Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

Trip Stats

...

This was the first day we decided to enhance our racing strategy by adding in battery State of Charge (and thereby range) estimation in order to optimize where we would charge and stay during the day, and give ops a heads up for where we were planning on staying for the night, instead of scrambling to figure that out. It turns out that Karl's initial projection at the start of the day was accurate to about 10 km, and then his updated projection at the stage checkpoint was accurate to about 5 km.

Leaving Craters of the Moon was a nightmare, because Onda Solare stopped immediately, right we turned onto a major road, at the base of a hill. Illinois and Georgia Tech were behind us, and somehow, Onda Solare didn't pick up any penalties there for impeding solar cars behind them. We stopped there for a good 2 minutes while the officials figured out how to route us around them, considering there was oncoming traffic and there was no passing lane. As a result, we picked up a 1 minute penalty there for pushing the car in order to get it started.

We then immediately proceeded to pick up our second 1 minute penalty for pushing the car on the left turn onto the major road, since our lead vehicle stopped right at the crest of the hill.

There were some radio issues with our handheld radio set, as Minnesota's trailer attempted to pass us, which we later learned was due to their passenger getting shocked by HV as they were readjusting Telemetry. They would be stuck there until later the next day, as they resolved that issue.

We made it to the checkpoint with no major issues. Karl raced into the Walmart in order to charge his laptop, because the Chase car was noticing that when plugging in a 12V inverter, it would cause issues with the CB radio that was in the car, and so that was something that we wished to avoid doing if possible.

...