Randy Lewis

World's #1 Ranked Trackchaser

CONCORD RACEWAY, CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA



The Concord Raceway is located behind the Concord Motorsports Park.






The Concord Raceway pit area was jammed with different classes of go-karts.






This was a sharp looking Senior Champ Kart.






This kart is using electric "Tire warmers."  The tire warmers make the tires softer on a cold day which helps increase traction.






To reduce the danger of a fuel fire, the go-karts get their fuel just before they head out to the racetrack.






This may be the first skateboarder I've ever seen in a racecar pit area.






Allen's BBQ was very tasty today.






Don't tell anyone I showed you these pictures of non-countable flat karts.






There's not a lot of room in these things.






What could she be thinking about??






The Senior Champ Kart "Lite" division readies for their 15-lap feature race.






I beleive the Concord Raceway must have been here several years before the nearby Concord Motorsports Park came into existance.






I enjoyed watching the Senior Champ Karts.






The Champs haul butt down the frontstretch.






The panoramic view of the well maintained Concord Raceway.

GREETINGS FROM CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA AND THEN TO ANOTHER PART OF CONCORD AND THEN TO ANTIOCH, NORTH CAROLINA


 

THREE TRACKS IN THREE LOCATIONS IN ONE DAY IN FEBRUARY!  LIFE IS GOOD!

 

 

 

ANSWERS & QUESTIONS


Why wouldn’t the McDonalds drive-thru attendant tell me when I ordered a salad, waited through 10 cars in the drive-thru line and then fished out the exact change from under the floor mat, that they were out of salads?

 

TiVo rocks!

 

Why do the flight attendants always stop the drink cart right over my seat when my laptop is open and then proceed to pour 10-20 drinks for just about every passenger on the plane?

 

Jet Blue Airlines is great, they have leather seats, snacks, lots of legroom and live satellite TV.

 

Why do people continue to drive in the fast lane while fellow driver after fellow driver passes them on the right?

 

XM radio also rocks and local AM/FM does not.

 

The McCarran International Airport (Las Vegas) is one of the few that offers free high-speed wireless internet.

 

 

 

PEOPLE/STRATEGY/TRAVEL NEWS

 

The Strategy

 

Strategy is so important in trackchasing.  The right strategy can add more tracks, keep expenses down and make the trip more comfortable by saving time.  O.K., I’ll be honest.  I’d like to save money, but it really doesn’t matter.  I’d like to save time, but it really doesn’t matter.  The overriding strategy is to add new countable tracks.  Now you know what my REAL strategy is.

 

Believe it or not, my life strategy, as regards spending my time is to have a balance between all of the things I enjoy doing.  In regards to life strategy, I must admit I receive different forms of challenging feedback about my trackchasing hobby.  It’s always good to get challenging feedback.  It forces me to continue to evaluate your positions.

 

From some of the “Old boys” trackchasing network, I sometimes get “You’re trackchasing too much.  We can’t keep up.  You’ve put so much time and resources into trackchasing, we feel like giving up.”

 

From many of my golfing friends and friends, I get, “You built that big new house, and you must never be there to enjoy it.  Doesn’t Carol mind you being gone so much?  We haven’t seen you at the club, where have you been?”

 

I don’t exactly know how to answer these questions.  I might say to the good old boys, “Now you know how folks who compete against Tiger Woods feel.”  To my golfing friends (who never have to worry about confusing me with Tiger Woods), I might say, “I’m home 4-5 days a week.  That’s plenty of time to enjoy our house.” 

 

My business travel over a 30-year career, along with personal travel had me traveling about two nights a week.  That’s 100 or more nights a year.  Carol never traveled with me on business. 

 

I think it’s important for a successful and fulfilling marriage to have some independence.  I think my travel in the early years helped Carol develop into the independent young woman she is.

 

In all of my years of business travel, I was almost never on the road for more than three consecutive days.  A normal business trip had me out one or two nights.  A good deal of the time, when a meeting in an attractive location ended, Carol and the kids would fly in and join me at the meeting resort for a few days. 

 

This past year was my biggest travel year in terms of overnights. I have never had or expect to have this many overnights again.  As far as I can tell, I traveled 163 overnights in 2006.  About 125 of those were primarily for trackchasing.  Carol had 76 overnights.  (Editor’s note:  Now you can understand why my tax CPA says I am the only non-engineer she knows who replicates the entire U.S. tax form in Excel for planning purposes!)

