Or at least the design is old school...
In truth the tshirt was created very recently for the '13 edition of the Mint 400, the largest offroad race in the US. The designer/artist who made up the shirt is one Rory Ward who is a huge fan of old school offroad racing and competes in the vintage class in NORRA events. As you can tell by the artwork he is also a big fan of Dave Deal and what I would call a 1960's vibe of vehicle artwork.
Rory Ward did the design work for the original Team Xterra Racing tshirt that I worked up and was selling a few years ago. I will have to see if I can track down a photo of one and/or the original design artwork which I have framed in my basement. Rory does excellent work and with this Mint 400 tshirt he has gone back and included a drawing of a classic Nissan Hardbody which was typically run by the Mears boys back in the mid-80s. Really cool to see an oldschool Nissan on a tshirt like this and for only $10 it would make a great stocking stuffer for any Nissan fan!
Mint 400 Nissan Tshirt...
Rory Ward's Racer's Only website...
Friday, November 28, 2014
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Mike Johnson--Not Running Dakar Due to Surgery
Mr. Mike Johnson of Drivers, Inc., a collection of professional drivers (inclusive of Paul Dallenbach, Rhys Millen and Greg Tracy among others) specializing in meeting the needs of the commercial, television and motion picture industries took Baja 1000 and Baja 500 victories in his class 10 buggie in '14. Along with these victories came the winning of a free entry into the 2015 edition of the Dakar.
Unfortunately a brief email exchange has revealed that he will not be able to take advantage of this opportunity. Due to an impending shoulder injury requiring surgery and extensive recovery time and Johnson will not be entered in the 2015 Dakar.
He is however looking to the future in regards to the international exposure that the Dakar could bring both himself and his sponsors:
"My tire sponsor (Radar Tires) still really wants to do it so we may try to put a program together for 2016. I think it's a great thing what Roger Norman, SCORE and the Dakar guys are doing to get the two series together, it will only help strengthen each series both in outside interest (fans) as well as sponsors & TV worldwide."
One last item of note--the Dakar organizers do not allow you to carry over a free entry win from one year to the next so unfortunately Johnson will have to go back out and with the free entry again in '15 if he or Radar Tires or others are not going to pay for the entry fee out of pocket. Its a use it or lose it proposition. A shame really but likely an appropriate one designed to encourage entries to come to the event rather than just leave it out there as an idea to always hold in your back pocket for when the "time is right".
Thanks to Mike for the brief conservation and make a quick recovery!
Unfortunately a brief email exchange has revealed that he will not be able to take advantage of this opportunity. Due to an impending shoulder injury requiring surgery and extensive recovery time and Johnson will not be entered in the 2015 Dakar.
He is however looking to the future in regards to the international exposure that the Dakar could bring both himself and his sponsors:
"My tire sponsor (Radar Tires) still really wants to do it so we may try to put a program together for 2016. I think it's a great thing what Roger Norman, SCORE and the Dakar guys are doing to get the two series together, it will only help strengthen each series both in outside interest (fans) as well as sponsors & TV worldwide."
Thanks to Mike for the brief conservation and make a quick recovery!
Labels:
Baja,
class 10,
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drivers inc.,
film,
mike johnson,
movie,
race,
radar tires,
short course,
stunt,
tv
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Global RallyCross and Lucas Oil Offroad Racing Series 11/15-11/16 TV Ratings
