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2008 Montana 500
Nan Robison
(From Tweetybird's eye)
Wow!!!! If the 2007 Montana 500 blew in with gale force winds,
the 2008 came in on rays of sunshine. The weather was bright
and shiny the whole time. It rained one night, but most of us slept
through it.
Mike, Jillian, Mark, Janice and I all traveled from Spokane
together. Dave and Joe Swanson took a different track and rode off
on motorcycles. It was a leisurely trip for us this year, as
Thompson Fall is more in our neck of the woods so we didn't have to
leave days in advance. We had almost arrived in Thompson
Falls, having reached the top of the pass. We pulled into the
lay by at the top of the pass to stretch our legs and take a look at
the view. We were enjoying the beauty and quiet of the mountain,
when the stillness was shattered by the roar of an un-muffled
model T. Up the road came Garrett Green and Sonny Bishop.
They were road testing their cars, and as luck would have it, we
happened to be in the same place at the same time. Greetings
were exchanged and snowballs thrown. We all left together and
headed to town.
When we rolled into town we were met by other drivers
that had already arrived. As usual, tires were kicked and lies told
as we greeted drivers from past races.
We had 16 racers this year and an assortment of tour cars.
Coming back after a four-year absence was Brian "Red" Cress,
from Bismark, IL. It was great to have him back. He wins the
farthest traveled award. A newcomer this year, was John Carlin
from Graettinger, IA. He had a story to tell and hopefully I will
get a chance to spot light it in another publication. Colorado
Springs, CO saw the Coniff family, Steve, Joey, and friends.
Garrett Green and Sonny Bishop hailed from sunny California,
and the Montana contingency sported Doug Langel, Tony and
Janet Cerovski, and Mike Cuffe. Last but not least, Washington
offered Mike Robison, Jillian Caples, Mark Hutchinson, Rick and
Tom Carnegie, Ed Marshall, and myself. We had a variety of
tour cars also this year.
As we awaited inspection to begin, there was a flurry
over by Sonny's rig. Apparently on the way down the mountain,
he lost a rod. As is the nature of the 500 group, drivers
and crews were scrambling to come up with a way to repair his
car. Someone came up with a rod, but it was not the same size
as Sonny's. So, with bailing wire and butter (family joke-ask
me about it some time) they managed to jury-rig a rod that
would work in Sonny's car.
Inspection went off with out a hitch, and the evening
meeting saw the following places picked. 1-Garrett Green, 2-
Red Cress, 3-Joey Coniff, 4-Sonny Bishop, 5-Ed Marshall, 6-
Tony Cerovski, 7-John Carlin,
8-Jillian Caples, 9-Tom Carnegie, 10-Mark Hutchinson, 11-
Doug Langel, 12-Mike Robison, 13-Rick Carnegie, 14-Janet
Cerovski, 15-Nan Robison, 16-Mike Cuffe. Once again, we
were given our pre-race instructions, cautioned to use care and
common sense and off we went for the night.
Day one of the race dawned bright and sunny. Our first
leg was from Thompson Falls to the intersection of Highway 5,
39 miles. Tony never made it off the trailer. His car was just
not sounding right, so he opted to not race. This first leg proved
to be the nemesis of two other drivers. Red and Doug both
threw a rod. Ouch!!! The remainder of the legs were not fatal
until the 4th leg. Mike Robison's center main had been sounding
pretty rough and it gave up the ghost on that leg. He chose
not to destroy his engine, so he loaded his car on the trailer. I
was doing well, staying about 8th until the 5th leg. Tweetybird
was running smooth when suddenly she started missing. I
scrambled to test coils, and sure enough, one was gone. Now
my brothers and son are great at changing coils on the fly, but I
have not mastered that skill yet. (I am working on it though) I
didn't even have a coil on the seat with me, which I now understand
is standard procedure! I debated whether to stop and
change one out, or just limp along until the end of that leg. I
was running at about 35 mph, so I decided to just wait it out, as
I was almost at the finish of that leg. Ed and Jillian made some
time up on me, as I crawled in. I changed my coil at the stop
and was back in the race for the last leg.
The remainder of the day proved fairly uneventful for the rest of
the drivers. Joey Coniff's car was running fine, coming in almost
fourteen minutes ahead of the #2 car, Tom Carnegie. Tom was
followed by Garrett who was three seconds behind. Next was
Rick, with Sonny, Mark, Nan, Jillian, Janet, Ed, Mike Cuffe, John
and Mike R. John had just got his car going before the race, and
was still dialing it in. He improved with every leg.
Day two greeted us with more sunshine. With the cars going out in
reverse order, John headed up the line.
Joey continued to run well the first leg. Rick and Garrett stayed
steady, with Tom losing a few seconds. I gained about 5 seconds
on Sonny that leg, and every one else maintained their spots. Leg
eight proved to be the nemesis of Ed and Joey. Joey's timer
started acting up and he lost almost twenty minutes as he tried to
fix it. Ed had an oil issue and froze his engine. Rats!!!! Tom
gained some seconds on Garrett, and Sonny some on me. Rick
and the rest hung on . Garrett and Sonny picked up the pace on
leg nine with the rest following. Tom caught up on leg ten and
Sonny lost some ground I picked up few seconds on Garrett,
(how odd) with Jillian only a second behind Garrett's time. Janet,
Mike Cuffe and John maintained their positions. The day ended
with the fastest time for the day going to Tom, with Garrett second
(only 5 seconds behind) and Rick third. Sonny, myself, Jillian, Joey,
Janet, Mike Cuffe, John and Ed followed.
The start of day three again greeted us with sun. Tom took off
with Garrett in pursuit. Garrett only had to make up 5 seconds,
and he was on a mission! Rick only needed to maintain his position
to be in the top three, so he hunkered in. The rest of us could
only keep up, so we sat back to enjoy the sunshine. Garrett came
in on leg 12, 39 seconds ahead of Tom. He not only made up the
5 seconds, but gave himself a bit of a cushion! Tom ran well, but
just couldn't quite come up with the goods. Rick and the rest of
us didn't change much. The last leg saw Joey picking up some
time, and Garrett losing some, but not enough to count. Garrett,
Tom, and Rick were headed for the tear down, with Joey, Sonny
and myself on hold. There were no disqualifications and the 2008
Montana 500 became history with Garrett Green-1st, Tom-2nd Rick-3rd.
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