 

In 2006, Carol and I were able to travel together for about 35 nights that had nothing to do with trackchasing.  I would submit that very few couples in all of America travel that many nights together for personal vacations.  We traveled another 40 nights or so together to trackchase.  That means I traveled about 85 nights during 2006 without Carol in pursuit of tracks.  Doing the math tells me I must have spent 240 nights with Carol.  To here her tell it that was enough!  Just kidding.  I’ll admit that number of nights spend away from Carol was greater than my goal of just a night a week, or an average or about 50 nights a year.

 

This may give you some insight into how I look at this hobby.  Carol and I will probably still travel for non-trackchasing activity about as much as we did last year.  I won’t travel 125 nights for trackchasing this year.  I hope the number of my trackchasing days equals my golfing days in 2006.  So far, golf is beating trackchasing 11-10!

 

 

The People

 

Do you believe people are inherently bad?  On the other hand, do you believe people are inherently good?  I can go both ways on the issue.  I’ll give you an example of both bad and good people behavior I encountered on the very first day of the trip.  My first overnight stop was in Piedmont, South Carolina.  Ever been there before?  Me neither.

 

I stopped in Piedmont because they had rented a large interstate billboard that read, “$35.99/night!”  That seemed like a reasonable price for a Super 8 Motel.  That’s where I would stay for the night.

 

I walked up to the motel check-in desk and told the clerk I’d like a single room.  The elderly gentlemen wearing a white short sleeve shirt with a black tie and Masonic tie clip smiled a totally toothless smile and replied, “Fine, that will be $49.95 for tonight.”  I didn’t expect him to say that.  “What about the billboard?” I asked.   “Oh ya, the billboard,” was all he could say.  He agreed to give me the advertised rate.  I was prepared to walk if he didn’t.

 

Was the elderly desk clerk being dishonest with me?  I don’t think so.  Were the proprietors being dishonest by saying one thing on their billboard and another at their check-in desk?  Probably!  Some people are a little shady.  It pays to pay attention and speak out when folks don’t do the right thing.

 

I have more positive people experiences than negatives ones by far.  One of my best people experiences in a long time was my lunch with Steve S. in Charlotte.  Steve and I have been talking about trackchasing over the net for some time and decided to get together for lunch.

 

I showed up at Steve’s office and he asked me “If I had my helmet?”  Had my helmet?  What was Steve talking about?  It turns out Steve had a special plan before we went to lunch.  He wanted to take me to an indoor go-kart racing facility.  I’ve ridden at my share of go-karts tracks, but I never needed a helmet before.

 

We soon arrived at the Victory Lane Indoor Karting Center (www.victorylanekarting.com). It wasn’t long before I was being asked to sign every liability clause ever invented by the American legal community.  After that, I was issued my very own personal racing I.D. card as well as a “Head sock.”  The head sock was to be worn under my helmet.  These guys weren’t kidding!

 

Steve and I then walked into the uniform room.  There I picked out my driving suit and racing helmet.  The karts even had shoulder harnesses and seat belts.  We would be racing for two 10-minute segments. 

 

The racetrack was a road course.  It was flat, long and fast.  The track’s management even puts Coke syrup on the racing surface to give drivers better traction.  I have never driven faster go-karts in my life!!

 

Steve gave me some good advice on the “Racing line.”  Soon we were off on the first run.  The track has a large time clock that projects on the wall.  The clock counts down the seconds from 10:00 minutes. 

 

I’d like to tell you that I dusted Steve, but that wouldn’t exactly be accurate.  I will say I was spotting him 60-70 pounds of extra weight, which would be accurate.  It turns out Steve had raced professionally.  He was a truck racer at the super fast Irwindale Speedway in California and has raced asphalt late models here in North Carolina.

 

In point of fact, Steve dusted me.  The track gives every racer a lap time printout for each lap completed.  Steve’s best time was 32.593 and my best was 35.810 during the first session.  That difference of 3.3 seconds was huge on the track.

 

During our second session, we both lowered our lap times.  Steve ran a 31.942 and I improved to 34.534.  Again, trailing by more than 2.5 seconds was a big deficit.  Steve’s time was the fastest of the day for everyone who had raced up to that point.

 

This was one of most fun things I’ve done in a very long time.  I give the Victory Lane Indoor Karting Center a RANLAY Racing Money Back Guarantee.  If you go there prepare to have a very fun experience.  Thanks, Steve!!

 

 

The trip

 

This was supposed to be a simple, “Out Thursday, back Sunday” trackchasing trip.  In trackchasing, nothing is ever as simple as it sounds.  As befits my status as “Trackchasing’s #1 trackchaser while being married”, I wanted to make certain that “Trackchasing’s First Mother” aka wife, Carol was comfortable in my absence. 

