11 October, 2008
Not sure how I ended up here!!
The past few weeks at the Houston MSR have been a bit of a blur. To be honest it has been fantastic, lots of driving (in karts) and the chance to create a racing program to my hearts desire. I have been entrusted with the strategic planning on the MSR Houston karting program for 2009 and beyond. It is a brand new kart circuit so there are not a lot of people set in their ways which gives me a good freedom to change things for the better of racing.
While I have been busy working on the karting project, there have been a lot of cool things happening around me. Last week I traveled to Texas World Speedway which is located in College Station, Texas (for you Brit's reading this, College Station is about as Texas as you can get). I had the change to meet an interesting gentleman who is the global director of a firm which is involved in international business. He also drives a fantastic Porsche GT3 RS which he took me for a tour of the TWS circuit before it promptly broke on the second lap... Only a $1,500 dollar pressure plate in the clutch. The fourth one he's done in the past year!
This week MSR Houston has been hoping. On Wednesday AJ Foyt's Indy car racing team arrived on the scene for a sponsor appreciate day and a test with their new driver, Vietor Miera. There were rumors Vietor might be going to Penske, but as it turns out Foyt was able to grab him. It was great fun to watch the VP's from their sponsor company ABC Supply company (a home building supply firm) having a go in a 700 horse power indy car. I am pretty sure none of them got out of first gear!
On Thursday and Friday the course stayed hot with the arrival of Chip Ganassi's team. After the recent sacking of Dan Wheldon the team is doing some testing with their new driver Dario Franchetti a refuge from the Andretti Green racing team and failed (I suppose) convert to NASCAR world. Franchetti did probably 150 miles over the two days in the car doing short 3-5 lap test intervals.
This evening (Saturday) was absolutely wild!! One of the members of the kart track decided it would be well cool to set up a booth at the local fair. I haven't been to a local fair before, and quite frankly I haven't been to anything like it before! There was the widest assortment of people I have ever seen at one place at one time, however the majority of them leaned towards the cowboy side of things. During the fair they had a concert (country music) and there was a no B.S. rodeo taking place where I got to see a few riders go the whole 8 seconds and one unlucky chap who shunted with the ground after being pitched off his bull. Doesn't look like a good result as I saw a helicopter leaving the premesis.
I hope this message finds you doing very well. The slow trickle of news has been on account of staying so busy on this karting project! It might not be necessarily getting me any closer to Formula 1, but I feel like it is really going to help the program out at MSR and I hope to see it doing a lot of good for them in the future.
Wishing you the best
Michael
01 October, 2008
Setting up in Houston
On at invitation from the circuit director, I have returned to MSR Houston to continue the work I was doing with their racing program before my travels to and from England.
I drove down to Houston last night and had dinner with my friend, motorsport artist Kevin Paige (www.kevinpaigeart.com). We weren't sure where to go for dinner but stopped at a place called Willie G's Seafood and Steakhouse. We certainly weren't dressed for the occasion but looked cool nonetheless in our racing inspired attire. Most people were wearing button up shirts and ties. On receiving the menu we realized we hadn't budgeted appropriately for the evening either! We managed to make a few thrify selections and ended up having a great meal!
Since I have been in Houston I have found a few reminiants of Hurricane Ike which blew threw here not much more than a few weeks ago. Many places appear that they were not even touched by the storm.
I borrowed a super cool 'tour bus' style motor home and I will be literally living at the track! I am going to be applying for a proper work visa so I can get back to England soon. In the meantime, I think this is a fantastic place to be!
Wishing you the best
Michael
20 September, 2008
MJDrive: New World Record - Back to Back Cross Atlantic flight - Also: British Government holds down American F1 contingency
As many of you know earlier this week I boarded a flight to take me back to England and get back to the effort of getting to Formula 1. Little did I know in this process I would set a new world record: fastest consecutive cross-atlantic flights.
My flight left from Dallas / Fort Worth International airport on Wednesday afternoon at 530 p.m. By my calculations 8 hours later I had crossed the Atlantic Ocean and arrived over British soil and by 9 1/2 hours I had landed at Heathrow airport in London. Once on ground in the brand new, 'ultra modern' terminal five. We painstakingly slowly disembarker our plane and loaded onto a bus which took our flight to immigration/boarder crossing to get our passports stamped. Well, that was the plan atleast.
When I arrived at the immigration this lady who was on a mission to prove something took a look at my passport and immediately launched into 21 questions. Who are you? Why are you here?? What are you planning on doing??? After explaining my name was Michael, I am here on our countries mutually agreed upon tourist visa which allows us to visit the other country for up to six months, and I intend on watching some premiere league football, looking at castles, and enjoying some british weather, the lady decided she wasn't satisfied. She took me out of line and into an office where she repeated the same questions and asking why I was returning again to the country after so recently being here. These questions carried on for half an hour or so before she told me she thought I was lying and that I was in the country to work. (clealy my broad shoulders sold her on the construction worker type).
