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Fisker Found at the Mall

Fisker Karma

I stopped by Tysons Galleria for lunch expecting to see the usual Ferrari, Maserati, and Lambos on display (not your ordinary mall…) and much to my surprise they had a Fisker Karma there too.

From the back

I’m not sure what to make of the design. It seems well built, even if the panel gaps are a bit large. I wasn’t expecting it to be this big. The proportions are just slightly wrong. I’m not sure if it’s because of the huge wheels or the fact that the wheels are pushed out to the ends of the body, but something isn’t right. It reminds me of a cross between a BMW Z4 (not a pretty parent) and a C6 Corvette. For $112K you can have a ‘lectric super-car with a 32 mile range too. I wonder if this is Colin Powell’s car

Last Motoring Event of 2011

Summit Point Winter

Saturday brought the last motoring event of the year for GeorgeCo. It was a very nice late Autumn day of sliding and sloshing on the skidpad at Summit Point with the other instructors from the local BMW club. GeorgeCo got a chance to test out the Red MINI’s new suspension and even got to drive a friend’s 911.

Red and 911

I’ve instructed in a Porsche a couple of times and really enjoyed the opportunity to drive it on the skidpad. I’d like to say I instantly mastered oversteer, but that would be not true. It’s a very different experience to feel the car rotating around you at a point somewhere in the middle of the rear seats. Most of my MINI tricks didn’t work (ie more power in oversteer) and the balance just feels wrong. It wasn’t until later in the session that I finally figured out to ease up on the wheel, let the wheels straighten and keep steady power and it sorts itself out. You can’t lift suddenly and more power just speeds up the spin, but steady power seems to do the trick. That was fun.

Red waiting

The new suspension on Red MINI proved to be a good choice. The middle setting on the Alta rear swaybar took out most of the understeer, but didn’t make the car tail happy so as to induce oversteer on sudden throttle lift. It’s very neutral with a slight bias to understeer which is the way I like it. We set up some cones and got a chance to practice a little scandinavian flick action. The IE fixed camber plates provide a much less harsh ride than the adjustable plates in the Blue MINI. I think I’m going to like this set-up.

Zen Garden

The track was quiet all day. I don’t think I’ve been here before when there wasn’t some sort of event going on. The run-off area in turn one had a certain zen garden quality to it. Be the curve.

Getting the MINI Low-down

New Wheels

We’ve been busy here at GeorgeCo during the last few weeks of Autumn, taking advantage of the warmer than expected weather to get some projects done before the cold and snow of Winter sets in. Even as we prepare to sell the GeorgeCo Blue MINI, work continues on the Red MINI. In addition to getting the FES-Auto shift light to work in the new car, we finally made some suspension modifications. Here’s a brief recap:

We picked up a set of 17 inch R90 wheels couple of months ago and they were a little worse for wear under the previous owner. Nothing structural, but better to be straightened than to worry. A quick trip to the Rim Doctor and they look great, but they also really highlighted the fact that the car rides too high in stock configuration. (You can thank taller springs from the factory due to our crappy roads in the US for that.) Keeping in mind the performance goals of this car — faster, quieter, and smoother than the Blue MINI — we set to work on the suspension.

The stock Cooper S suspension is very competent from the factory. Optimized for occasional spirited driving, it starts to show its weaknesses when you get it on the track and really push it. The front wheels have little to no camber. The 16mm rear swaybar is undersized. The result is a serious tendency to understeer and excessive tire wear on the outer edges. The taller springs increase body roll and exaggerate the understeer.

We solved the camber problem in the Blue MINI with adjustable camber plates, but they proved too harsh for daily driving and were a major source of the uncomfortable ride. We liked the performance of the Bavarian Autosport lowering springs on the Blue MINI, but the Koni shocks just added to the harshness. To build on what we learned from the Blue MINI, we started with the parts we liked (BavAuto springs, stock shocks) and built from there.

New vs stock spring

BavAuto springs lowered the car and eliminated the raked stance that comes from the factory. We installed them over stock MINI shocks. Since the rear end picks up camber with the lowering springs, we added Hotchkis adjustable control arms to reset camber to negative 1.5 degrees. (Toe is set to 1/8 inch Toe-In for the rear to provide high speed stability.) We added a 22mm adjustable Alta rear swaybar to dial-out the inherent understeer. By sitting lower on the springs we also needed to reset the swaybar back to a right angle relative to the droplink, so we added adjustable drop links, also from Alta. (While we had the wheels off, we also added brass bushings to the rear brake calipers.)

rear spring

Having finished the rear end, we switched our attention to the front where we installed Ireland Engineering fixed camber plates over the BavAuto springs on stock MINI struts. If you remove the wheel liners, you can actually install the springs and camber plates without removing the strut from the hub. Just disconnect the strut from the front sway bar, compress the springs, disconnect the strut tower plate from the car and you can remove the springs and reinstall the new camber plates. The IE fixed plates are supposed to provide 1.25 degrees of negative camber on stock springs. Unlike the adjustable camber plates where the bearing is set in a thin setting of urethane, the fixed plates are set in a rubber bushing. You end up trading adjust-ability for ride comfort. When we got the car back from the alignment, we were happy to see they provide 2.5 degrees of negative camber on the BavAuto springs. (Toe is set to zero in the front.)

