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previously the sileightymania.com journal.

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Last weekend, I was at another Just Drift event at the Balcony… only this time I wasn’t there for instruction, I was there for driving! It was way fun driving with Nadine and Alex. I got to drive Henry’s FC… man… that thing is tough to drive. Power at the high RPM ranges, no power steering, and no traction! It was really hard to keep the car where I wanted it, because it always seemed a little out of control. I give Henry a lot of respect for being so consistent in that thing!

There’s something funny about my car… when I am on boost for long periods of time, the boost just dies completely off. Then I give it a second to calm down, and the boost is there again. I’m not sure why it does it, but the only thing right now that makes sense to me is that maybe the actuator is getting weak?

Anyway, doing donuts with Nadine and Alex was a lot of fun… this is what drifting is all about! Drifting along side your friends… it’s awesome.

On Sunday we had a BBQ for my buddy Brent’s birthday. It’s been a while since we BBQed! I had such a blast… I really want to start BBQing again. Good times, good times.

Life changes

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I haven’t written a non-automotive related journal entry in a while, but I guess since a lot of things have been changing lately, and that I USED to do this all the time, I thought I would write a new one. Well first off, I got a new job! I’m no longer at Overboost… Now I’m at Southland Credit Union. Now I have to dress nice to go to work everyday, now I get to work a normal 8 hour day without having to be complained to… now I have a real job like a normal adult! It’s been strange how my life has taken a detour because of the slump in the economy in 2001. But I’m starting to get back on track now… this job isn’t as glamorous as my first job out of college, but I think there’s a lot of promise here. I’m happy to get this new opportunity. I have so many goals OUTSIDE of drifting and car stuff, and this will finally allow me to accomplish some of them. It feels really good… especially since I have Nadine and Kristy specifically in mind. As for my drifting situation for 2005, I’m both excited and kind of uneasy about it. I’m unsure about sponsorships, the different season series, and my involvement in events. I love drifting… the competitions are fun too, but there are things about it that get me bummed out. I hate selling myself to get sponsors, I hate the seriousness of it, I hate the politics, the secrets, the deals. It stinks. Plus, it takes so much time out of my life to deal with all this stuff behind the scenes and to prepare and to fly out to all the events. There’s always been a seriousness around me since drifting started to get big… a feeling of people watching… a feeling that you have to prove to people that I’m serious about drifting and that I want to get good and stay good and be committed to the sport and its supporters. All that SUCKS. I just want to have fun and I just want to drive. I’m completely happy once I’m in my car and I’m drifting… but the other 95% drama associated with drifting gets me down. That’s why I’ve informally decided that this will be my last year of drifting competitively. Will I drop out of people’s minds when they think about the popular drifters in the US? Yeah… but I don’t care. I’ll also lose all my sponsors… no tire support, no anything support. But I’ll still have fun, and I’ll still be drifting, and I’ll still be teaching people and giving them the awesome gift of learning how to drift too. That’s all good enough for me. That’s what makes me happy. I wonder if quitting the competitions will keep me happy? I still love the challenge of courses that mostly only competetions can bring.

Nadine’s grandfather’s funeral was last week. It was the most touching funeral I’ve ever been to. Not because of how the ceremony went… but because I understood how much of a loss the entire world had suffered because of his passing. He was easily one of the best men I’ve ever met… and I think it’s because of my age that I can fully realize and appreciate that now. My grandparents passed away when I was young… my grandmother passed away when I was in elementary school… my grandfather passed away when I was a senior in high school. My great grandmother passed away a few years ago. I guess when I talk about age, I mean in a sense of maturity and awareness. I’m hoping that the medical bills didn’t end up being too high… I’d be willing to give my RS-R prize event winnings to Nadine’s grandmother to help pay it off. Nadine was soooo strong throughout the whole ordeal. I’m so proud of her and I’m glad to know that when times are tough and the people around her are weak, she will be the crutch that everybody can lean on.