After a complete tear down and inspection of my bags this increasingly charming lady (not), repeated for the third time the same set of questions trying to get me to tell her I had came to the country for working. By this time four hours had passed and it was nearly noon. My friend Bradley Philpott who had came to the airport to pick me up was, I am sure, getting particularly pissed, especially after turning up at the airport at 8 a.m. to pick me up. With a further no explination the lady left only to return a couple of hours later to announce she had came to the conclusion that I had came to the country to work and I had been booked for a return flight to the United States on the next possible flight.
With no course to refute this decision I was stuck and my only option was to get on the flight back to the states. Thirteen hours of flying later I arrived back at Dallas / Forth Worth airport clenching the new world record for fastest consecutive cross atlantic flights. Now, while I am most pleased to receive an award for being the fastest at anything, you can be assured I am not one bit happy with this situation, and to say that is in fact a massive understatement.
After I got home I slept for about 13 hours. After waking up I spent most of the day thinking about the massive flow of east europeans who are currently overwhelming the british social benefits system and how damn awful fish and chips are. Now that I have spent sufficient time hating that immigration cow, I am going to start focusing my energies back where they belong on getting back to the top of motorsport.
Michael
12 September, 2008
How are things going?
Just wanted to make a quick update to say hello and let everyone know what I have been up to. While I have been away from England I feel like a few of the projects I have been working on - with teams and sponsors have been unattended a bit. However since I left England I have remained fully emersed in motorsport, on account of Al Mitchell, the manager of MSR Houston (www.msrhouston.com) who was kind enough to extend an invitation to me to help out around his circuit while I was in the states.
Since I have been down here I have been helping them get their karting operation up and running. They recently built an incredible eight-tenths of a mile kart circuit and they are looking forward to getting a full rental and competition race program up and running. I have been helping get those things up and running and in the process have gotten to do a bit of driving myself!
MSR Houston is absolutely fantastic and a blast to be around. I can only begin to tell you about the facilities they have set up for the members of the track. My favorite thing on site, which I have not done yet, but agree fully to in principle and plan to try out soon is a shotgun shooting range. My friends in England will not believe it, since guns are prohibited (without a special license). However here in Texas we have lots of guns and naturally a clay targets range at the racing track is a fundamental piece of the puzzle. There is also a work out facility which I have been spending some time in while I haven't been working.
Additionally there is a lake on site for fishing. I must say, I don't think having a lake is that special, because PalmerSport has a lake as well. As you might remember PalmerSport has a special tradition of throwing lucky birthday people into the lake. In the lake they have here in Houston there is a real, live, honest-to-god Aligator. I was able to take a few pictures of it and I will have to upload them to prove it to all of you soon. I thing getting a birthday treat of being thrown in the pond would be less than optimal.
As many of you might have heard the weather is getting a bit dodgy around here. The last I heard there was a level 3, (read: 120 mile per hour wind) hurricane called Ike bearing down on my present local. I haven't ever been in a hurricane before and in fact never in any major disaster for that matter. A lot of people around the coast of Houston have evacuated along with many others throughout the city. Since we are not in an evacuation area we are going to hold up as the hurricane passes. I'm not sure if I will get a chance, but I will try to take a picture to show you what it looks like. We were considering opening up some of the garages (two doors at booth end of building) putting a race car on scales and doing some aerodynamic wind tunnel testing. Sounds a whole heck of a lot cheaper than buying our own wind tunnel!
Hope all of you are doing well. I am enjoying things down here (bar hurricane) and am looking to getting back to Europe soon!
Warmest regards
Michael
26 August, 2008
Stateside
This week I have made a temporary return stateside, back to Texas.
The reason I have returned is on account of my British visa which expired this week. I am applying for a new visa which will be a long term visa. At this moment I am not excactly sure how long it is going to take for my new long term visa I have applied for, but once it comes through, I will be able to go back to England on a long term basis.
In the mean time I have a few projects in the works which I will be able to announce in short accord!
I arrived back in Texas on Tuesday and I have been 'indulging' in a few of my favorite things from Texas first of which was hot weather, mexican food, and a bit of karting. This past weekend I went to MSR Houston, a new racing circuit in Houston, Texas and drove with the owner of the track on his brand new karting circuit. Unfortunantely I didn't get any photos or videos of the track, but it is a fantastic circuit! The track is .7 tenths of a mile, featuring a variety of low, medium, high speed corners and the ultra American NASCAR turn. The 180' turn is at the end of a straight and features four levels of banking, MEGA!
Hope this message finds you doing well, I am happy to be back in Texas to see my family, but am looking forward to getting back to England as soon as possible and getting back on with my program.
Wishing you the best.
Michael
21 August, 2008
Inside Honda F1
Last week I had the chance to not only visit one of these facilities, but also to go inside the heart of the engineering section and see what goes on behind the closed doors at a Formula 1 teams racing facilities. The team I had the chance to visit was Honda Formula 1 team which is based near Silverstone in the United Kingdom Midlands. When approaching the facility from the motorway you won’t realize you are approaching it, and unless you know where to look it would be quite easy to pass by. That is of course, unless you know what you are looking for, then the industrial estate, transformed racing stratofortress is impossible to miss.

