Eurodragster.com's News Editor and Race Reporter Tog had the chance to sample drag racing from the other
side of the guardrail at the 2004 Halloween Showdown at Shakespeare County Raceway. At what has become a
traditional event for driver swaps, Tog took up an invitation to drive Nev Mottershead's Toyota Supra Super
Gasser. In this special feature, Tog describes what it is like to drive a race car.
All Libby's fault
The phone call from Nev came late on the Wednesday evening before the Halloween Showdown. We had already been
in touch about the Halloween Showdown as I had been due to drive Paul Marston Racing's Grumpy's Dodge for the
weekend and Nev and I were going to race, but due to circumstances beyond Paul and the team's control PMR had
had to cancel.
"Lib's had an idea about this weekend", said Nev. "She suggested that I get in my car and put down a time, and
then we put you in the car and you try to beat it. She says that's just like racing!". Even though Nev had put it to
me in plain English, it still took a moment or two to sink in that Nev had just offered me a drive of his Toyota,
a very serious piece of kit. "What can I say? Thank you both very much indeed!" I babbled. Nev proposed spending
some time showing me how to drive the car and then setting it up for a sensible ET so that I could get a handle
on it, and then upping the power in increments with the eventual aim of beating my Personal Best of
10.669, which I recorded in Grumpy's Dodge last year.
Nev has outstanding qualifications for Super Gas tuition since he has been involved with the class since
it began in the UK. He was introduced to drag racing by Bill Sherratt, and the sight of Raymond Beadle running
the Blue Max Funny Car in the dark on his first visit to a race hooked Nev immediately. Nev crewed with
Bill Sherratt both on the Cannonball FC and on Bill's record-setting street-legal Ventora which was at
that point the quickest street-legal car in the country. After a change of owner the Ventora was eventually
transformed into one of the first purpose-built Super Gas cars in the country. Nev stayed with the car through
its change of owner and also worked on other race cars. In 1999 Whilst Nev was building a Camaro race car for
Will Furniss, Bert Englefield's Toyota Supra Pro Mod became available as a rolling chassis;
Nev and Will bought this car and installed the Camaro's engine and trans. The Toyota made its first Super Gas
appearance at the 2001 Easter Thunderball at Santa Pod Raceway, starting the weekend without a tag or a licenced
driver and finishing it with the event victory. Nev concentrated on tuning the Toyota whilst Will drove,
until he took to the seat himself in 2004.
Under instruction from my niece Jennipher to "Have a good weekend and don't crash the car" I travelled to
Shakespeare County Raceway armed with Fay Fischer's Super Pro ET firesuit which, as Fay is
of similar stature to me, fit very well except around the stomach where I outdo her by quite some volume.
In the pits I found the Toyota bridled and saddled and the kettle already on the boil. Over tea, Nev explained the
weekend's game plan and told me how he proposed to set up the Toyota for my first run. I would get a nice kick
on launch, and then after 0.2 seconds the throttle stop would come in and the power would be limited so that
I ran a mid-to-low eleven-second pass. Depending upon how I did and how many runs we could get, the throttle
stop would be delayed and the power increased for each run.
I already knew that you have to be some sort of genius to be able to set a car to run a particular ET but
before Nev pulled out his run log I didn't have any idea how much work goes into making tuning calls.
Every run which Nev had ever made in the car, and every run which Will Furniss had made when he was driving,
was listed in meticulous detail with an exhaustive list of parameters. Watching Nev poring studiously over
the log sheets to find a suitable set-up for my rookie pass I realised just how many balls you have to keep
in the air. Had the tuning calls been left to me I would probably have just been crossing the finish line
as you read this.
With the game plan sketched out over tea we decided that I had better get into the car to see if I actually
fit. As an ex-Pro Mod the Toyota has a lot of roll cage and other impact protection and it was a real squeeze
to get into the seat. Then the crucial moment: could I reach all the switches, and could I push the brake
and throttle pedals all the way down? The good news was that I could, otherwise that would have ended my weekend
real quick. I could push both pedals down but Nev suggested that I have some padding behind my back to
locate me a touch further forward, so he summoned Libby who happened to be standing ready with a pair
of small cushions. OK, yes, I wasn't going to mention this but the cushions had flowers on them.