 

Just before I left on the trip, she asked if I could do a chore for her.   I said I would.  Of course, the idea of doing a chore made me shutter and break out in a rash.  She wanted me to call the plumber.  I told her I would.

 

When I told her I’d call the plumber, I honestly meant too.  However, from the tone of this, you guessed it; I forgot to make the call.  Ultimately, Carol made the call so the plumber could repair a running toilet and do something to a “Hose bib.”  Since I didn’t know what a “Hose bib” was, in hindsight I thought it was better that Carol shepard this project from start to finish.

 

I guess I had failed Carol in her chore request.  When you’re on a roll, why stop, right?  Next, I had to ask Carol at the last minute to drive me to LAX.  This is usually a difficult drive, traffic-wise, but I would not be returning to LAX at the end of the trip, so I couldn’t drive myself.  Asking her to make this drive after my plumbing “Oversight” was beginning to push the limit.

 

Nevertheless, Carol dropped me off at LAX and this trackchasing trip was happening.  My flight was delayed so I stopped by the “Home Turf Bar” in terminal 3 to watch the Accenture Match Play golf tournament for an hour or so.  As luck would have it (actually it was bad luck), I left my credit card on the table and then hopped on my flight to Atlanta.  Bad move!

 

I noticed I didn’t have my MasterCard when I picked up my National rental car.  I carry only one other card and I used that one to get my car.  I attempted to call the sports bar without success.

 

This credit card recovery project was too big for me.  It required the attention to detail of a woman.  My call to Carol went something like this, “I’ve got bad news I lost my credit card.”  Before I could get too much more out, I was listening to why it’s important to 1) keep an eye on my credit cards, 2) always check to make sure I had my credit card after I used it and 3) don’t be a dummy.

 

Carol’s advice was helpful.  At least, that’s what I told her.  I needed her to do the legwork to track down the lost credit card, so it wasn’t a good time to disagree with one word of what she was saying.  This is one of the secrets to 34 years of wedded bliss, make that near wedded bliss!

 

So that’s how the last winter trackchasing trip of the year began.  I had screwed up the one and only chore I was given.  I had caused Carol to make a last minute unexpected 130-mile round-trip drive in heavy city traffic.  Finally, I got her involved in a never-ending phone tree of conversations trying to track down my lost credit card. 

 

Please don’t feel sorry for Carol.  She’s the one who said, “Yes” when asked if she would accept me for “Better or worse!”  All right, that’s a little harsh.  I’ll do something special for her to make up for my significant inadequacies. 

 

 

RACE TRACK STATS:


LOWE’S MOTOR SPEEDWAY (1/5 MILE OVAL), CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA #1,004 – 2/25/06

 

This track was my 25th to see in North Carolina.  This gives me a 10th place ranking in the state behind Paul Weidman’s 26 tracks and safely ahead of 11th place (tie) totals of 18 tracks from both Allan Brown and Norm Wagner.  Guy Smith leads the state with 63 tracks.

 

CONCORD RACEWAY, CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA #1,004 – 2/25/06

This track was my 26th to see in North Carolina.  I’ve now moved into a 9th place tie with Paul Weidman.

 

ANTIOCH SPEEDWAY, ANTIOCH, NORTH CAROLINA #1,005 – 2/25/06

This track was my 27th to see in North Carolina.  I’ve now moved into sole possession of 9th place in the Tar Heel state.

 

 

RACE TRACK NEWS:

 

LOWE’S MOTOR SPEEDWAY (1/5 MILE ASPHALT OVAL), CONCORD

 

There are five countable racetracks on the Lowe’s Motor Speedway property.  I’ve already been to the 1.5 mile oval, which is home to NASCAR’s Nextel Cup races.  I saw that track with Carol back in 1990.  We paid $59 for fourth turn seats and thought that was outrageous.  That would be cheap by today’s standards.

 

I also saw the Dirt Track @ Lowe’s Motor Speedway in 2002 with good friend and Tar Heel native, George Robertson.  It was a terribly cold evening on that occasion.

 

After today’s visit to the Lowe’s Motor Speedway 1/5 mile asphalt oval, there will be future new track opportunities at their infield road course as well as their Ľ mile asphalt oval located inside the 1.5 mile oval.

 

There are only a handful of facilities that offer multiple track choices as Lowe’s Motor Speedway does.  Most of the time the tracks don’t run at the same time.  That means that I will have to visit the Lowe’s Motor Speedway five different times to see each of their tracks.  From that point of view, it’s not much different from visiting five different tracks in five different locations.