The purpose for my visit was to return a misplaced intercom system which had went missing a few weeks earlier at PalmerSport. One of the Honda’s F1 engineers had came to our facility and had been doing a driver evaluation for an F3 driver they are considering for their development program. As one of the ‘new’ instructors on the beat, I was asked if I could drive halfway across England and return the misplaced intercom (a half hour drive).

As I headed down the road with intercom in hand I had a chance to see some of the various buildings on site. There must have been six or seven large buildings, one appeared to have a Formula 1 car hanging from the ceiling, a nice bit of decorate kit I think.

Once I walked into the primary Honda engineering building I was greeted by a secretary who had a lanyard with my name already printed on it. I was met by the engineer who offered to show me around the facility. As we walked inside the medical laboratory feel became evident, everything was painfully clean, I felt as if I should clean my shoes! At this point the photography stopped for obvious reasons.
16 August, 2008
unfortunate turn of events
On account of a problem with the insurance provider for the car, we have been forced to withdraw the entry.
I think a few of you were planning on coming out tomorrow, of course you are still welcome to head out for the meeting, but I will not be racing.
Shame! I was really looking forward to driving the Cooper!!
Hope you are having a better weekend than mine!
Michael
15 August, 2008
On the cover for Team USA
Just wanted to send you a quick note and pass on something that recently caught my eye. It is a re-print of the article from motorsport.com, but it was picked up on the opening page of the A1GP Team USA website. You have probably already read the article, but I was really happy to see my name on the opening page of the teams site!! Hopefully it will something to look forward to more of in the future!
You can see the article and check out the A1GP Team USA site at: www.a1teamusatv.com/
It is Friday so I think most of you will be very pleased that it is the weekend! I am getting ready for the Formula Junior race at Mallory Park on Sunday. From what I understand there are going to be 22 cars in the field with a number of different makes, models, and constructors being represented. I am not fully clued in as to the performance of these different models, so I am just preparing to push the car as rapidly as it will go!
Hope you have a fantastic weekend, check back on Monday and I will have some photos up from the race meeting.
All the best
Michael
13 August, 2008
My first British Motor Car Race
The circuit I will be racing at is Mallory Park, an infamous circuit in the United Kingdom. While the circuit is short in length, just around one mile, it has both the longest and tightest corners in the country. From an overhead map you will see there are only five corners on the circuit, however Gerards the corner at the end of the main straight goes on for about two days and three weeks, and I am told it actually has more than one apex! On the opposite end of the course is a corner where the cars must brake down to about 30 miles per hour.