With the cushions behind my back I could easily push both pedals to their stops and could have pushed them
further with either foot. Only being licenced for an automatic, I have only ever used my right foot to drive but
I would need both feet to drive the Toyota - left for brake and right for gas - because you can't waste time
swapping pedals driving one-footed.
Confident that I could reach everything, Nev started the tuition and my head was very quickly reeling. Anyone
who thinks that to drag race you just point the car or bike forwards and hit the throttle should be forced
to sit in the seat of a race car and be taken through the routine. As a fan and journalist, and
from my previous driving experience in Grumpy's Dodge, I was well aware that there was a lot to do but
I still had to repeat things to myself in the right order over and over again to make sure that I remembered.
There was a set routine for starting the engine, a set routine for the burnout, and a set routine at the
start line.
For example, to perform the burnout the sequence of events was as follows: pull through the water box;
whilst holding the car on the brake, press the line-lock button on the steering wheel; pump the brake pedal
until the brake pressure got to 1000 lbs; take my foot off the brake but keep the linelock button depressed;
stand on the throttle and get the revs up to about six and a half thousand; shift into second gear on
Nev's signal; let go of the linelock button; roll forward out of the water box then stop.
Whilst doing all of this I was to keep an eye on Nev, who would be standing outside the car conducting
events, and also to keep an eye on the tach and the oil, fuel and water pressure gauges. Both Nev and Andy
assured me that it would be very difficult to do anything so wrong that I damaged the engine or the car.
Nev also took me through the procedure for a transbrake launch, something I had never been through except
as a passenger and something I had always wanted to do for myself. Again there was a particular sequence of
events to be followed, which Nev asked me to guess. "Into stage, on the brake, on the button, off the
brake, on the gas, off the button" I said. "Well, yes, that's one way of doing it", Nev replied diplomatically. It
transpired that there is a wimp's way of using the transbrake and that is what I had described. We agreed that in
the interest of keeping things relatively uncomplicated I should do it by that method.
The plan for Saturday was for Nev to make two passes and then for me to make however many passes we could
fit in and then to make more runs on Sunday. However the weather had been doing its best to mess things up, rain
followed by damp, and although the track crew had worked very hard to dry the track throughout Saturday morning the
word came from the pit runner that no slicks would be allowed on the track on Saturday.
Sunday's conditions were marginally better, but good enough for the track to be open to all. The plan was still
for Nev to make two passes to check the set-up which he was going to dial-in for me, and then I would hopefully
get in two passes which Nev would set up for a low eleven and a mid-ten. When went down the to the start line for
Nev's first pass, Nev asked me to watch what Andy did outside the car. "You know how to drive the car,
but what I want you to watch this time is how Andy interacts with me", said Nev. "You will notice the various
signals we use, they are all pretty obvious but it will be useful for you to see them beforehand."
I followed Andy onto the track and watched him like a hawk. As Nev had explained, the signals were intuitive
but there was definitely no substitute for seeing them used because I would have quite enough to think about
when it was my turn without misinterpreting what Nev and Andy were telling me. Nev's first pass of the day was
a low twelve, which gave him enough data to decide the final settings for my first run.
After Nev and Andy had worked on the fine-tuning, Nev looked at his watch and said "Right, I don't think there's
going to be enough time for me to make another run and for you to make two runs. Go and put your firesuit on, then".
I put on Fay's firesuit, and with my far-from-anorexic stomach I looked like a blueberry.
Suited up and with a thumping heart, I climbed into the Toyota ready to drive it down the pits to join the end
of the queue. Nev leaned in. "Remember", he said, "when you are in the car just keep an eye on Andy and I.
We will see you out of the pits, don't worry about trying to look left and right because you won't be able to
see anyway. When we get to the start line I will take you through the burnout, then I will
signal to Andy, and then you just need to watch him until he points back to me, and then I will take you up to the
blue line". "Right now, if you told me to walk to the edge of a cliff and jump, I'd do it", I replied.
