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Author: Jon Steege

Indoor Karting in Denver!

Indoor Karting in Denver!

икониПравославни икониI spent some time at Unser Racing, an indoor Karting venue, in Denver, Colorado this weekend, and it was a great time. It was my friend Tom’s 30th birthday, so for a present I bought him a 5 race package to complement a 5 race deal for myself. I have been Karting before in Arizona at F1 Race Factory and had a great time, and Unser Racing is no different.

Unser Racing has 1 speed Honda powered racing karts that can probably hit 50 MPH, running Hoosier racing tires. They can hold more g force in a corner than most road cars and are a real kick to drive. In order to drive one, each racer has to go through safety briefing to familiarize themselves with the flagging system and the kart controls. Then you don your racing gear and helmet and hit the track.

Unser Racing’s course is pretty technical, with several lower speed hairpins and front and back sweepers that really test your physical conditioning and driving ability. The average lap time is around the 20-21 second mark, with younger drivers running in separate heats in slightly underpowered karts from the older drivers. The fastest time I was able to put in was a 20.5 second lap, and with 7 minutes of track time per session, 18-20 laps is more than enough to wear you out.

Their system is pretty cool to keep track of races paid for and run, as I bought a 5 race package but was able to do only 3 races before feeling totally wiped out. They kept the other 2 races in my name and I was able to come in and race again the next day.

I gathered from talking to some workers that there are big plans for more and longer tracks in the future, with indoor and outdoor tracks in the same complex coming in the near future. This may shape up to be the premiere spot in Colorado to go Karting. They also do corporate events and parties and things like that, so I may have to have a chat with my companies owner about where to have our next team-building event..

All together, I had a great experience, and I would recommend it to anyone looking to test their chops in a serious racing environment.

Unser Racing
7300 N. Broadway
Denver CO

SSD’s to kill off Magentic Media Monoliths?

SSD’s to kill off Magentic Media Monoliths?

There has been a lot of chatter lately on different investing news sites about the Western Digital/Hitachi merger, and it is funny to read investment reporters perspectives on the future earnings potential of these “old style, spinning platter” companies. The following is my perspective of what is going on, and where I see this technology going.

First, everyone has observed the rapid uptake of the tablet PC, starting with the iPad, the Asus eee tablet, HP’s tablet offerings, and others. I think the uptake is interesting, but I wonder about continuing use statistics. I am in a computer related field and none of my coworkers has given up the laptop for a tablet either at home or work.

Next, some investment journalists have noted that most tablet pc options currently use solid state drives instead of old spinning platter drives.

An article on SeekingAlpha linked to a Wall street journal article, likely talking about how tablets might bring about the death of the spinning platter drive manufacturers. I could not read the article as it is behind a pay wall, but I feel inclined to laugh at that premise posed in the seeking alpha entry.

I understand most tablets are using SSDs at this point, but many laptops, most desktops, and nearly all servers on the planet are still using the good old spinning platter drive which are WD, Seagate, Hitachi’s bread and butter. Saying 1 tiny class of computers is going to dictate the direction of the rest of the computer market is crazy. There is a reason why tablets are using SSD’s and other computers are not, and that is because tablet utility is severly limited right now, and people are not using them to download lots of content or play video games or run websites. Everyone who isn’t buying devices for the novelty of them is buying spinning platter drives. Once there are 2TB SSD’s that can survive 200 million writes and cost $79, I will believe the end is nigh for spinning platters. Not until then.

I think SSd’s will come around in price, but the huge hurdle they have now is how to overcome the limited write lifetime they currently have. It will be interesting to watch as the first iPads start having problems as the SSd’s exhaust their write lifetimes. This problem is being addressed as rapidly as possible by everyone in the SSD supply chain, but there is some possibility that a good solution is still a ways off, or may even involve a ssd/spinning platter combo drive!

The point is, it seems that investors are trying to start a movement now that has all but written off spinning platter drive makers, but I would argue that in 2011, their best few years may still be ahead. I would guess if your investment timeframe is 10+ years, you are probably ok to divest from magnetic media companies, but less than that probably still holds some upside.

disclosure: No positions current or intended in the next 30 days in any of the companies mentioned in this article.

New 1/4 Mile Record Set Under Honda K-series Power

New 1/4 Mile Record Set Under Honda K-series Power

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The Honda k-series is proving a force to behold, as the Prayoonto Racing Supertech Integra posts a blazing 8.65 @175 mph pass with Jonathan Reynolds at the wheel at Maryland International Raceway. This is the fastest time yet set using the new generation K-series engine from Honda. Look forward to this weekend, as the third annual Airwerks Borg Warner $10,000 Outlaw Shootout goes down at Englishtown Raceway Park, Oct 9th and 10, as part of the 12th annual Sport Compact Fall Nationals. Smart money may be on B-series power, but will Reynolds be the first to turn up the wick and capture the $10k prize from the tried and true B-monsters? It’s going to be an interesting weekend…

Thanks to GreasyBlocks.com for breaking the story.