 

Today’s track is located just outside the second turn of the 1.5 mile oval.  The 1/5 mile asphalt oval is a permanent track with very limited grandstand seating.  They have lights but did not have a public address announcer.  Refreshments were served from a mobile catering truck.

 

At the driver’s meeting, I was handed a schedule of events for the day.  There were several classes racing today.  Some were countable by trackchaser rules and some were not.  There were four types of Bandeleros including Beginner Bandits, Bandits, Young Guns and Outlaws.  I don’t believe any of these classes were countable because they were not driven by adults.

 

The countable classes of legends included Young Lions, Semi-Pro, Masters and Pro.  I’m not sure about the age limit for the Young Lions.  It’s possible they were not countable.  Thunder Roadsters also joined the fray.

 

Without an announcer, it was impossible to tell which class of Bandeleros or Legends was racing.  The track was efficient.  They ran one race after another without any delays.  The heats were six laps long and the main events from 10-20 laps in distance.

 

After taking both digital pictures and some video, I retired to the comfort of the National Rental Car Racing Buick Lacrosse’s cockpit.  It was warm in there.  By the way, I did not see one other person wearing shorts today.  Don’t they value their personal comfort?

 

My car location was just 20 yards from the second turn fence.  From here, I had a great view under weather conditions that met the requirements of an aging warm weather resident body.  It was all good.

 

On the way out of the Lowes Motor Speedway, I saw the opportunity to drive through the infield tunnel for a quick tour of the big track at LMS.  I was thinking that if no one was looking, I might take the National Rental Car Racing Buick Lacrosse up on the high banks of the 1.5-mile oval for a lap or two! 

 

I couldn’t do that today.  They have torn up the oval’s surface and are in the midst of repaving the entire oval.  This comes after Humpy Wheeler’s failed attempt to “Levigate” the track’s surface.

 

I must tell you now that I took a personal risk at this point.  Even though I knew I was trespassing I had a responsibility to viewers of www.ranlayracing.com.  I took several photographs of the repaving project that will be on the website soon.  Please don’t tell anyone where you first heard about this super secret repaving project or saw photos of same.

 


CONCORD RACEWAY

 

I first visited the Concord Motorsports Complex back in 1992.  On that October evening, Carol and our Seattle based friends, Terry & Linda Johnson joined me.  We were in town for the NASCAR Winston Cup show to be held the next day at the North Wilkesboro Speedway.

 

I recall the late model racing on the Concord half-mile oval to be some of the loudest I could ever remember.  North Wilkesboro was rained out on the next day, Sunday.  That was a bummer since I owned nine season tickets to Wilkesboro back then.  Trying to sell NASCAR tickets on the rain date, which was the following day on Monday, required my best sales skills.  Geoff Bodine won that NASCAR 400-lap race that was run totally under the green flag.  A caution free race happens less than one time out of each 100 races.

 

Today, I’m visiting the Concord Raceway quarter mile asphalt track.  I was thinking this was an inner oval to the half mile track at the Concord Motorsports Park.  In reality this is its own self-contained permanent oval located a couple hundred yards from the bigger track.

 

When I entered the long winding entrance to the complex, there wasn’t much activity.  There was so little activity, it crossed my mind that there was no one racing today.  That kind of thing has happened before, so that’s why it crossed my mind!

 

I kept going when a sign pointed me to the “Legends/Bandelero” track.  That’s where I wanted to go.  Just at that point, I saw some activity.  Good!  The pit area for the small track was full of go-karts and go-kart haulers. 

 

It was a cold, cloudy 57 degrees.  I really wanted to watch the races from my car but that wasn’t going to work.  A very professional announcer was telling the handful of people in the stands about the qualifying times of the different go-kart classes racing today.

 

I was here to see the Senior Champ Karts.  I figured I could buy a grandstand ticket and stay in the car until the champ karts were ready to race.  First, I had to confirm there were some Senior Champs racing today.  I walked over to the pit shack and asked.

 

Just at that moment a woman approached to buy her pit pass.  She had overheard my question about champ karts and confirmed to me that, yes indeed, they were racing. 

 

That was the good news.  The woman working the pit shack told me that no grandstand tickets were being sold, only pit passes.  She said something about “People buying a grandstand ticket and sneaking into the pits.”  Let’s see.  Rather than establish some control that prevents people from buying a cheaper ticket and then sneaking into the pits, we’ll just charge everyone for the higher priced pit pass.  I guess I was just at another customer friendly short track.