Neither show fared that well, though the LOORRS show was no worse than its typical ratings. GRC's 0.3 rating ties for its worst of the year and shortest of its brief existence. This will wrap up GRC's programing for the year I would imagine and so I'll recap their ratings for their events below, prior to the weekend's full ratings. Their high for the year was a 0.5, equating to 578,000 households and some 636,000 actual viewers and the low was a 0.3, equating to 350,000 and 382,000 viewers. Overall this puts Global RallyCross a bit behind the Lucas Oil Off Road Racing Series shows as we will recap in the future. Of note is the recent F1 ratings on NBC for the Brazil event which grabbed a 0.5 rating and two weeks prior a 0.7 rating for the USGP in Texas. NBC paid $3 Million to acquire the rights to F1 in the US (prior to any production, talent, coverage costs), so to have LOORRS and GRC somewhat equaling those ratings with what is essentially a paid advertisement, costing the networks nothing, both can be viewed as being successful on their own terms. Though when you compare the measly $3 million paid for F1 to the $2.4 billion Fox paid for NASCAR (not completely an apples to apples comparison but you get the idea) you understand how far behind in the Q ratings sports like F1, RallyCross or short course are from NAPCAR.
Global RallyCross 2015 Ratings:
5/24--0.4
6/22--0.3
7/20--0.5
7/26--0.3
8/03--0.3
9/20--0.5
9/21--0.3
NFL: Eagles-Packers (84%) |
11/16
|
Fox
|
4:25-7:30pm
|
17.1
|
"Sunday Night Football": Patriots-Colts |
11/16
|
NBC
|
8:30-11:15pm
|
13.6
|
NFL: (singleheader) |
11/16
|
CBS
|
1:00-4:05pm
|
11.7
|
NFL: (regional) |
11/16
|
Fox
|
1:00-4:15pm
|
10.1
|
College Football: Mississippi State-Alabama |
11/15
|
CBS
|
3:30-7:15pm
|
6.6
|
College Football: Florida State-Miami |
11/15
|
ABC
|
8:00-11:45pm
|
6.1
|
"Football Night in America" |
11/16
|
NBC
|
7:30-8:15pm
|
5.4
|
College Football: Ohio State-Minnesota |
11/15
|
ABC
|
12:00-3:30pm
|
4.3
|
"Fox NFL Sunday" |
11/16
|
Fox
|
12:00-1:00pm
|
3.5
|
"The NFL Today" |
11/16
|
CBS
|
12:00-1:00pm
|
2.8
|
College Football: Nebraska-Minnesota |
11/15
|
ABC
|
3:30-7:15pm
|
2.3
|
College Football: Northwestern-Notre Dame |
11/15
|
NBC
|
3:30-8:00pm
|
2.0
|
"Courage in Sports" |
11/16
|
CBS
|
5:00-6:00pm
|
1.5
|
"College Football Today" |
11/15
|
CBS
|
3:00-3:30pm
|
1.0
|
College Football: Texas-Oklahoma State |
11/15
|
Fox
|
7:30-11:00pm
|
1.0
|
College Football: Washington-Arizona |
11/15
|
Fox
|
3:30-7:15pm
|
0.9
|
ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating: Russia |
11/16
|
NBC
|
4:00-6:00pm
|
0.9
|
"Fox College Saturday" |
11/15
|
Fox
|
3:00-3:30pm
|
0.5
|
Ironman World Championship |
11/15
|
NBC
|
1:30-3:00pm
|
0.5
|
"Notre Dame Football Pre-Game" |
11/15
|
NBC
|
3:00-3:30pm
|
0.5
|
Lucas Oil Off Road Racing |
11/15
|
CBS
|
1:00-2:00pm
|
0.4
|
"College Football's Open Season: Vanderbilt" |
11/15
|
CBS
|
2:00-2:30pm
|
0.4
|
"College Football's Open Season: Arkansas" |
11/15
|
CBS
|
2:30-3:00pm
|
0.4
|
"World of X Games: ASP Surfing" |
11/16
|
ABC
|
5:00-6:00pm
|
0.4
|
"The Grantland Basketball Hour" |
11/16
|
ABC
|
4:00-5:00pm
|
0.3
|
Global Rallycross: Las Vegas |
11/16
|
NBC
|
1:30-3:00pm
|
0.3
|
Spartan Race: Vermont |
11/16
|
NBC
|
3:00-4:00pm
|
0.3
|
Article on UTVs Participating in Rally Racing...
I interviewed Idaho resident Carl Marcum to talk about his use of a Polaris RZR as a stage rally vehicle and talk about the brief history and acceptance of UTVs in stage rally racing in North America in general. The page has gotten 77 likes on Facebook, 3 tweets on Twitter and 6 thumbs up on Google+ so at least its gotten its message out there a little bit! Thanks to Carl for the interview and thanks to ATV.com for publishing it!
The Evolution of UTVs in Rally Racing...
Labels:
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carl marcum,
desert,
freelance,
nasa,
polaris,
quad,
racing,
rally,
rally america,
rzr,
utv
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Most Interesting Entry at This Year's Baja 1000
I picked the Quigley 4x4 Van as the 2013 "winner" of this title and many seemed to agree. They DNF'd and never saw the end of the race but certainly put in a solid effort before returning stateside.
This year I am "awarding" (?) this title to an entry just showing up on the entry list.