The engine started straight away, and for the first time I put the Toyota into gear and moved forward. Nev
directed me out of the pit and then signalled me to drive down to join the queue which was half way back into the
pits. I had really only driven the car a few yards, maybe thirty seconds' experience of balancing the brake and
throttle, but it did wonders for my confidence just to be in the car with the engine running and actually being
in control as it moved.
Nev, Andy, Lib and Sharon joined me in the queue and we slowly pushed the Toyota forward. We then got word
from APIRA marshal Bev that we could take the car down the middle of the three pairing lanes, which is usually
kept clear. We pushed the Toyota to the front of the pairing lanes and waited whilst Roger Goring and Martin
Hill did their stuff. Within a few minutes it would be my turn.
So, what's it actually like to drive a race car?
One of the things which race fans most wonder is what it is like to drive a race car. I
am going to do my very best to describe what it is like, and to do so as realistically as possible
I am going to switch to the present tense to describe my first run. Granted, it is a cheap literary
trick, but hopefully it will involve the reader more immediately in the events, thoughts and feelings.
I climb into the car, which is an art in itself: there are side bars to step over and it is very easy
to put your leading leg in the wrong place and end up wriggling about to get in or falling over. Effectively,
I'm folding myself into the car, then I make what is best described as a controlled slump backwards into the
seat and pull in my trailing leg.
The seat area is quite tight, surrounded by a Pro Mod roll cage. Nev leans in and adjusts the cushions
behind my back until I am happy with the fit and then reaches around to help me drape the belts over my shoulders
to tighten when we're ready to go.
My good buddy, track announcer Barry Bohannon spots us in the pairing lanes and I can hear him bantering
with Nev. "Well, Nev is outside the car - does that mean..." asks Barry. Nev nods, I wave but Barry doesn't
see me. I spend the few minutes before belting up going through the burnout and launch routines, talking to
myself: "On the brake, on the button, pump the brake, off the brake, on the gas, six to six and a half,
shift, ease down a little, keep watching Nev, off the button when he signals, come forward, stop". Nev
spots me practicing the burnout routine and leans in. "You got it right. You see, you'll be fine!". Libby
puts the video camera through the door and asks me to go through the routine again.
Enough practices, I'm starting to wind myself up. all there is to do now is wait. As strap-in approaches
I stare into the the middle distance trying to focus and trying to breathe normally, and I can feel my heart
thumping. For the tiniest moment all the nervousness and emotion surges and I wonder if I can really go
through with it. They're all good guys and they're not going to think any less of me if I get out now. But
it's a cleansing moment - a final barrier to overcome and I'm ready.
"OK" says Nev and leans in to help me strap in. It's nice and snug in there as it is but I'm strapped in
good and tight. I can't really move my torso at all, but I can reach all the switches and the steering wheel
and I can push both pedals down. Helmet and neck brace on and then my head is pretty solid too. The helmet
provides a fair amount of sound insulation and now I am in my own little world. I can hear myself breathing.
Through the windscreen Bev gives me a big smile of encouragement and an "Are you ready?" gesture, then the
signal to fire up. Nev stands by the open door ready to assist if there are any problems. I reach up and switch
on the pumps, hold the starter on for a few seconds and then push the ignition. A little bit of gas pedal and
the engine fires. It's loud, but louder outside I think, and there are a lot of rumbly harmonics. I ease my foot off
the gas and the engine burbles happily.
Nev hangs the window net, shuts the door and walks away. This is it - the big moment. On the brake, put the
car in gear and wait for Nev to wave me forward. Nev beckons, the gas pedal hardly needs a touch and we're
moving. I balance the brake and the gas pedals as taught and keep it nice and slow as we move out. Nev doesn't
miss a trick in making me comfortable: he wants me in the right lane because the back end of the car tends to
step out during burnouts in the left lane, and he wants me straightened up before I go into the water. Turning
the wheel is very easy; I'd swear the Toyota has power steering. I steer a wide circle from the left hand side
of the pairing lanes. And I mean wide - I pass VIP almost close enough to lean out and grab a cup of tea, and
even though I am watching Nev like a hawk I recognise Lee Child and Ronnie Picardo in my peripheral vision.