 

I paid my $20 pit pass fee and wandered into the pit area.  At first, it seemed like the only countable event would be the Senior Champ Kart Heavy division scheduled to race as the 13th class of the 18 total classes.  That was bad for two reasons.  First, it looked like it might rain.  Secondly, this might jeopardize my idea of visiting the Antioch Speedway later in the afternoon.

 

A closer examination of the race schedule told me that the Senior Champ Kart Lite division was the fourth scheduled feature of the day.  The Heavy and Lite divisions of the Senior Champ Kart group would be racing exactly the same cars.  The “Lite” division has a 410-pound weight limit.  The “Heavy” division has a 425-pound weight limit.  The karts simply bolt on 15 extra pounds when it comes time to switch from the Lite division to the Heavy division.  I didn’t know that until today.

 

After I saw the Lite division contest their 15-lap feature in the fourth event of the day, there was really no reason to hang around and see the very same competitor’s race with 15 pounds of leads added to their chassis’.

 

I did visit “Allan’s BBQ and Catering” truck in the pit area.  He was serving some of the best BBQ I’ve eaten this season.  About the time I was downing my last bite of BBQ the announcer told the competitors to speed up the program.  Rain was on the way.  With that comment, I began to worry that I might not get my race in but the rain held off long enough.

 

The Senior Champ Kart Lite division ran their one and only race of the day.  It was a 15-lap feature event.  I enjoyed watching the flat karts race their feature events as well. 

 

You should know I’m feeling the pressure from non-trackchasing Trackchaser Report readers.  They simply can’t understand why the trackchaser rules preclude the counting of flat karts.  I’m just about ready to give the phone numbers and addresses of those trackchasers that passed the rules outlawing flat karts.

 

 

ANTIOCH SPEEDWAY, ANTIOCH, NORTH CAROLINA

 

Today’s program at Antioch was scheduled to begin at 3 p.m.  I left the Concord Raceway about 4:30 p.m.  I called the track and asked if they were still racing considering the threatening weather and if they were running ahead of or behind schedule.

 

The woman I spoke with told me they were “About a quarter of the way through the program.”  I’m no math whiz.  O.K., I am a math whiz and my calculations told me that if they were finished with 25% of the program at 4:30 p.m. then the entire program would be completed by about 9 p.m.  I was only an hour away.  I expected to arrive at the Antioch Speedway by about 5:30 p.m.  I had all the time in the world.

 

I must admit that I experience my share of angst whenever I am trying to make it to a track when time is a factor.  I felt no such angst today.  I was running low on gas so I made a leisurely stop for gas.  I saw some interesting sights and stopped to take pictures.  I wasn’t hungry, but if I had been I would have stopped to eat.

 

I pulled into the Antioch Speedway at about 5:30 p.m.  From a distance I could see some late model looking racecars finishing up their race.  Everything was looking just fine.

 

No one was collecting money at the ticket booth at this stage in the program.  Now, everything was looking REALLY fine.  The facility suffers from a significant amount of deferred maintenance.  Yes, it is a run down dump.

 

I scanned the pit area.  There weren’t many cars in the infield.  Most of them were already on their trailers.  That part didn’t look good.  To make a long story short, they had only one race to go.  That was the Renegade stock car feature that ran about 12 cars.  The race had a few cautions and ended up lasting about 20 minutes. 

 

The entire program ended at 5:55 p.m.  Maybe the Antioch spokeswoman needs to retake some algebra or calculus classes.  She doesn’t seem to be very good at math.  If I had arrived 20 minutes later I would have missed the entire track.  It was that close and I didn’t even know it.

 

The announcer gave me a nice trackchaser mention.  Many announcers have a difficult time pronouncing San Clemente.  Clemente is pronounced “Cle” (rhymes with Duh), “Men” (rhymes with Men) and then “Te” (rhymes with Tea). 

 

He told the crowd I was from San “Clemontine.”  His fellow announcer corrected him and told the crowd that “Was nice country out there.”  He’s right.  There weren’t many people in the stands to hear all of this.  Several were huddled around 55 gallon drums that had raging blazes going in them.  This kept those folks warm on a cold and damp late North Carolina afternoon.

 

 

WEATHER CONDITIONS

 

It was 53 degrees and overcast when I arrived at LMS at 10:10 a.m.  That’s not warm, but it is probably better than 80-90% of the rest of the country.  That’s not bad.  The rain forecast increases from 10% to 30% by 3 p.m.  I expect to be long gone by then.

 

The announcer at Concord Raceway told the crowd the weather was “Coming in.”  He asked the competitors to help move the show along.  Just 20 minutes after I left the Concord Raceway, it began to sprinkle.