For '14 Hanawa is coming to Baja with a completely new vehicle of his own design and build (from what I can decipher from the translated Japanese on his Facebook page). He also lists it as his Baja/Dakar vehicle so maybe we'll see it in South America in a few months as well? It certainly looks the Dakar part being VERY small looking with a non-existent rear end, and a wholly enclosed shell with dual spares almost completely covered.


It certainly looks like a foreign designed and built vehicle with an emphasis on a small size and light weight. How its rather spindly looking suspension and steering holds up to the roughness of Baja will soon be seen. I'll be rooting for him but having my doubts as to its ability to stay in one piece. I would have expected that Hanawa has enough Baja experience to know what he is asking of his vehicle and have designed it accordingly--so what do I know? My vehicle broke down every day I raced it the 2014 NORRA event, so clearly I don't have the answer.

As always for me, seeing something besides a Geiser Trophy Truck powered by some massive Cheby crate motor is the more captivating portion of this race. I'm in the minority but I'm more of an underdog, root for the guy who is likely to lose, sort of person. With someone like Hanawa and his Japanese engined, Dakar style buggie, some eyes might at least be pulled away from the carbon copy lineup one usually sees...if only for a moment.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014
A Bit of Baja Home With Me
So some six months later I've finally begun to seriously take apart the NISMOStuff Frontier and head towards preparing it for 2015. As I begin unbolting some steering and suspension components I notice that there sure appears to be a great deal of sand and silt packed into my frame. Then I proceed to unbolt the skidplates and a sheet of powdery silt comes raining down on my garage floor. Vacuuming up good deal of the light tan talcum like sand (?) brings me back to digging out the truck in the Mexican heat, dozens of miles from...well...nowhere. Broken parts, broken trailer, broken van, lost teammates, etc....it all comes back.
Monday, November 10, 2014
Someone At Playmobil Is Cool...
Initially saw this little gem within ADV Moto magazine, which, if you aren't reading on a regular basis, makes you a major sap. It was within their Nov/Dec issue and listed as one of their holiday gift recommendations. I'm still a fan of toys of all kinds be they Legos or otherwise and this one will also go on my wish list.
Playmobil has made some cool stuff in the recent past--a dirt bike and accompanying rider that my son has for one, providing a great deal of entertainment during my times playing with the kids. This one is even more niche specific as I think the number of toys presenting an ADV bike with full panniers (with world traveling stickers even!) and Dakar style windscreen are between few and zero.

Playmobil ADV Motorcycle Link...
Sunday, November 9, 2014
Book Review(s): Surely You're Joking Mr. Feynman & What Do You Care What Other People Think?
I'm reviewing these two works together as "What Do You Care" is essentially an extension of "Surely You're Joking". Both are written in the same style and contain the same themes.
If you're not familiar with Richard Feynman a brief primer on him is as follows--a NYC born and bread theoretical physicist he was a major participant in the Manhattan project and went on to win the Nobel prize along with rubbing shoulders as an intellectual equal with Einstein, Oppenheimer, Bethe, Bohr and others. He has become well known in popular culture due to his participation in the Challenger disaster investigation as well as his decidedly non-traditional scientist personality.
The books are all told in first person by Feynman himself as he recounts in numerous short vignettes various occurrences in his life that shed light on his various viewpoints. In truth all these viewpoints all support his main viewpoint--which is that in virtually all circumstances the perceived correct way to do things is wrong and that people do not often enough question authority or make their own path. In this aspect the title the second work "What Do You Care What Other People Think?" more closely sums up the overarching themes than anything else.
I also found "What Do You Care" to be the stronger of the two works. The short vignettes become largely forgettable after a while as they skip from one moment in his life to the next. You get an overall feeling as to his irreverence and brilliance (sometimes wandering into inflated egotism) but they don't carry a great deal of weight as they involve mundane things like how he picked up on various women or played the bongos in plays or learned to pick locks/crack safes--all interesting occurrences in their own right but not anything that stays with you emotionally besides your realization that Mr. Feynman was a really unique character, memorable for reasons besides just his massive intelligence and impact on our understanding of the fundamental functioning of the universe.
"What Do You Care" contains an extended section on Feynman's involvement with the Challenger investigation and this is the most valuable part of the books. Here we see Feynman at his best--not dealing with trivial matters but in focusing his abilities and stubbornness at a single complex issue. he cuts through the bureaucracy and politics involved in finding the blame for its catastrophic failure. It can be legitimately be said that if he wasn't involved in the investigation that its cause would likely have gone unpublished.
If I had one of the two to recommend it would then be "What Do You Care" though both are worth consuming for their the mindset that they convey--question everything, make your own path and don't give a fuck what anyone else thinks.