Anyway. RS-R Chicago!
As you might remember, the KAAZ car was sitting around with a blown engine… I couldn’t compete in that. So Ron, offered me his car… you might have seen the car before… it has a lot of history. Anyway, Ron did me a HUGE favor and put in a lot of work and money so that I could drive the car. He installed a cage… installed some cams… did some tuning, etc… all at the last minute. Ron is such a cool guy… he’s done so much for me this year. I haven’t even known him for very long yet he’s come through for me like I’m an old friend, and I really appreciate that.

Nadine was at home taking care of her grandfather who was in the critical care unit at the hospital. We decided it was best for her to stay home because I wouldn’t forgive myself if something happened while she was half way across the country. So I flew in early early Saturday morning by myself. It was a really strange experience flying into an unfamiliar city/state all by myself… renting a car… and then finding my way to the track so that I can wrench on the car by myself. I was lucky that I have a friend Rob in Chicago… he is a very nice guy, and I was glad that I was able to call him to get directions on how to get to the track, and what to order from White Castle. Haha! If you’ve ever wondered what White Castle sliders taste like… you don’t have to travel far far away to taste it. Just go to your local grocery store and buy a box from the freezer section. They taste EXACTLY the same… except the bread doesn’t get hard when it gets cold.

ANYWAY… after finding grabbing a bite to eat and finding a Walmart to buy some supplies, I headed over to the track… The reason why I flew in a day before the event was because I had to work on Ron’s car and make some changes before it was ready for competition. We forgot to put the rocker arm stoppers in, so that was one thing… the other thing was changing the B&M short shifter that was in there… that thing was so hard to shift, I was constantly mis-shifting. That’s not a good thing when you are coming into a corner really fast and you need to downshift to keep from going too wide. When I pulled up, I met some of the local guys, who were awesome, by the way. Really friendly people… I had so many people offer me their help and even people who kept me company while I was working on the car. Rob was super generous and offered to change my shifter for me while I was installing the rocker arm stoppers. Which was a HUMONGOUS help, since changing that shifter is rediculous, and it would have taken me another hour or so to finish working on my car in the dark. Thanks Rob! To my surprise, RS-R was there… with FOUR cars!!! They were busy working on the cars too… can you imagine? That’s A LOT of cars to get into good running condition when they all just came from Japan. The sun began to set as we finished up. Jerry, Dai, and I were in the same hotel, so we drove over to the hotel to check in and clean up. Ron flew in late that night also.

So the next day was pretty cool… there weren’t many people at the competition, and it seemed a lot more like we were there just having fun and hanging out in a new place. I was AMAZED at the talent I saw in Chicago… I was thinking that it would probably be like our first drift day competition in LA, being that this was one of the few drift events that they’ve ever had. I was wrong!! They were all very good and maybe a year, they can be as good as the guys in LA… it was awesome seeing that… and it was awesome seeing how closely knit they were… it pretty much reminded me of how things were for me a couple years ago. It was nice. I was able to sit with some of the drivers and go for a ride… which is always fun. The part I loved best was that most of those guys never had instruction from people who have been doing it longer… so I was totally honored to introduce them to proper line and help them to get better. I sat with Rob and was impressed… he did really well in such a difficult car – a Miata. After I rode with him, I told Ken and Dai “see the black turbo miata? He’s going to the finals!” and he did. He got 1st place! Congrats Rob!

As for our competition, I was driving the car pretty much for the first time. Since the last time I drove it, it had a new engine, a new turbo, new tuning, a cage, new shifter, cams… but the interesting part was that the pilot bearing decided to take a crap on us. It didn’t seem to bother me while I was kicking the clutch, but it was horrible trying to shift in a straight line and mid-drift. The powerband always dropped off when I missed the shift, and it really affected my entry speed. We went out for our introduction runs… Ken went out and played with the wall… oops. He hit pretty hard and wrecked his front tie rod, wheel, fender, and bumper. I went out and did my introduction run really quick and then came back to help Ken out with his car… he was frantic and went out looking for tie rods and stuff. Turns out that the generous guys at Tiger Racing crashed too… and donated their parts to Ken. Gushi san and I went to work and swapped all of Ken’s bad parts in a really short time. Then we went out for qualifying round!

