for the first time. The X-games introduced it as one of their new events and it was amazing. Racers went from dirt to tarmac off jumps slid around crazy corners and basically just tore it up. When it was on the X games I'd watch but that was about the extent of my interest at that time.

Fast forward a few  years and I discovered Rally Cross is now its own series here in the US,  the Red Bull Global Rally Cross(The GRC). Basically it took what I had seen on the X games and turned it into a series of races held on their own through out the US. I started watching what ever I could find on line and would just wait for the next event to become available on youtube or anywhere else I could find it.

Then I started to search for more to do with The GRC. I quickly realized that there were groups of people that did their own versions of what I was seeing on TV and online. Granted it was all on dirt there were no jump and instead of walls there were cones, but essentially it was the same thing. Better yet you could run almost any car you could get your hands on with almost no modifications. This meant I might be able to afford to get involved. So I did what any sane person would do signed me and my Scion XD up for the next Rally Cross event in Utah. Now we just sit back and enjoy rally videos until race day.