The books are all told in first person by Feynman himself as he recounts in numerous short vignettes various occurrences in his life that shed light on his various viewpoints. In truth all these viewpoints all support his main viewpoint--which is that in virtually all circumstances the perceived correct way to do things is wrong and that people do not often enough question authority or make their own path. In this aspect the title the second work "What Do You Care What Other People Think?" more closely sums up the overarching themes than anything else.
I also found "What Do You Care" to be the stronger of the two works. The short vignettes become largely forgettable after a while as they skip from one moment in his life to the next. You get an overall feeling as to his irreverence and brilliance (sometimes wandering into inflated egotism) but they don't carry a great deal of weight as they involve mundane things like how he picked up on various women or played the bongos in plays or learned to pick locks/crack safes--all interesting occurrences in their own right but not anything that stays with you emotionally besides your realization that Mr. Feynman was a really unique character, memorable for reasons besides just his massive intelligence and impact on our understanding of the fundamental functioning of the universe.
"What Do You Care" contains an extended section on Feynman's involvement with the Challenger investigation and this is the most valuable part of the books. Here we see Feynman at his best--not dealing with trivial matters but in focusing his abilities and stubbornness at a single complex issue. he cuts through the bureaucracy and politics involved in finding the blame for its catastrophic failure. It can be legitimately be said that if he wasn't involved in the investigation that its cause would likely have gone unpublished.
If I had one of the two to recommend it would then be "What Do You Care" though both are worth consuming for their the mindset that they convey--question everything, make your own path and don't give a fuck what anyone else thinks.
Thursday, November 6, 2014
A Nissan Frontier Returning to the Baja 1000 Next Weekend!


Los Angeles resident Glen Tanizawa has had this race in mind for a number of years now and has been transforming his Frontier into a SCORE compliant racer over the course of at least the past year with a significant amount of the work (of course) taking place in the last few months, weeks and days.








Wednesday, November 5, 2014
This?? Oh Nothing...Just a Fez From a Waffen SS Division Member...
This was within a private collection I visited in the recent past that brought to my attention the fact that there was an ever so nice connection between the Nazis and Muslims of Europe and the Mid-East in WWII.
This division of Bosnian Muslims was one of many efforts made between the Nazis and Muslims throughout Europe and the Mid-East to reach common goals--namely the extermination of those that they both found undesirable. Hell, even a Grand Mufti from Jerusalem was flown in to assist in the recruiting of Muslims into the Nazi ranks. They were known for their brutality and massacre of Serbs more than they were for their fighting excellence. No terrorists here...just your usual genocidal maniacs. And the skull?? Well its a real skull, just a prop though, not an actual dead Handzar SS Division Muslim...
This division of Bosnian Muslims was one of many efforts made between the Nazis and Muslims throughout Europe and the Mid-East to reach common goals--namely the extermination of those that they both found undesirable. Hell, even a Grand Mufti from Jerusalem was flown in to assist in the recruiting of Muslims into the Nazi ranks. They were known for their brutality and massacre of Serbs more than they were for their fighting excellence. No terrorists here...just your usual genocidal maniacs. And the skull?? Well its a real skull, just a prop though, not an actual dead Handzar SS Division Muslim...
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Dunkin Donuts Croissant Doughnut Review
First off they are $2.49 a piece and thus are some 2 1/2 times the cost of their regular donuts. Then there is the way they served it to me. It wasn't just tossed in the brown paper bag that normal donuts go into...noooooo...it gets individually placed in its own cardboard box with plastic window so that you can gaze upon its sugar ice covered surface until you eat it. I guess at the largely increased cost they are trying to make it seem like it is a premium product.
All in all it is a fair experience. The taste is good and a bit "greasier" than a doughnut with corresponding heaviness in the stomach and the same sweetness as a glazed version while retaining the buttery flavor of a croissant. The texture is closer to that of a croissant than that of a doughnut and pleasant. Bottom line?? Do you want to pay 2 1/2 times the cost of of your regular doughnut for what is largely similar experience except housed in a cardboard box?? I don't.
Monday, November 3, 2014
2016 Nissan Titan Cummins Diesel Spy Shots


With its full introduction only a few months away we are finally seeing what is likely a near production ready version of the coming diesel Titan being taken out on the road. While still heavily camouflaged at this point there are a number of items worth pointing out in these photos.

First we have the single exhaust pipe and a small one at that. Look at any heavy duty diesel truck and you will see a giant honking exhaust pipe hanging out the back to expend all those gases. Evidently one example of how a smaller turbo diesel will change things up is in the exhaust design. Lighter and in only a single outlet is different than a lot of the diesel trucks out there today.


We also see evidence in these photos of additional nods to fuel economy found on most modern trucks including the aero skirt at the very front of the truck. These have been viewed as major targets for curbs, rock and other debris typical of locations where fullsize trucks operate but have become fairly standard across the industry and one of the first things to be removed by many offroad oriented owners.

Lastly, size-wise the new Titan looks to have beefed up quite a bit compared to its prior version. Asian trucks (the Toyota Tundra and Titan) have always been viewed as being just slightly undersized compared to their American brethren--a 7/8ths size truck or the like. The crew-cab version here does not appear to lack for bulk or length with the passenger cab looking particularly cavernous. The windshield also looks more raked than its predecessor and should help the overall aero and diesel sipping nature of the vehicle.
Here's hoping we see more of this in less and less disguised versions in the period leading up to its full introduction in Detroit in January '15.
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