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I was very excited to leave for the 92nd Classic because this would be my very first time both attending and participating in the vent. We packed and left early Thursday to join the racer practice to get some more seat time on the bikes and scrub in nw race rubber. Luckily we were running late and found out that practice didn’t start until 2PM so there was ample amount of time to set up our infield area. Over the two rounds we figured out that 4 canopies, 3 chairs, 2 tables and 1 fridge was the perfect numbers to have a good pit area. After setup was finished we got ready for practice.
Making the infield a home away from home.
The first session out I can already feel my brakes being cooked and cooked some more. There absolutely no power or bite left in them especially for my braking before T3. I rolled back into the pits and made my way towards S&C to which they recommend me some performance friction pads as I wanted a good initial bite but a progressive feel for trail braking. Glad I did cause the pads worked very well with my setup. For the remainder of practice I just tried new brake markers, different gears for different part of the track and tried to stay a steady pace for the two races the next day.
The office was tough today with braking problems.
Friday Race:
Rain was forecast that evening but I didn’t think much of it but in retrospect we should’ve moved all our gear and lowered the canopies. I woke up to a flooded pit area where water was everywhere. One hour of cleanup and drying out meant missing morning practice – no biggie considering I had ample time the day before. I wondered the track watching others practice and jotting mental notes until it was my turn to race.
Formula 1:
As usual my nerves were building as I sat on pre-grid – maybe I should’ve gone out for practice that morning I thought to myself. The new lights went on and I will say after trial and error I think they nailed this on the head! I didn’t have the best of starts as I got ate up by everyone behind me, gridded 1C, something to work on. I made so many costly mistakes such as nearly hitting the wall coming out of 2 and forgetting my brake markers saw me finish 9th after the first lap. My poor performance saw me finish 10th by lap 2, I was in dire territories. I managed a close last round laptime of 1:27.990 before someone binned it and a restart was in order.
I thought to myself ‘Fuck you cant mess up this time again’ so i put my head down as we gridded back up on the line. As the 3 board turn to the number 2 everyone put their bike into gear and their heads down myself included. As soon as the 2nd or 3rd light came on someone on my row jumped the start and had no choice but to keep going. I stayed put wondering if anyone would follow in tow but the lights went out and off I went. 3rd position into T1 and held that into the back straight. Front runner ran on as I put on the brakes but still they weren’t providing the stopping I needed as I lose two positions on the inside as we make the run up the hill.
What happened next was almost instant. I shift into 3rd before I put on the brakes to tip it into 6, my line wide and arcing. It was near the apex I noticed in my peripheral a bike coming in tight and fast. This was it – I knew we were going to touch but when? Boom. His front end touched my rear hard enough I was forced to pick it up and rub wide. Our momentum carried us off track where another touch took place. I thought I could save it in the gravel but the front skidded and slid, making the bike catapult me over the bars. This is probably what flying feels like – well right before I face smashed into the gravel, my collarbone breaking instantly.
Video of the crash:
https://youtu.be/ASW4QUukC84
The impact tossed me onto my right side as I grabbed both my collarbone and left ankle. The corner worker ran to my aid where I informed him of my situation and asked him to pull off my helmet. With the sun beaming on my face I knew my weekend was over.
A trip to the ER revealed indeed a broken collarbone and bruised ligaments in my left ankle. A sling, soft cast, painkillers and some rest was what the doctor ordered. This is my first injury ever of this type so I am not familiar with the healing process but I can’t wait to start training again and making it back as soon as possible.
These weren’t the kind of bands I wanted to rock last weekend.
The difference in my right vs left cb area was apparent.
What else can ya do?
Looks better in photos.
I want to thank all corner workers for what they do and continue to do as well as the medical team on track! Without you and what you do we couldn’t do what we love to do!
Until next time!
Ian told me about your crash. Sucks man. Hopefully you get out of the novice class soon. Some of their lines are scary.