 

The wet stuff stopped on my way to the Antioch Speedway.  It was 55 degrees at Antioch.  Fans were burning fires in 55-gallon drums to keep warm.  I was the only person dressed in shorts at ALL three tracks.

 

It misted rained most of the way to Atlanta on Saturday evening.  From the looks of roadside puddles, it had rained much harder earlier.  I was very lucky with the weather.

 

 

RENTAL CAR UPDATE:


 

Whenever possible, I will try to rent my cars from National Car Rental.  My “Executive Selection” status gives me the right to pick from their very best cars.  Today, I’ll be going with a Buick Lacrosse CXL model.  I chose this car because it had a leather interior and sunroof.  It’s a very comfortable car to drive.  The car even came with Nevada license plates.  I’ll explain the significance of that is my next Trackchaser Report.


I covered 758 driving miles on this trip with my rental car.  I paid an average gas price of $2.15 per gallon.  The Buick Lacrosse gave me 27.6 M.P.G. in fuel mileage at an average cost of 7.8 cents per mile, one of my lowest totals for the year. 

 

 

LIFETIME TRACKCHASER STANDINGS UPDATE:

 

These worldwide trackchasers are within 100 tracks (plus or minus) of my current trackchaser total.

 

1.  Rick Schneider – Bay Shore, New York - 1,038 (+33)

2.  Allan Brown, Comstock Park, Michigan – 1,021 (+16)

3.  Guy Smith, Effort, Pennsylvania – 1,010 (+5)

4.  Any Sivi, Clairton, Pennsylvania – 1,007 (+2)

5.  Randy Lewis, San Clemente, California – 1,005

6.  Gordon Killian, Sinking Spring, Pennsylvania – 990 (-15)

 

 

 

Other notables

 

These worldwide trackchasers are within 10 tracks (plus or minus) of Carol’s current trackchaser total.

 

40.  Don McAuley, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada - 235 (+1)

41.  Carol Lewis, San Clemente, California - 234

42.  Andy Ritter, Mansfield, Pennsylvania - 233 (-1)

43.  Colin Casserly, Stevenage, England 232 (-2)

44.  Bernie Harlen, Goshen, Indiana - 229 (-5)

 

 

 

 

2006 TRACKCHASER STANDINGS

 

1.  Randy Lewis, San Clemente, California - 14

2.  Ed Esser, Madison, Wisconsin – 8

3.  Rick Young, Maxville, Ontario, Canada - 6

4.  Roger Ferrell, Majenica, Indiana – 5

4.  Guy Smith, Effort, Pennsylvania – 5

4.  Will White, Quakertown, Pennsylvania – 5

7.  Carol Lewis, San Clemente, California – 4

7.  Gordon Killian, Sinking Springs, Pennsylvania – 4

9.  Bob Schafer, Oshkosh, Wisconsin

10.  Several trackchasers – 1

 

 

 

 

Thanks for reading about my trackchasing,

Randy Lewis

Trackchasing’s #1 trackchaser of the 21st century

 

Trackchasing doesn’t have to be fun to be fun.

 

 

 

 

CUMULATIVE TRAVEL DISTANCES:

 

AIRPLANE

 

Los Angeles, CA – Atlanta, GA – 1,941 miles


RENTAL CAR


Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport – trip begins

Concord, NC – 299 miles

Concord, NC – 316 miles

Lenoir, NC – 415 miles


 

 

 

TRACK ADMSSION PRICES:


 

Lowe’s Motor Speedway 1/5M oval – Free

Concord Raceway - $20

Antioch Speedway – Free

 

 

 

Past trackchasing stories are available at:

www.ranlayracing.com

 

Official trackchaser standings can be viewed at:

www.trackchaser.com  

 

Some of my standings data comes from trackchaser.com

 

 

 

 

 

UPCOMING TRACKCHASING PLANS

 

Green Valley Speedway, Gadsden, Alabama

 

 

 

 

RACETRACKS VISITED IN 2006 (** not the first time to visit this track)

 

992.  Watermelon Capital Speedway, Cordele, Georgia - January 14

 

993.  Cross Roads Motorplex (asphalt oval), Jasper, Florida - January 15

 

994.  Norfolk Scope Arena, Norfolk, Virginia - January 20

 

995.  Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego, California - January 21

 

996.  Oregon State Fair & Expo Center, Forster Livestock Arena, Salem, Oregon - January 28

 

997.  Morosso Motorsports Park, Jupiter, Florida – February 4

 

998.  Thunderbowl Speedway of Ocala, Ocala, Florida - February 4

 

999.  Cross Roads Motorplex (dirt oval), Jasper, Florida - February 5

 

