Our Next Rally

 

NOTE: Please update your bookmarks to point to www.brmscc.org!!


Blue Ridge Mountain Sports Car Club

Presents:


We'll Cross That Bridge XIII


Date: Jul 31st 2022

 

Registration:  Registration is at 12:00 PM and the first car starts at 1:01 PM. Rally fee is $10.


Start:
Beau St Park N Ride off of I70 in Washington, PA
Coordinates: 40.1798 N 80.2226 W

Google Map of Start Location

Midpoint: East Finley Park (No Gas or Food)

End: Panera Bread, 108 Trinity Point Dr, Washington, PA


Description:   Rallymasters John & Dwayne tell us: This is a novice friendly rally that includes a tour of eight covered bridges in Washington county. All open controls will be staffed with hoses and wires. All first time rally participants will have milage noted for all turns. Because most of the covered bridges are in remote parts of the county, we will be traveling on many well maintained unpaved roads. These roads are "narrow and rustic". This should be a fun rally to drive and the scenery is fantastic from mountain tops to tree lined creek valley roads. If you like to drive come rally with us. The rally is about 85 miles and should take four and a half hours.







What beginners should bring with them:


For starters - there should be two of you in the car: a driver, and a navigator (who isn't inclined to get car-sick reading while moving, or has an antidote for it).


Bring a mechanically sound car* that has a tenths -reading odometer (a resettable trip odometer can be a help), a clipboard, a four function calculator, several working pens, a set of highlighters (for marking up the route instructions) and post-it notes. 


If you can choose between a mechanical odometer that "rolls" and a digital display, the mechanical will enable you to interpolate to the hundredths. If you only have the digital tenths, then you'll have to do a lot more "guessing" in between the numbers clicking over. We have folks who have gotten good at this with practice!


While every team has their own procedure, it's useful to be able to highlight things like speed changes, and free zones (remember - there is a tutorial to get you started!) so that "on the road" it helps you remember them better.  The post-its are to stick on your dashboard to remind the driver of the assigned speeds and what the active course following priorities are. 


Also - having a good map of the area that includes secondary (and tertiary roads) can be very helpful if you get lost and can't regain the rally course.


*While a cell phone and a AAA membership can't hurt, a lot of the time, we'll be traveling on roads that are well off the beaten track, and you may not have much of a description of where you are!  "Well - we got here by turning left after "Snodgrass", then right at T, and left by protection... "  While a GPS unit probably won’t help you very much while running the rally, it may be very useful for telling AAA where you are if you break down.