Check Your Dial
Over the weekend I witnessed a racer that lost his round because he did not check his dial.Dial was one second off.This racer was .001 and dead on as well.To say he was upset is an understatement.We all know that when we stage the car we buy the dial in.
This racer is very good and well seasoned.He always checks his dial in,but got a little distracted.Can happen to us all! Jeff Ross |
Re: Check Your Dial
Happened to Chad Rhodes at the Gators this year in Stock. They screwed up his very obvious 11.77 dial, and made it 11.17.
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Re: Check Your Dial
It happen to me this year at reading.look up and saw .86 on a 11.86 dial.didn't see it was a 10.86.was very luck when the guy in the other line went red.I was having a fuel problem in the first 3 Q-run and was little distracted.it doesn't take much.
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Re: Check Your Dial
That happend to me as well. Now I am vigalent on checking my dial. I really dont even like to do my burn out until I see the dial on the board. Its also real important to make your dial legable to the people working in the tower so they can see and put the correct dial into the computer. I have seen some that were barely readable.
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Re: Check Your Dial
I would like to post a small retort and I know I am opening myself up for criticism but that is Okay, the boss of the house has taught me how humble I need to be. Errors are made each and every day. In my early years I was lucky enough to work in the timing tower of a close by drag way. I made more than my share of mistakes. It only takes one miss-punch with one finger to totally miss a number. Put your self in their shoes and honestly say that you do not make a mistake. I tell ya what to do, sit down and write a email and see if you do it without any mistakes. As I wrote this reply, I had to retype 4 words and I ONLY made 1 mistake all of last year. HeHe. Give the guys a little credit but make sure you check the board 4 ya run.
reed |
Re: Check Your Dial
I started working last month at my home track (Quaker City). Usually announcing, but sometimes other duties. The way they do it (and the way Pittsburgh does it also), a person at the head of the lanes calls out car numbers for each pair during time trials, and car numbers and dial-ins during eliminations. Hopefully to help eliminate errors from the person in the tower in reading a slightly sloppy/small dial-in and/or car number. Seems to work pretty well. Not sure if other tracks do this or not.
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Re: Check Your Dial
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Re: Check Your Dial
A strange situation happened to me at a S/SS combo race a few years back. I was racing a super stock car that was about 2 seconds faster than me, but his dial was in wrong making him leave first. My tree is coming down and I see him leave which totally distracts me. I quickly look back at my tree, leave, go red by a ton, he wins. I argued that his dial should have never been accepted due to it being over his index, and that him unexpectedly leaving first would be a natural distraction to anyone in my situation. I was told I went red, so I lost. No rerun. I was not happy about it, but I did understand and went home.
Now I check both dails before I stage. |
Re: Check Your Dial
I'd like tracks to have a reader board where your dial shows up close to the start line. Us old guys sometime have a hard time making out the digits from 1/4 mile away and a burnt out light or two on the reader board can make things tough. That said, I probably only check my dial about 50% of the time so I'm as much to blame if I get bit.
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Re: Check Your Dial
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