12 August, 2008
Adriano's Radical Race

For this particular race meeting I arrived at Adriano’s house bright and early (before 7AM!!!) where his wife Ana had prepared breakfast for us. After breakfast we jumped in Adriano’s road car and headed off towards Donington Park the location of the Radical Cup Race Meeting and the 2010 British round of the Formula 1 World Championship (which should be an interesting affair). Donington Park seems like a fantastic circuit to drive, however quite short, just under 1 minute to complete. However from what I sat, if Silverstone isn’t up to scratch for Bernie Ecclestone’s expectations, Donington Park and the one lane country road leading into it, are going to need some serious development before the circus that is Formula 1 and the hundreds of thousands of rabid British motorsport fans descend upon it.




05 August, 2008
In the news: motorsport.com
Believe it or not I have managed to make it in the world-wide motorsport media! Well, sort of! After meeting with A1GP Team USA owner Rick Weidinger at Brands Hatch I wrote an article which was picked up by motorsport.com about the team and the A1GP series.
If you would like to check out the article you can view it at: http://www.motorsport.com/news/article.asp?ID=302345
For the next day or so it will also be available on the sites homepage at www.motorsport.com
Hope you are all doing very well! You won't believe what I have been able to see today!
Warmest regards
Michael (from a very very wet UK!)
02 August, 2008
Fortec Motorsport

Dear Friends and Family,
A couple of weeks ago I was able to meet with a few teams from the two championships I have been exploring and determining the viability of me participating in; Formula Renault and Formula Ford. Both of these series offer very valuable learning platforms which would serve as a fantastic place for me to move towards Formula 1.
The first team I visited is one of the top junior formula car teams in Europe Fortec Motorsport. The team is truly outstanding in both performance and size. In total there are 18 drivers for the team competing in five different championships.
When I arrived on the Fortec motorsport premises, which is located in an industrial estate in the British mid-lands, I found not one but two warehouses which house the team and all of the necessary equipment to run these cars. Between the two buildings a fleet of immaculate white transporters which haul the cars to the track were parked, impressive stuff.
After heading in to the front office I was met by the team director and owner Richard Dutton. Richard has been involved in the motorsport scene since for a number of years. I can't recall specifically how many at this moment, but close to as my lifetime, with the exception of a few years he 'escaped' to do real estate. Eddie Jordan personally asked him to return to run a driver he was bringing up through the ranks in the 90's.
One of Dutton's recent accomplishments, aside from championships in nearly every class his team enters, is that he is responsible for bringing along Formula 1's newest winner, Heikki Kovelainen through the junior series ranks. He told me he had been impressed with Kovelainen and his perseveirence even though he didn't have any money for racing, even relating one story where he raced at the karting world finals in Japan and sent his chassis with another teams van and had to carry his engine as carry on luggage his flight.
During my meeting with Dutton he showed me around their facilities and introduced me to the Formula Renault team manager. We had a chance to speak about the details of the program and there are certainly some details! Dutton was quite pleased with my previous racing experience and expressed an interest in running me in a car for the winter championship a set of two rounds which he uses to evaluate drivers for the 2009 championship. In order to run the two race winter championship and do a few days of testing I will need to come up with around 42,000 United States Dollars. While the word motorsport has this funny word 'sport' in it, what it really means is motor business. I am going to be hard on the case of finding the sponsors to help me secure this seat for the winter championship as well as the entire 2009 championship!
Today I am going to be doing some private instructing with a journalist by the name Will Powell and perhaps even the famous photographer Stuart Price from the magazine Autocar, the worlds older automotive publication. Wish you all the best for a great week, i'm going to be busy!!!!
Cheers
Michael
28 July, 2008
World Touring Car Championship