I qualified 4th, and I found out that in the first round of tandem… it was me and Taka. Oh great. Somehow, I pulled through and won the round. For some reason, although I wasn’t making awesome runs, I was super consistent. Maybe that got it for me. In the next round, it was me and Hiroo. Oh great! Hiroo is always super super good at tandem… very consistent and very aggressive (no matter what kind of car he is driving against). In our first two runs, we both made mistakes, and we had to go into sudden death. The next round, for some reason Hiroo wasn’t able to initiate into the first corner, and I won the round.

As I was running, I was watching to see who I would be paired up with for the final round… Ken went out against Dai… and beat him, and put him into 3rd place. Holy crap! I realized that it would be Ken, Dai, and me on the podium together! It’s been ages since I was last on the podium, and I didn’t even care about that… it was the fact that we were all good friends. I was so excited to run in the finals against Ken… in the past 4 years of me drifting, I’ve never had that chance, and it made me not care how it ended up. I just realized… a year or so ago, Ken, Dai, and I would always be drifting together on Gran Turismo 3 at my house. How geeky is that! Haha! ANYWAYS… Ken and I went out and had even runs… sudden death. The next time I went out, I went out way too wide and missed the clipping point… my line ended up to be really bad, and Ken got a lot of distance on me. Ken was right on my ass when I was leading… that didn’t help either.

I ended up placing 2nd with Ken and Dai beside me. It was a lot of fun, but in the back of my mind was always Nadine and her grandfather. I wished I could fly out that night
but I was way too tired and it was a long flight. I went to dinner with Ken and his family to celebrate, then hung out with Dai and Ron for a little bit and went to bed early so that I could catch my early flight in the morning. He ended up passing away while I was in the air flying back… Nadine was with him.

Nadine’s grandfather passed away while I was rushing home from Chicago… R.I.P. Mr. Edwards. You are one of the greatest people I will ever meet. I looked up to you in many ways, and the world is a lesser place without you. It was an honor to know you.

JDM Option DVD vol.6 has been out for over a week… the one that has coverage from the California Speedway D1 Drivers Search… and I haven’t seen it. It’s making me crazy. I want to drift.

I placed 2nd at the RS-R Drift Festival at Chicago a couple weekends ago! I’ll post up a recap soon.

Hey guys, sorry for the really late update. Life is so busy!

A quick recap of Drift Association’s second annual drifting competition (I think they called it DC 2). The Formula D competitors weren’t allowed to compete, so that we could make this more of a beginner style competition… but the cool thing was, we were allowed to judge! This was an AWESOME experience, because it really gave me some great insight on competition. All of the judges had to pair up with another judge so that we can save time on vote totalling at the end of each round. I paired up with Ken Gushi, and that was pretty cool because for the most part, we were scoring the same amount of points for each person anyways. In the beginning Ken and I had to decide how to judge… should we judge relative to the skill level in the competitors that day, or should we judge as the D1 judges would judge us in Formula D or D1? Ken and I thought it would be good for the competitors if we judged them the way we were judged. 0 to 5 points… 5 being a pro level run and 0 if there is a spin. The most consistent guys out there were the ones that ended up placing 1st, 2nd, and 3rd. These guys ALL scored 4s all the way across our scoring sheets throughout the day. Hiro secured his 1st place position in the final round, when he drove his heart out on one of his runs… Ken and I scored him a 5. Quoc and Alex were both ultra consistent and scored 4s on their final runs. They placed 2nd and 3rd.

The day was long but I had so much fun. It was also my first day to drive the KAAZ car. It wasn’t yet tuned, and there wasn’t an alignment on the car, so instead of learning how to drive the car, I was pretty much just making sure that nothing would break when I drove it for Formula D.