I don't make the turn perfectly - how on Earth do they do it in one in a dragster? - so Nev carries on
beckoning and directing me through the waterbox until I am completely straight. Now I have to put the Toyota
into reverse to get back to the water. On the brake, pull the shifter up and push it through Neutral and into
reverse. I stay on the brake, in any case I'm not going to move until I press the transbrake button which
activates reverse. Off the brake and on the button, the tiniest amount of gas pedal and we're going backwards,
I'm steering one-handed but luckily no major adjustments are needed because Nev has got the car nice and
straight. Nev smiles encouragingly as he sees me back then signals me to stop. I get on the brake and off the
button, pull the shifter up again and back into first. Nev waves me forward slowly, I edge through the water
and stop on his signal.
Nev leans down and signals me to put on the linelock and pump up the brake. The linelock button is on the
steering wheel, I press it hard with my left thumb and then start to pump on the brake pedal, watching the
gauge for a thousand pounds pressure. It gets up to about nine hundred and doesn't seem to want to go much
further. I feel like I have been pumping on the brake pedal for an age - it was easier than this when I did
it in the pits. I'm just getting a bit flustered and am trying to rush things. I force the pressure to about
nine fifty then I remember Nev saying that anything over eight hundred should be OK. I tell myself to stay
on the button, foot off the brake, look up and Nev is waiting patiently for me. He gives me the signal to
start the burnout.
Keeping the pressure on my left thumb I reach down and put my right hand on the shifter, then I stand
on the gas. It's still not as loud as I expect inside the car, I can hear the engine working against the
tyre friction. I flick my eyes between watching the tach climb to nearly seven thousand, and watching Nev
outside. Nev signals me to shift and I bang the stick forward and then take hold of the steering wheel.
As I ease the revs down to six and a half the back end of the car starts to step out to the right, almost
in slow motion, nothing dramatic. Now the car is starting to move forward ever so slightly. Nev waves me
forward and I release the button, the car starts to roll and I get off the gas a little too quickly - the
revs come off and it feels as if I only just get the car out of the bleach box before rolling to a stop.
The driver side door opens and Nev looks in to cast an eye over everything and to give me a thumbs-up to
make sure that I am OK. Door closed, Nev checks around the car. The couple of members of the start line crew
I see look very tall; I hadn't realised just how low down this car is. Whilst Nev does his stuff outside
there's a flash of light off to the right and I sense someone standing there. The corner of my eye must be
working fine as I recognise the blue-clad figure of Steve Moxley. Checks complete, Nev walks back into my
line of vision and points forward to Andy who is standing on the start line.
Behind Andy the track stretches away into the distance and the guardrails emphasise the perspective.
I've stood on or around that start line hundreds of times but I've never noticed that effect before. A
brief smile from Andy then it's all business, signalling that l am lined up straight and beckoning me
forward. Again I balance the brake and gas pedals as Nev taught me, the Toyota needs very little persuasion
to move. Andy is of necessity in the middle of the lane right in front of me, whereas Nev had the luxury
of being able to stand a little way off-centre, and I take the car forward very slowly, acutely conscious
of not suddenly hitting the gas too hard and running Andy over. When I'm a few feet from the blue line,
Andy signals me to stop. A brief smile and thumbs-up and then Andy hands me back over to Nev.
Nev stands with his arms spread, hands about a yard apart, bringing them closer together as I get
to the blue line. The final moment - Nev points to the Tree and walks away. Now it's down to me: up
to this point everyone has been helping me along, but only I can do the next bit.
I take my foot off the brake a bit too eagerly and the car moves forward quickly, lighting the
pre-stage bulb on the Tree. I push firmly on the brake pedal again, reach down to the transbrake
button, take a deep breath, Check all the gauges, and then very slowly ease off the brake and edge
the Toyota forward. The stage bulb lights and I stand on the brake again. I press the transbrake
button and as I take my foot off the brake pedal the Tree runs. It's so unexpected that I don't
react by doing anything stupid, but carry on with the routine. I floor the gas pedal - now that's
pretty loud - and on a quick count of three let go of the transbrake button.