25 July, 2008
Talking to Teams


20 July, 2008
Dinner with the wizard
A few nights ago I met up again for dinner with racing coach extraordinare Rob Wilson. Rob has been staying very busy working with drivers from around the world none the least of which are with Formula 1 drivers from McLaren and Williams.
When speaking with Rob it is truly phenomenal his depth of knowledge and understand of the art and science of racing driver. I cannot say just the art or just the science of racing driver becuase he looks at racing driver in such a way that both are very much involved. Aside from his racing Rob is also a musician and one cannot help but make the comparison to the way he describes racing driving, because many times it relates to the tempo and harmony one would think of when describing music.
During our conversation Rob gave me a number of ideas to continue going forward and finding ways to get in racing seats. He also shared with me a number of ideas and philosophies on driving. It is simply phenomenal the level at which he breaks down the most simple acts in driving. When speaking with Rob he explains complex properties of a racing car in a simple way which makes you almost think you realized it on your own. In the end I believe my conversation with him is worth atleast .3 tenths of a second!
My next mission is to get on the track and start putting into practice some of the lessons he suggested!
Hope you are all doing well, I am looking forward to the week and hopefully by the end of the week will be closer to finding a sponsor!
Best regards
Michael
15 July, 2008
Getting into Formula 1




14 July, 2008
Inside Formula 1: British Grand Prix



07 July, 2008
British Grand Prix Weekend: Saturday



05 July, 2008
Off to Silverstone
I hope to return with some great stories and excellent photographs of racers sloshing around in the wet!
All the best
Michael
02 July, 2008
You never know who will turn up at Palmer Sport
Today was an interesting day at PalmerSport! The program started as normal, nothing special to report, and I was assigned to instruct on the Caterham circuit. For me the Caterham circuit is a highly enjoyable, but very involved position. If you have never seen/driver a Caterham I will tell you they are hugely fun to drive. The car is built after a Lotus 7 with the engine way in the front and the driver/passenger being the only thing to put any weight on the rear tyres. Because of this weight balance the cars are constantly in a state of 'slideways' and it is very easy to control a four wheel drift with the cars. SUPER!
This being said, when many of our guests get behind the wheel it is a job and a half to keep them on the track! Sometimes their ability to fire the cars off the track exceeds our instructors talent to keeping them on the track! It is a classic Caterham move for the rear end of the cars to overtake the front end in a plume of smoke through the high speed corners.
Between the chaos on the Caterhman circuit I found myself out of the car in between sessions further explaining to one of my drivers how not to launch the car off the course. Occasionally my boss will drive by in his bright yellow Seat (a spanish manufactured sedan, not too different in appearance to a honda civic). He will often drive around on inspections of the different events to make sure everything is running smoothly and everyone is on task. On this particular day I had seen him by twice already which is normal, but when he came by the third time I was a bit suprised to see him so many times in the morning.
As the Seat drove by I looked up and noticed someone was riding in the passenger seat. I wasn't sure at first who it was but they looked familiar. On second look as the car came by I realized Honda/Super Aguri Formula 1 driver Takuma Sato was in the passenger seat looking out on our organized chaos.
Takuma Sato is a national hero in Japan as he is one of the few Japanese drivers to rise to the level of Formula 1 in motorsport. It is also suggested that the Super Aguri F1 team was created and supported by Honda simply to keep him in an F1 racing seat when he was sacked from the Honda works team.
Although Sato has a flair for running into the back of people on starts and firing his Honda powered machine off the circuit last year he became a hero to me. During the 2007 season he was driving for Super Aguri F1 a small operation which was running the Honda 2006 cars (which happened to be very fast). However, because the operation was so small and new no one expected them to do anything aside from field a car for Sato to keep riots from breaking out in Japan. However in Canada he put the follow pass on Championship leader Fernando Alonso for 6th place. It was a mega pass and I was hugely impressed that the Japanese driver could pass a McLaren!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwaicYzTlOE&NR=1