1,000.  Auburndale Kartway, Auburndale, Florida - February 10

 

1,001.  Ocala Speedway (asphalt oval), Ocala, Florida - February 12

 

1,002. Speedworld Speedway, Surprise, Arizona - February 19

 

1,003. Lowe’s Motor Speedway (1/5 mile asphalt oval), Concord, North Carolina - February 25

 

1,004. Concord Raceway, Concord, North Carolina - February 25

 

1,005. Antioch Speedway, Antioch, North Carolina - February 25

 

 

 

 

 

GREETINGS FROM CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA AND THEN TO ANOTHER PART OF CONCORD AND THEN TO ANTIOCH, NORTH CAROLINA


 

THREE TRACKS IN THREE LOCATIONS IN ONE DAY IN FEBRUARY!  LIFE IS GOOD!

 

 

 

ANSWERS & QUESTIONS


Why wouldn’t the McDonalds drive-thru attendant tell me when I ordered a salad, waited through 10 cars in the drive-thru line and then fished out the exact change from under the floor mat, that they were out of salads?

 

TiVo rocks!

 

Why do the flight attendants always stop the drink cart right over my seat when my laptop is open and then proceed to pour 10-20 drinks for just about every passenger on the plane?

 

Jet Blue Airlines is great, they have leather seats, snacks, lots of legroom and live satellite TV.

 

Why do people continue to drive in the fast lane while fellow driver after fellow driver passes them on the right?

 

XM radio also rocks and local AM/FM does not.

 

The McCarran International Airport (Las Vegas) is one of the few that offers free high-speed wireless internet.

 

 

 

PEOPLE/STRATEGY/TRAVEL NEWS

 

The Strategy

 

Strategy is so important in trackchasing.  The right strategy can add more tracks, keep expenses down and make the trip more comfortable by saving time.  O.K., I’ll be honest.  I’d like to save money, but it really doesn’t matter.  I’d like to save time, but it really doesn’t matter.  The overriding strategy is to add new countable tracks.  Now you know what my REAL strategy is.

 

Believe it or not, my life strategy, as regards spending my time is to have a balance between all of the things I enjoy doing.  In regards to life strategy, I must admit I receive different forms of challenging feedback about my trackchasing hobby.  It’s always good to get challenging feedback.  It forces me to continue to evaluate your positions.

 

From some of the “Old boys” trackchasing network, I sometimes get “You’re trackchasing too much.  We can’t keep up.  You’ve put so much time and resources into trackchasing, we feel like giving up.”

 

From many of my golfing friends and friends, I get, “You built that big new house, and you must never be there to enjoy it.  Doesn’t Carol mind you being gone so much?  We haven’t seen you at the club, where have you been?”

 

I don’t exactly know how to answer these questions.  I might say to the good old boys, “Now you know how folks who compete against Tiger Woods feel.”  To my golfing friends (who never have to worry about confusing me with Tiger Woods), I might say, “I’m home 4-5 days a week.  That’s plenty of time to enjoy our house.” 

 

My business travel over a 30-year career, along with personal travel had me traveling about two nights a week.  That’s 100 or more nights a year.  Carol never traveled with me on business. 

 

I think it’s important for a successful and fulfilling marriage to have some independence.  I think my travel in the early years helped Carol develop into the independent young woman she is.

 

In all of my years of business travel, I was almost never on the road for more than three consecutive days.  A normal business trip had me out one or two nights.  A good deal of the time, when a meeting in an attractive location ended, Carol and the kids would fly in and join me at the meeting resort for a few days. 

 

This past year was my biggest travel year in terms of overnights. I have never had or expect to have this many overnights again.  As far as I can tell, I traveled 163 overnights in 2006.  About 125 of those were primarily for trackchasing.  Carol had 76 overnights.  (Editor’s note:  Now you can understand why my tax CPA says I am the only non-engineer she knows who replicates the entire U.S. tax form in Excel for planning purposes!)

 

In 2006, Carol and I were able to travel together for about 35 nights that had nothing to do with trackchasing.  I would submit that very few couples in all of America travel that many nights together for personal vacations.  We traveled another 40 nights or so together to trackchase.  That means I traveled about 85 nights during 2006 without Carol in pursuit of tracks.  Doing the math tells me I must have spent 240 nights with Carol.  To here her tell it that was enough!  Just kidding.  I’ll admit that number of nights spend away from Carol was greater than my goal of just a night a week, or an average or about 50 nights a year.