Someone picks me up and throws me. I momentarily feel as if I am flying upwards and then the
hit tries to shove me backwards without ceremony at the same time as the car is rocketing forward. The
neck brace keeps my head pretty solidly in position. I keep pushing my foot down against the force and
put my right hand back on the wheel. It is all happening very quickly now. The steering goes light for
a moment, and then I hear the throttle stop kick in. The throttle stop pushes me forward for a moment
and the hard transbrake launch gives way to a consistent acceleration which still pushes me back into
the seat, but less severely.
I'm staring down the track, aiming for the middle of the lane. The guardrail streaks along to my
right. The scoreboards are my reference and they are growing larger by the moment. It's a very smooth
ride, I expected to feel every bump on the track at this speed but there aren't any. The shift light
comes on and I reach down and shove the shifter forwards. I put my right hand back on the wheel and
the car starts to move to the right. I steer the Toyota back to the middle of the lane and it moves
to the right again. I steer it back again, and I think that if it makes another move then I will get
off the throttle. But after the second correction the car is back running on rails.
The scoreboards sweep past and I take my foot off the gas pedal quickly but not abruptly. I give
the car a moment to settle and then start to press on the brake pedal with my left foot. The brakes
respond quickly and are very smooth - much smoother than my Ford Fiesta. I push harder and harder on
the brake and I am pushed forward a little as the speed comes off dramatically. The Toyota is very
stable indeed under hard braking, no hint of moving around or wanting to head off in another direction.
I make the first turnoff easily - this is something I have been worried about all day. With all
the speed scrubbed off I turn in past the watching fire crew, straighten the car up and change back
into first gear. From so low down the return road is not easy to spot to start with, but some traffic
cones have been placed to block off the rest of the runway and I slow to a crawl until I find the
return road by following the line across. The return road looks quite narrow from my position and
features a tight chicane-like kink. I take it very slowly so as not to drive onto the grass.
I get to the end of the return road and Nev, Libby, Andy and Sharon are waiting for me with big
smiles on their faces. I'm still feeling very serious as I pull up, then reach up to switch off the
ignition. Nev opens the door and takes down the window net. "How did you like that, then?", he says
cheerfully.
Click here for video of first run (Windows
Media format, 2.5 Meg,
courtesy quartermilehigh.com)
A windscreen full of Christmas Tree
There is only one answer I could give to the above question. "Awesome" is a word which is over-used
nowadays but when you've just launched on a transbrake there aren't that many other words you can
use to describe it. The timing slip read 11.450/115.03 and everyone was very happy with that since
Nev had set the car for a low eleven and it was my first run in the car. I pretended not to see the
Reaction Time of 1.498. Nev told me that Libby's video showed the car briefly pulling a wheelie off the start
line. My first run in the Toyota and my first-ever wheelie!
I told Nev as much as I could remember of the run, including 'fessing up to
what I thought I had done wrong. I knew that the burnout could have been better, and I was convinced
that the little move the Toyota made after shifting was down to me; I thought that I may have grabbed at
the steering wheel when I put my right hand back on it, although Nev wasn't having any of that. Nev was
particularly impressed with my reaction, or lack of it, when the lights ran. "You stayed calm and didn't
panic, you just did what you had to and left", he said, "and that's not an easy thing to do".
The tach replay, which tells all, showed that I had not only driven the Toyota out the back door but
also driven it over the patio and some way down the garden, going past the finish line under power for
around a second.
The sun was going down, it was getting colder and the damp was rising, and the track's curfew was
coming close, so we had to move pretty fast to get in a second run. For this pass Nev proposed to set
the Toyota for a 10.5, which would beat my PB. I stayed in the car whilst Nev
and Andy adjusted the blades and the throttle stop, which would kick in a little later now that I knew
how it felt to let go of the transbrake. Changes made, Nev gave me a briefing on what to expect and
we set off down the pairing lanes again.
Thanks to the good offices of APIRA marshals Beth and Bev we were again allowed to take the middle pairing
lane and push down to the front. As we rolled past Ian Brown's Thatadoo Camaro, Ian and his family lined
up and applauded me past, a very kind gesture which helped to lessen my nervousness but didn't do much for
my guilt for queue-jumping.
