By now I was a bit eager to go racing for real. It seemed like there actually was a decent chance of putting together a real racing car out of what seemed destined for the shelf. So I decided it was time to retire the old, worn Egress body shell which had served so far and sort out a nice spray can job on a new body shell. Didn't have time to find somebody with better skills and tools who could do it for me, and I had thought I'd never spray paint any body shell again. Always hated it. However I did decide to try out Liquid Mask this time, it seemed like a pretty nice solution on those youtube videos. The thought was to try and re-use my old 1:12 color scheme in a simplified way.
It turned out way worse than I had hoped, mainly because of the mask sticking and 'reacting' with the paint in a weird way. Didn't seem to matter if I did the layers with less or more time in between them, and if they were thinner or thicker - I basically had to cut most stuff twice. But I covered the worst hiccups with decals..
We were now in the middle of the summer and a very hot July. My local club Mk Eskil arranged an open practice day during a weekend and this was probably the first ocassion on which I dared running the car pretty hard. There were still small niggles with one way bearing / main shaft outdrive in need of shimming, rear hubs (Madcap) and front steering knuckles (Hotshot / Manta Ray) which sometimes seemed like they were made out of fine cheese, but in general the car was in much better shape right now.
Lots of setup headache came from the fact that it's extremely difficult to find decent tuning springs for the hicaps - the hopup-tuning springs are slightly weird, the harder the springs are the longer they also are which makes it hard to set your ride height properly when going for harder springs. God knows how many times I changed pistons and oil and/or internal limiters instead..
It was probably here somehwere that I started getting lost setup-wise. From the car having been decent it just got slightly worse over time. I later realized that it was partly down to it wearing down the front tires quite heavily and making the low speed understeer more and more excessive, but it was also partly down to trying out things which didn't work well. Over the month I tried running with less rear toe in (standard Egress chassis), more rear toe in (replica chassis + SA hubs), longer wheelbase replica chassis (copy of what was on Jamies original car) with both more and less rear toe in, re-release hicap dampers etc...
When the Nordic Vintage Challenge was finally coming closer in September, I had pretty much rolled back most changes and was back where I started after putting on the front anti roll bar. It's good knowing what doesn't work but it didn't really get me anywhere

I had changed some minor things though;
* Schumacher ball ends in the front - I was so sick and tired of popping the small black Tamiya ball ends even in the slightest of hits. Simply not worth it
* Different steering. Not a fan of blue bling-bling stuff on a vintage car, but I did get more steering throw with the M01 (? I think) alu steering kit. Much needed
* Turnbuckles in the front end. The vintage purist in me simply had to give up, it's not practical to pop off the ball ends consistently for the smallest adjustment
* Trinity motor instead of the Orion (better punch, less boost-dependent)
* Wider front end - 2mm extra on each side
* Dremelled down the rear gearbox to allow for a 24T pinion (25T might be possible if you take away a bit more)
For a while I did consider putting on medium front shocks and using the outer suspension arm holes instead, but in the end I decided against it. The dampers are such an important part of the soul of the car to me - others might disagree, but I want to preserve the old feeling of the car.
Took a quick shot of the cars before going out to the track last Friday to start the free practice. All in all I have to say it ran pretty smoothly. Took TQ and won all three A-finals in the 4WD classic class. It wasn't a big field and there were some others running older cars than this, but still I was pretty quick in pace compared to the more modern cars. I know it would probably had been easier to "just" build myself a rere-Cat XLS or perhaps a standard re-re Egress, but it was still worth the extra effort. I loved driving it and just the feeling of finally running my own Works Egress was great. Above all, I was happy that it didn't break down one single heat all day.
I don't know If I'll ever going to drive it again, but if so it will probably be in the 'newer' 4WD category. It's slightly too good to be fighting old Cats only..