Anyway, Sonoma for Formula D Round 3 was pretty interesting. It was the first time I’ve ever competed along side my friend Barry Wong… my new teammate for Team KAAZ! This was our first competition as Team KAAZ, and I think that we figured out a lot of things… like what it takes to support a 2 car/driver team, and that teamwork does wonders. Before the competition, the car was tuned. We had so many problems tuning the car because the car kept overheating… It has a bad radiator setup. So the tuner had to keep letting the car cool down before he could continue tuning. Anyway, in the end, he didn’t have enough time to finish the tuning because of the overheating problem. So the map wasn’t perfect… but it was good enough to run. The car makes 270 horsepower to the wheels at 1.2 bar of boost, but doesn’t start making power until 4300 rpms. Eeek! I’ve never driven a car like that before (except for JDM Rice 1). I didn’t know how I would do in the competition while trying to figure out the new car.

On Saturday, we had a couple hours of practice time on the track. I had a lot of car problems… the intercooler piping busting off, the car overheating… and one of my biggest fears – the course was wack. AND it had a high speed 3rd gear entry into turn 1 with a very low speed exit. The huge boost lag in the car would really challenge me at that corner. Practice session started and I was all over the place… going off course, spinning, putting the car where it shouldn’t have been… It’s really strange what a competition will do to you. All day we were pairing up with whoever we happened to be next to in line… sometimes the person in front of you spun, and you got a screwed up practice run, or sometimes you spun, and you screwed it up for the person following. All day I kept messing up… I couldn’t get the first corner right! I think it might have been the pressure combined with the high speed entry of that first corner. Towards the end of the day, Barry and I talked and started giving each other advice, when we realized that we both see things the same way. So we started doing our practice runs with each other only. You have no idea how much it helped!!! Barry would give me advice when he was following me, and I gave him advice when I was following him… it was awesome, and we started to get it… and we started to pull off successful runs at the end of the day. This was so important, because once we were able to finish the course without spinning out, we were able to focus on certain parts of the run and clean them up for the competition the next day. Our method of attack was doing a feint… drifting away from the corner and then transitioning our drift into the corner… This is always hard for me, I don’t know why… but I was getting consistent, and as I transitioned into the corner, I was practicing using the entire track… and getting up close to the cones and dirt area.

Sunday came around, and I was pretty happy… Saturday I was worrying that I wouldn’t have the course figured out by competition time, but because of Barry’s help, I knew I wasn’t THAT far off. Practice began and I started to get comfortable with my speed and initiation… so I tried to go faster and earlier. Qualifying session rolls around and Utsumi does some demo runs to show us what he’s looking for. Utsumi has a really unique style… He has great control of the car and can go into the corner with very low angle and very high speeds. For some reason though, I disagree with the line that he takes and suggests at every event. Anyway, that is something I’ve been struggling with for the past year or so and can have it’s own journal entry. Anyway, we start our practice runs… I said to myself… okay… I’m going to try something new (a stupid thing to do on a qualifying run) and initiate EARLIER… First run, I initiated early, and it felt pretty good. It felt like I was driving at 70%… That was the practice run, and I felt confident… next run, it was on, and I decided to drive closer to like 85%. I initiated even earlier and I decided to get close to the tire barrier at my initiation point for style points… I got pretty danged close… as I got near I said to myself “oooh, this is going to be a close one…” I made it past the barrier and came in towards the first corner, except this time I got back onto the throttle a lot earlier… I came around approaching turn 2… and I decided to clean up my line… I used the throttle to tighten it up at the last minute to make a nice late apex, sending me out along the wall, just like I would while grip driving (I still think that racing line is the proper drifting line). It felt really good and I thought I would do pretty well in the qualifications.

Okay… this took me long enough to write… I’ll finish up the story next week, along with videos and some details from last weekend’s D1 Grand Prix US drivers search.

Sorry I haven’t been updating my journal lately. I’ve been SUPER busy getting my car ready for Atlanta Georgia. Anyways, to get you up to speed, I wasn’t planning on going to Atlanta… then all of the sudden, Hot Import Nights and Hot Wheels decided that they wanted to sponsor me for transportation! I couldn’t pass this up, of course and I started getting my car into good running shape for the event.