I had another rush of emotion before strapping in, but it went away again just as it did before the
first run. A lot of racers of my acquaintance have told me that they still get nervous before running,
even though they have been doing it for years, and most will tell you that if you stop getting nervous
then that's the time to stop racing - better to be nervous than even a touch too confident.
I strapped in, put on the helmet and gloves, and waited for Bev's signal to start the engine.
As I turned on to the track and rolled into the water box it was noticeably darker than it had
been for my first run. The lights on the Christmas Tree and scoreboards were standing out in the
gathering gloom. Nev had given me some more advice on doing the burnout and I was determined to make a
better job of it this time. No pussyfooting, I stood on the gas as instructed and
was rewarded with a beaming smile from Nev as he stood beside the car signalling me to keep it going,
then to shift, and then to roll forward. When I got off the line lock the revs shot up and
the car came out of the water box all ready to lay down a rolling burnout if I wanted it to. As I pulled
up Nev was grinning - in fact he looked as if he was about to laugh - and as he handed me over to Andy he too
had a big smile on his face, so either I had completely shagged it up or I had got it right.
Andy lined me up, then Nev saw me up to the blue line and again I got that "You're on you're own now"
feeling as he walked away. I edged forward into pre-stage, took the customary deep breath, then went into
stage. I went onto the transbrake and the lights ran, and I let go of the button as soon as I saw the
ambers. I didn't see the green at all.
When I let go of the transbrake the Toyota leapt forward but suddenly the engine revs shot up and the car
turned left without ceremony just as I was putting my right hand back on the wheel.
The Christmas Tree was in the middle of my field of vision. I got off the
throttle, steered right, then floored it again. Whilst all this was going on I actually had a conscious
thought, which was "I didn't ask Nev about pedalling!". When I hit the throttle for the second time, the
car turned right and I found myself looking at the right-hand guardrail so I got off the gas and
trundled down the track to a twenty-four second pass, although it wasn't for the want of trying.
Click here for video of second run (Windows
Media format, 1.9 Meg, courtesy Nev and Libby Mottershead)
In the return road I found myself behind two Junior Dragsters which were being pushed along by their
owners. Although the kids tried very hard to get out of the way it was not easy to get past, and Nev and the
guys waiting at the end of the return road must have wondered where I had got to - was I sitting crying
with fear somewhere? As it was, when I got past the Juniors I managed to pick up a souvenir for Nev in the
form of a few tufts of grass from the side of the road.
My first words to Nev when I got back to the pit were "Well, that got my attention!". Nothing and no-one
had been damaged - possibly apart from Nev's heart rate and that was transitory - so we were able to have a
good laugh about what had happened and in the end it was yet another experience from which I could
benefit. The timing slip showed my Reaction Time to be 0.282 - my best ever - and Libby's video showed
that the back of the car jumped up and the tyres broke traction as soon as I let go of the transbrake.
The video also showed that when I hit the throttle the second time the car pulled a wheelie as
it turned right. "We overpowered the track, plain and simple", said Nev.
Nev also explained what all the smiling was about during and after the burnout. "You were boiling
the tyres like a good'un and when you came forward the revs went up and it just carried on smoking!",
he said. "It was like a Pro Mod burnout!"
Unfinished business
I was very happy indeed with the way the day had gone, and Nev was very pleased with the way
things had worked out even though the conditions had conspired against us. "I was impressed with
the way you handled yourself", he said. "You listened to everything I said, you did what I told you to
do, and you didn't panic when things didn't go right. I think you should be very proud". Nev
added that it was always an interesting experience for him to watch the car from the outside, although
he did say that when standing behind the Toyota he preferred to see the back of it rather than the sides!
Santa Pod's Race Director Darren Prentice, who had been at Shakespeare County Raceway all weekend
prepping the track, was also complimentary especially about the second pass. "It takes balls to get on
it a second time after going out of shape like that, and a real man not to hit it a third time", he
said.
In response to the above I could only say, then and now, that I was doing what Nev had taught me to do, so
all the credit is due to him for being such an excellent teacher.
Driving the Toyota confirmed everything I have ever thought about driving a race car, the main being
that it is nowhere near as easy as the racers make it look, but there were some aspects which had never
occurred to me. The biggest example was just how reliant you are on your crew. Every victory interview I have ever
heard includes thanks to the racer's crew and believe me I now realise it is not just said out of rote.