Now since he isn't driving in F1 and I saw him riding around at PalmerSport job security immeditely came to mind. However when I spoke with my boss later I found out that he is just going to be doing a special instructing session for some of his investors later in the year.
On a side note after work I went and played Football (known as Soccer in America) and scored 4 goals in the game! My colleagues were a bit shocked because it was my first time to play football, perhaps the 12 yeas of soccer I played might have benefited me a bit!
Hope you are all doing well, the British F1 grand prix is coming up this weekend and I am looking forward to bringing you all the buzz from the pit lane!
Cheers
Michael
29 June, 2008
How good do you want to be?
Dear Friends and Family,
One thing I've noticed over the past few years, whether that is sport, in the classroom, or on the job is that there is an expectation for mediocrity in the world.
Some things quickly come to my mind as I recall my days in different places in the world. Some of my teammates in various sport would take short cuts when we were on training runs. At University I remember classmates frowning if I asked a question when it got too close to the time to leave. Over and over again at different jobs I have witnessed some people happy to do a job that is just good enough to get by. I have never understood this, why are people driven to the middle of the road, to being mediocre, and not pushing themselves to seeing what life can really hold?
Last week I spent some time planning specifically where I want to be over the next five years and how I am going to get there. I want to be in Formula 1 in five years and not just in Formula 1, I intend on being the 2013 Formula 1 driving world champion.
I told a few people about this last week and I got a few responses "are you serious?" or "You think you can actually make it to Formula 1?" All of a sudden my team mates taking short cuts came back into my mind, the people that would rather get by than get the most out of life. If I don't go to Formula 1 who is going to?
Well perhaps it is ambitious. Perhaps it is completely unlikely, but Yes, I do think I can make it to Formula 1 and I intend on doing it.
So my next question is for you. Where on the road do you want to be in five years? Are you one of those people who accepts the middle? From the incredible encouragement I receive from so many of you, I would imagine you are of a different breed. You know the world is a tough place but great things can happen when great people put there mind to it.
Looking forward to hearing from you.
Your friend
Michael
25 June, 2008
On the Job: 2009 Championship Campaign
This week I have started planning for the 2009 Championship. I have been kindly granted a few days off work so I can focus on the planning stages of my racing plans. I have been working recently with the incredibly talented Megan Wood of Game Plan on a marketing piece which explains the commercial benefits of a motorsport program with MJDrive.
Although everyone is quick to talk about the talent level of this driver or the commitment level of that driver, before you can even get on the track it takes a massive amount of captial. Just for next years Formula Ford campaign I am told to expect it to cost around 100k British Pounds to be with a top team. A step up from there to British F3 is around 500k British Pounds. If you are reading this in America just double that figure to get the US Dollar equivalent.
To me this is one of the saddest things about the sport. I even recall Fernando Alonso mentioning a few years ago there are more talented drivers in karting than Formula 1, its just a matter of having the money and getting the breaks. Well, I don't have either, but I think money would be a stupid thing to let stop me.
I am incredibly grateful for Megan's help on the proposal. It is in a .pdf form and I cannot figure out how to load it here, but if you are keen to see it send me an email and I will pass it on.
Hope you are doing well, would love to hear how things are going on your side of the world.
CheersMichael
23 June, 2008
In the news: AUTOCAR
Dear Friends,
A few weeks ago I was at the newstand where I picked up the Autocar magazine. Autocar is a major british publication, and the worlds oldest car magazine. My friend Colin Goodwin writes for the magazine and he did an article about his day 'trying out' to be a Palmer Sport instructor.
Attached is the article if you would like to read it. There are a few parts I found quite interesting, especially the one highlighting the past instructors who have moved up the motorsport ladder.
Hope you are doing well and looking forward to a brilliant week. This week I have a few days away from Palmer Sport and I am going to be working on putting together my racing program for next year. I will post with details as they develop.
Cheers
Michael
(to see the article close up, click on the page you want to read)