 

This may give you some insight into how I look at this hobby.  Carol and I will probably still travel for non-trackchasing activity about as much as we did last year.  I won’t travel 125 nights for trackchasing this year.  I hope the number of my trackchasing days equals my golfing days in 2006.  So far, golf is beating trackchasing 11-10!

 

 

The People

 

Do you believe people are inherently bad?  On the other hand, do you believe people are inherently good?  I can go both ways on the issue.  I’ll give you an example of both bad and good people behavior I encountered on the very first day of the trip.  My first overnight stop was in Piedmont, South Carolina.  Ever been there before?  Me neither.

 

I stopped in Piedmont because they had rented a large interstate billboard that read, “$35.99/night!”  That seemed like a reasonable price for a Super 8 Motel.  That’s where I would stay for the night.

 

I walked up to the motel check-in desk and told the clerk I’d like a single room.  The elderly gentlemen wearing a white short sleeve shirt with a black tie and Masonic tie clip smiled a totally toothless smile and replied, “Fine, that will be $49.95 for tonight.”  I didn’t expect him to say that.  “What about the billboard?” I asked.   “Oh ya, the billboard,” was all he could say.  He agreed to give me the advertised rate.  I was prepared to walk if he didn’t.

 

Was the elderly desk clerk being dishonest with me?  I don’t think so.  Were the proprietors being dishonest by saying one thing on their billboard and another at their check-in desk?  Probably!  Some people are a little shady.  It pays to pay attention and speak out when folks don’t do the right thing.

 

I have more positive people experiences than negatives ones by far.  One of my best people experiences in a long time was my lunch with Steve S. in Charlotte.  Steve and I have been talking about trackchasing over the net for some time and decided to get together for lunch.

 

I showed up at Steve’s office and he asked me “If I had my helmet?”  Had my helmet?  What was Steve talking about?  It turns out Steve had a special plan before we went to lunch.  He wanted to take me to an indoor go-kart racing facility.  I’ve ridden at my share of go-karts tracks, but I never needed a helmet before.

 

We soon arrived at the Victory Lane Indoor Karting Center (www.victorylanekarting.com). It wasn’t long before I was being asked to sign every liability clause ever invented by the American legal community.  After that, I was issued my very own personal racing I.D. card as well as a “Head sock.”  The head sock was to be worn under my helmet.  These guys weren’t kidding!

 

Steve and I then walked into the uniform room.  There I picked out my driving suit and racing helmet.  The karts even had shoulder harnesses and seat belts.  We would be racing for two 10-minute segments. 

 

The racetrack was a road course.  It was flat, long and fast.  The track’s management even puts Coke syrup on the racing surface to give drivers better traction.  I have never driven faster go-karts in my life!!

 

Steve gave me some good advice on the “Racing line.”  Soon we were off on the first run.  The track has a large time clock that projects on the wall.  The clock counts down the seconds from 10:00 minutes. 

 

I’d like to tell you that I dusted Steve, but that wouldn’t exactly be accurate.  I will say I was spotting him 60-70 pounds of extra weight, which would be accurate.  It turns out Steve had raced professionally.  He was a truck racer at the super fast Irwindale Speedway in California and has raced asphalt late models here in North Carolina.

 

In point of fact, Steve dusted me.  The track gives every racer a lap time printout for each lap completed.  Steve’s best time was 32.593 and my best was 35.810 during the first session.  That difference of 3.3 seconds was huge on the track.

 

During our second session, we both lowered our lap times.  Steve ran a 31.942 and I improved to 34.534.  Again, trailing by more than 2.5 seconds was a big deficit.  Steve’s time was the fastest of the day for everyone who had raced up to that point.

 

This was one of most fun things I’ve done in a very long time.  I give the Victory Lane Indoor Karting Center a RANLAY Racing Money Back Guarantee.  If you go there prepare to have a very fun experience.  Thanks, Steve!!

 

 

The trip

 

This was supposed to be a simple, “Out Thursday, back Sunday” trackchasing trip.  In trackchasing, nothing is ever as simple as it sounds.  As befits my status as “Trackchasing’s #1 trackchaser while being married”, I wanted to make certain that “Trackchasing’s First Mother” aka wife, Carol was comfortable in my absence. 

 

Just before I left on the trip, she asked if I could do a chore for her.   I said I would.  Of course, the idea of doing a chore made me shutter and break out in a rash.  She wanted me to call the plumber.  I told her I would.

 

When I told her I’d call the plumber, I honestly meant too.  However, from the tone of this, you guessed it; I forgot to make the call.  Ultimately, Carol made the call so the plumber could repair a running toilet and do something to a “Hose bib.”  Since I didn’t know what a “Hose bib” was, in hindsight I thought it was