The PF pads rock. I've been using them since I started track days. I just installed the 13 compound Saturday on my GSXR. Once they break in, they're awesome.
Isaac LRRS/CCS #871 ECK Racing | Spears Enterprises | GMD Computrack Boston | Pine Motorparts/PBE Specialists | Woodcraft | Street & Competition | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
Bike: SV650, Bride of Frankenstein
Ah man, heal up quick! I'm hearing of too many breaking collar bones this season...
Roland Arsenault
LRRS and USCRA #763
2012, 2013 and 2015 Big Fish Small Pond Champion
"The 4 board is an upshift marker, not a brake marker"
some of the lines in NOV class are hairy indeed - unfortunate that a teammate of mine ended his race short on saturday due to an incident of slow racer meets faster racer.
i think sc had the carbon metallic .10 compounds which arent bad - much better than the hh sintered i had in there for sure
thank you!
it is indeed unsettling they filet my suit to get me out of it - ahhhhh
I liked your first race report better, heal up - we need MSG racing in the paddock.
Central Mass Powersports #123
1000rr, zx10r, rmz450, RE classic, r6, S4Rs, xr123, sv650(2), cr250 and a box truck that leaks power steering fluid.
Oh man.... Judging from that pic above, I hereby declare that your name is no longer Hung Phan.... you are now to known as Hanging Shoulder.
That sucks, dude. Heal up soon!
Last edited by OreoGaborio; 06-23-15 at 02:28 PM.
-Pete
NEMRR #81 - ECK Racing
Cyclesmith Track Days
Woodcraft | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
'03 Tuono | '06 SV650 | '04 CRF250X | '24 Aprilia Tuareg
Damn...that sucks! Heal up quick dude!!
-Christian LRRS/CCS HasBeen ECK Racing
2011 Pit Bike Race CHAMPION!
I feel your pain, quite literally.You'll be back soon!
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99 + 02 SV650 ex-race - 91 FJ1200 street - 03 KDX220R woods - 12 WR450F motard/ice
I don't know you, but I hope you heal soon man. Very unfortunate to be shut out due to circumstances outside your control.
Whenever I hear of collar bone fractures, I always wonder if a Leatt or one of the newer airvests would have helped. I have no idea though.
Isaac LRRS/CCS #871 ECK Racing | Spears Enterprises | GMD Computrack Boston | Pine Motorparts/PBE Specialists | Woodcraft | Street & Competition | MTag-Pirelli | OnTrack Media
Bike: SV650, Bride of Frankenstein
Correct, the Leatt system transfers load from your neck into your shoulders. They try to direct as much as possible into the muscle, avoiding your collar bone but there is only so much you can do before 'bottoming out' on the clavicle. See my crash from last year, no Leatt and my collar bone likely would have been fine but I doubt my neck would have been from that side loading... :shudder:
I don't think any two offs are the same. Too many variables to start second guessing what one type of gear would or would not have done.
Although I wear a Leatt. Worth the cost in my book.
thanks man!
the way i crashed, pretty much face dive into the gravel, at the bowl got me thinking bout an airvest suit or a leatt system, although i was under the impression the leatts are more of spinal than of collar area. either way i need a new suit/lid![]()
Well put. 2 riders with the same airbag vest or Leatt system could crash the same way but have different injuries. There's SO MANY variables. I use a Spidi Air Bag vest for track riding and I love it. Haven't deployed it yet. Fingers crossed.
SPIDI AIR BAG VEST
PS: Buy it from Riders Discount. You can get a complete system for sub $500.
Last edited by South of Heaven; 06-24-15 at 07:19 AM.
[SIGPIhttp://www.nestreetriders.com/forum/signaturepics/sigpic8737_4.gifC][/SIGPIC]
I'm no doctor but, FUCK! I'd want screws and plates to make sure it goes back together in proper alignment.
Normal is an illusion, what is normal to the spider is chaos to the fly.
How are you going to eat with chopsticks now!?! :-(