So the first thing I needed to do was get a cage. And my favorite friend in the entire world, Richard (JDM Rice) was such a sweety (:-*) and let me take out his and put it in my car. That wasn’t very fun, especially since all but 2 of the 20 bolts on the car were STRIPPED. And when I say stripped, I don’t mean you take em off and you say… great – they’re stripped. Because these didn’t even come off. The nuts would just spin in place. Good thing Marc was there the whole afternoon to help me take them off… We resorted to using brute force and we took hammers and broke the bolts off at the nut. Which made us bloody, sweaty, and tired. A couple days later we spend an entire night taking out all my old interior and putting in the new cage, then putting in my new seat.

Other than that, I changed my oil, my LSD oil, looked for leaks… replaced a power steering line, flushed my coolant, and then and made sure all my fluids were topped off. My intercooler has a big a** crack in it from the accident… but, since I didn’t have the time or money (doesn’t get any better than that), I couldn’t replace it… I just planned on competing with the huge boost leak. To make my car look a little better, Jerry from Pacific Rim and Clay from Autolink helped me make some bling stickers for the car… And PJ Bonafacio painted my aero bumper that I’ve had sitting in my garage for the last year or so (I’m lazy).

So anyway, we get to Atlanta to visit Nadine’s grandma… she was sooo nice, and she took us sight-seeing to all of her favorite places. It was awesome, and I wasn’t missing ghetto LA for a minute. At first, I thought that I was gonna get lynched or tar and feathered, but I realized that we were safe when I found out there were 2 asian restaurants in town (imagine that!).

The next day started, and I wasn’t driving very well. In fact, I went way too hot into my first lap and I went straight into the rocks just outside of turn 1. The car was okay, but my wheels got all scratched up from the rocks (I like to refer to it as custom sand-blasting). My lip spoiler flew off and it’s funny, because the crowd loved seeing body parts fly off. They thought it was awesome when I was heading back towards the pit area, and I stopped in front of them to pick it up off the ground. No! You can’t have my lip spoiler!!! Anyway, my problem was I knew everything that I should have been doing… but it seemed like I wasn’t listening to myself. I was taking horrible line into turn 1 over and over and over again… at least I was consistent! Haha! Qualifying round came around and my line was a little better but not much… and still almost mirror image of what I was doing the entire time during practice. I qualified as one of the top 16 drivers, so I went on to the next round. Again, I did the same thing as I was doing all weekend, and it really messed me up while I was doing tandem with Hiroo… my entry style into turn 1 was horrible, and it made me fall way behind… I need a lot of practice when it comes to tandem… you’d think that you just go, but when youre drifting tandem, you’re in a whole other world of drifting. There’s a lot of strategy involved, a lot of adjustments, and change of attack that you just don’t get when you’re drifting alone. Hopefully I will get to have some more practice at it in the near future.

Needless to say, my driving wasn’t very good, but I had a GREAT time fooling around with the other drivers in the pit area. We’re all great buddies and I’m happy that our drifting culture is so good that we can totally have fun and goof around when we are all there to compete with each other. Thank you Nadine, Alex, and Marc for going with me… you guys helped out SO MUCH and there’s no way I would have had a good time or even felt right competing without you guys there with me. I’d have it no other way… thanks for all the support! And THANK YOU to Hot Wheels and Hot Import Nights for sponsoring me transportation, because without your help I’d never be able to even fathom going across the country and drift on the other side of the country! Thanks to all the GREAT people in Georgia who came out to watch us all drift! You were all so nice and great people… thanks for coming up to say hi to me and making me feel important! Team Hevnz, thank you so much for cheering me on and taking the time out to make a sign for me even though I sucked hardcore!

Here’s a link to the gallery from the trip… as you can tell, there aren’t a whole lot of driving pictures… I wonder why?
http://www.sileightymania.com/photosvideo/formulad_round1/