19 June, 2008
V.V.V.I.P.
During a normal week I get to work with a fantastic variety of racing drivers at Palmer Sport. Some of them have never sat in a racing car before, others are avid enthusiasts, while a few of them have raced Le Mans, European touring cars, and frankly could most likely offer me valuable advice! The variety in itself is certainly enough to keep me on my toes!
Last Friday I had a complete change of pace when I was asked if I could give karting lessons to a young student. As my background in racing is based on thirteen years of kart racing and I have a bit of experience coaching young people I was happy to oblige.
When the young driver arrived his father accompanied him. Aboard Dr. Palmers personal helicopter they landed moments after our normal day came to a finish. After landing the six year old was fitted in an appropriate childs jump suit, helmet, gloves, the whole deal and we headed out to the track. Our kart mechanic had prepared a special cadet kart for the boy to drive that he would fit in and allow him to reach the pedals.
I spent the first bit of time making sure he understood the basics, gas pedal, brakes, safely climbing in and out of the kart. You must understand the complexity of such a task, it is very tough to explain to a six year old how to 'stop' a kart, when all he just wants to go on the track and drive around in his new rompus suit! After practicing using the brakes a few times in the pits he headed out onto the track. Once on the track he followed behind one of my colleages in another kart and they did a lead follow session for a few laps so he could start getting a feel for a safe speed on the track. He did quite well and after a few more slow sessions he was able to take the lead and run a few laps without a guide.
After the lessons I had been asked to chauffeur the two of them back to their home in Oxford. For the ride home I had the pleasure of getting to know his father for what turned into a very interesting conversation. The boys father is a gentleman by the name of Adam Parr who has recently gotten involved in the motorsport industry and is the CEO of Williams Formula 1 racing.
At the end of the hour and a half drive he invited me in to his home for a drink where our conversation continued and I had a chance to meet his family. During the ride, Mr. Parr's boss Frank Williams called and Adam told him a bit about this kid that had just moved to England from Texas and sold his soul to race Formula 1 cars.
Meeting Mr. Parr was an incredible experience, aside from the fact more than anything in the world i'd like to work for him. He was a great guy, warm personality, and was happy to talk with me about his team, program, and operation. I learned a lot in a brief conversation and as I headed off he invited me along with the others who had helped with the day to come for a tour of their factory and watch their next test at Silverstone.

MEGA!
Wishing you all the best.
Michael
16 June, 2008
Porsche Saturday
In the Palmer Sport fleet of vehicles there are something like 50 vehicles which the guests and racing students drive in the pursuit of speed. Naturally some of those vehicles will have problems and engines, gearboxes, and differentials must be replaced. As is the proceedure when these things are replaced it is important to properly 'run them in.' This is a process of gradually building up speed as the mechanical components fit themselves together.
This past Saturday I spent helping the mechanic's at Palmer Sport running in a Porsche which had a new engine fitted. I brought along an onboard video and captured a few laps from the process. If you click on the video you can come onboard and see what I was up to this weekend!
Cheers
Michael
15 June, 2008
Paris
Last week after my birthday, once I had drying off from being thrown in the pond, for my birthday my mom took me on a weekend trip to Paris. It was the first time I had been to France and I really enjoyed it. Paris is a fascinating city with incredible personality. Below are a few of the photos from the sites.
Hope you are well and looking forward to a great week!
Cheers
Michael