As well as all the hard work which goes on in the pits, which everyone knows about and appreciates,
when you are strapped in and fired up your entire contact with the outside world comes from a crew
member outside the car showing you where to go and indicating how things are going.
I also learned a few things about myself over that weekend at Shakespeare County Raceway. For example, I
never knew that I was capable of such deep concentration and focus. In my entire life I have never felt so
serious as in the moments after I was strapped in to the Toyota. I now understand why even the jolliest of
racers look so thoughtful when strapped in to their vehicles or sat on their bikes, and why so many teams
post a crew member next to the racer to keep people at a distance whilst they are focusing.
Since I drove the Toyota I have also been having what are best described as flashback moments. I'll be walking
down the street or along a corridor and suddenly I can see guardrail flashing past, I can hear the engine
roaring, and I can even feel the acceleration on my body. I don't know if regular racers experience this but it
is not unpleasant.
Nev says that he views the day's events as unfinished business, since he wanted me to beat my
personal best. He is not yet sure of his racing plans for 2005, but he says that one of several
options includes Tog 2 - The PB, preferably in better weather.
The Sunday of the Halloween Showdown was one of the most enjoyable days of my life, and letting go
of a transbrake button for the first time was, I think, the best experience I have ever had in my forty
one years. If I get the chance to do it again then you can be sure that my feet won't touch the ground
on the way to the track.
Acknowledgements
The biggest Thank You, naturally, goes to Nev Mottershead for the invitation to have a go of his
race car. There isn't much which Nev can't tell you about running a car and that I was able to get into
the Toyota and run an 11.4 off the bat proves that not only does he know about running race cars but that
he also has a particular talent for explaining it. Nev's tuition was detailed, very patient, and
full of encouragement and left me with very few (if any) supplementary questions. Although I was
naturally nervous both about driving a race car at all, and especially one which I didn't own, I had
no concerns whatsoever about Nev's tuition and the car's set-up. It also takes real generosity to pass
up the last chance of a drive in your own car for the year but Nev was happy to let me take the wheel, even
foregoing his second run so that I was guaranteed two passes.
Huge thanks are also due to Nev's wife Libby who suggested the whole scheme. I wouldn't have minded
being a fly on the wall when Libby suggested to Nev that "You go out and put down a time and then see
if Tog can beat it" but it was a suggestion for which I am very grateful indeed. At the track Libby was
a constant source of encouragement, and took a lot of the video footage which provided much of the
illustration above. And she makes a fine cup of tea! Any time you fancy making more suggestions about
me and Nev's car, Libby, I'll be right there.
One of the biggest things I learnt from my weekend with Nev is how much you rely upon your crew, and
Andy Williamson gave me plenty to rely on. As well as tuning the car with Nev and presenting me with a
ride Andy was very encouraging, gave sound advice, and was another friendly face outside the car when
I was strapped in. Andy's wife Sharon is also due a big Thank You for encouragement and supplementary
catering.
At the track I must also thank APIRA marshals Bev Batsford and Beth Satchell for taking care of
me, the big smiles when I was nervous, and for allowing us to jump the RWYB queue before both of my runs.
This leads into a big Thank You to all of the racers and RWYBers for their patience, and a special
nod to Ian Brown and family and Johnny Hall and team for encouragement. Big thanks also to Barry Bohannon
for all the nice things he said on the PA - I didn't hear them at the time but what I can hear on the video
makes pleasant listening!
Thanks are due to Nick Davies and Spencer Tramm for their counsel about driving race cars before
I got to the track, even in the face of what must have seemed some pretty silly questions. Both
Nick and Spencer were very encouraging, as were my Eurodragster partner Sharkman and my wife Kay
(aka Mrs Tog). I owe Fay Fischer big time for the continued use of her firesuit and other safety
equipment which I promise I will have cleaned before its return.
Finally a big Thank You to Andy Marrs for producing the video frame grabs used above, and
to David Coleman and Helen Todd of
quartermilehigh.com
for providing the tremendous video of my first run and for giving permission for its use.