That's awesome! At the time I was about 21 and thought I was onto cool things, big things. As it turns I was onto big things, in my opinion, but big things are difficult things and it definitely didn't translate to car things.
2014 was one tough year after another. In 2012 I started my flight training but the two years after that were the most difficult of my life. I lost both my parents during that time, in my early 20s, and focused my energy on car things and plane things. The moment I chose a color to paint my RX7 wheels, that was all a coping mechanism. Everything after that was a coping mechanism. In the second half of 2014 I transferred schools to
The Ohio State University (for my Michiganders) where my car and racing passions evolved a bit and ultimately withered. They haven't disappeared per se, at least not as money disappears, but I'll be honest, I'd rather be up there flying planes and making money than down here spending it on cars. At some point in my career I hope to strike a good balance between those two things but for now my real desires are in the sky. I made the ultimate mistake, I put all my eggs in this basket, and it has to work.
Anyway, this is a car thread, not a therapy session. 2014...2014...where was I.
Oh yeah, airport life. Coffee, ice, papers. Doesn't matter how cold it is, rich people need to be places. And my secret weapon for a next couple years (which will probably be ten years):
Woo! A 1993 Corolla. Manual, blue fuzzy interior. Perfect. My cousin still has it to this day, in fact. Everything is wrong and yet it still works, figure that logic out. But don't worry, the RX7 was still around.
But in late 2014 my interest in cars and racing took a turn. I stumbled upon an engineering school display at OSU and noticed the FSAE (Formula Student) booth with an old car sitting next to it. I thought, "I recognized that car, I use to read about those in Car and Driver". It had been years since FSAE even crossed my mind but bang, here it was right in front of my face. I had never even considered that a huge university like OSU would have a team, but there it was. So naturally I went up to the kid at the desk (I was 24 at the time) and asked, "How do you choose your drivers?" Six months later, after discovering I was allergic to carbon fiber resin and annoying the hell out of the team captain for a driving test...
...we had designed and built a real race car. About halfway between the size of a kart and a V10-era F1 car, the entire chassis and all the aero were hand-laid carbon fiber and virtually every mechanical piece was designed, engineered, machined, and assembled by engineering students. Except me of course because I was a pretentious pilot who put my skills to use on the aero team (I know how wings work!) and ultimately making the car go fast. That's me in the diver's seat in the last two photos.
That's Technical University Graz for any of our Austrian friends. We actually host University of Stuttgart regularly but I don't have any photos of them from this year. I believe either Stuttgart or Graz is currently #1 in the world for Formula Student rankings. Yes, Graz is actually sponsored by Red Bull, and Stuttgart is actually sponsored by both Mercedes and Porsche.
Us and Michigan
@Joey D (they didn't build their own chassis, they outsourced it
)
Me under the umbrella not pulling as many nerdy engineer girls as I thought I would (because they're all dudes, shoulda stuck to the flight team).
Exhaust regs were a pain in the ass. FSAE measures on the dBC scale (even weighting) not the dBA scale (relative to human hearing) which means low frequencies are heavily weighted and extremely difficult to eliminate. This switch actually occurred in 2014 and numerous teams had difficulty dealing with it. Allegedly, low frequencies are actually more damaging to human hearing precisely because we can't hear them, so we don't realize they are doing damage. Because we can hear high frequencies, we feel their pain. This is the essence of dBA, but dBC weights everything equally and ultimately due to lack of knowledge we, and several other teams, not only muffled the hell out of our engines but
tuned them specifically to pass the exhaust sound test. Our engine could actually barely run at high enough rpm to even execute the exhaust sound test (it was running at about 1/4 power due to tuning) but once we passed we simply flicked a switch and boom, back to near full power. After 2015, FSAE got rid of this idiotic and industry-irrelevant rule.
Not long after I joined the team I made what I still believe to be one of the absolute worst financial decisions of my life...
I sold my Corolla to my cousin for $1200 and bought a 1999 GS300 for $4000. Unbelievable. It seems like an impressive and mature upgrade for a steal of a price, but no. Absolute dogs, these cars. Would not recommend to anybody for any reason, except to strip and turn into a drift car. The engines are dogs that eventually burn oil, the undersides (exhaust etc) are prone to unusual rust, the electronic climate controls are extremely fiddly points of failure, the drivetrain produced weird vibrations that I never managed to fix for
years. Also, I crashed it. I don't see any photos of that on my computer at the moment.
That's enough for tonight. I'll cover the next year of FSAE and my car life another time as I've got to dig through my phone for most of these pictures.