Fixed Plate

The net result of all of these changes is pretty dramatic. The car has a nice stance; is tall enough to get out of the driveway and over speed bumps; and is firm but not harsh. We’re heading out to the skidpad on Saturday to dial-in the swaybar. For now, it’s set in the middle setting which proved the best setting on the Blue MINI in the past. The photo below shows the previous ride height superimposed on the new stance.

Comparison

MINI Cooper Coupe Initial Impressions

Cooper Coupe

I found myself getting off of the local interstate highway last Friday to avoid traffic only to discover two things: (1) The road I chose (MD 355) was also blocked in both directions because of an accident, and (2) Passport MINI of Alexandria now has a showroom in Rockville. Since I wasn’t going anywhere anyway, I decided to stop by and check out the new MINI Cooper Coupe.

JCW Coupe

The had all three flavors on the lot — Cooper, Cooper S, and JCW. I’m not sure what to make of this car. On paper it’s very interesting: Lightest, most powerful JCW car to date. Coupe hardtop means it should be a screamer on the track. The windshield is considerably more raked than the standard Hardtop, but it did not seem as claustrophobic as say an Audi TT feels. I adjusted the seat for my long upper torso and had plenty of room for a helmet. Visibility wasn’t bad. Trunk room is expansive and I like the pass-through slot. Sort of reminds me of the ski pass-through on the old E30s.

Pass Through

I initially hated the interior when the second generation MINIs came out, but they have really improved the quality of materials as well as the overall feel of the interior. That quality comes at a price, however. This JCW car without all of the optional packages, came in over $32K. A well built JCW can now run north of $50K which is nuts.

Interior

And then there’s that roof. MINI describes it as a baseball cap worn backwards. I was thinking “goofy” or “incomplete” would be more descriptive. The car reminds me of the lovechild of a second generation new MINI and a Mazda MX5 cup racer with a hard top. Compare the real car, to the GeorgeCo Photoshop hack job:

Real thing

GeorgeCo hatched job

From behind, the goofy roof just makes the butt look huge.

behind

So what’s the take-away? I like that MINI is making specialty cars just like the old days. Next up in the spring is a roadster. Now that will be a car to take a second look at. I think the roadster has potential. But the Coupe? It’s a swing and a miss. Maybe I’ll think differently if I ever drive one.

All Autumn in a Day

Frosty MINI

Somebody must have hit the fast forward button on Autumn. We had our first winter snow storm yesterday — much too early in the season. It was a great day to get caught up on watching movies, sorting photos, and editing videos. Much has been happening at GeorgeCo in the last three months. Let’s get caught up.

RLL Racing

Labor Day weekend brought the inaugural Baltimore Grand Prix to the Inner Harbor of Baltimore. (Click the photo above for the complete set.) The three days of racing got off to a slow start as the track was about half a day late opening up to practice, but once it did open, Balmer put on an excellent show. Crowds were strong all three days and the racing was solid. The local BMW club had a hospitality tent and a car corral which proved great fun and also gave GeorgeCo an audience to advertise the GeorgeCo E30 powered by Beano for sale. GeorgeCo even got to meet Bobby Rahal (he signed my hat.)

Bobby Rahal

At the end of the day, we even got to drive the track. (GeorgeCo thought he was in a traffic jam to leave. Much to his surprise, traffic turned left instead of right, and we found ourselves on the track.) Pratt Street was bumpy at parade-lap speed, I couldn’t imagine what it was like at 185 MPH.

The beginning of October brought the final NCC BMW CCA Drivers’ School of the year. This time we were on the Jefferson Circuit. Rain turned most of the driving into one big skidpad exercise. But even at super low speeds with no grip, the Jefferson is tons of fun. Mid-day on the last day, the sun came out for a while and we got to take the new GeorgeCo MINI out for a spin. The video below shows the GeorgeCo MINI wearing regular old street tires, chasing down a certain Red M36. I still haven’t mastered getting the helmet-cam on straight, but this video is better than most.

The big news of the month, however, has to be that the GeorgeCo E30 Powered by Beano has been sold. The buyer is an enthusiastic autocrosser who will give it a good home and the attention it deserves. Scuderia GeorgeCo has now gone from a high of five cars, down to a more reasonable three.

GeorgeCo E30