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Old 02-22-2013, 06:44 PM   #1
CycloneFE
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

Well I don't have the answer either, but I will say that flashes can do weird things. I have taken hundreds of pic at the track and this is the only time it has ever happened and I have pics of the same car when I did not have a flash that were just fine. I used a medium grade Vivatar always set to manual mode. The panels on the car WERE reflective tape. Why it came out this way is still a mystery to me, even 30 years later.
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Old 02-22-2013, 09:01 PM   #2
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

The only reason I have not heard yet...........and I feel it is THE REAL ANSWER, is DeFrank's car moved. I do not mean forward or rearward roll; I mean when his top bulb came on he went to the chip and it "shook the front tires" enough to let the infra-red beam to get to the receiver cell. I owned a track and watched A LOT of races on the starting line.
If Jimmy staged really shallow all was good...then when it hit the chip or just went to the mat...it could have caused enough tire movement to bite him.

He was lucky...he got a rerun. Why didn't Mike Cotten get one? It looked like he was .05 on the tree but it went red....must have been a camera or a spaceship sending infra-red signals.

WOW! I would have been so mad if I was Cotten I wouldn't have to worry about pre-entries, I would probably be banned after that "hose-job" he took. Win the WinterNationals and then get the news your opponent "didn't really red light"!!!

Sad day for Compulink if that can happen; maybe nobody has ever "really red-lighted"?? That would change some big race final rounds wouldn't it.

I owned a Compulink System. They were state of the art, but they have been surpassed by the drivers and cars the last 10 years.

I think it is time for a timing equipment overhaul, at least get it as accurate as some of the cell phones and data recorders being used by racers today.

C'mon Jeff; we know you are reading this. Let's hear the official reason on how a camera can start the tree.

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Old 02-22-2013, 09:45 PM   #3
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

Quote:
The only reason I have not heard yet...........and I feel it is THE REAL ANSWER, is DeFrank's car moved. I do not mean forward or rearward roll; I mean when his top bulb came on he went to the chip and it "shook the front tires" enough to let the infra-red beam to get to the receiver cell. I owned a track and watched A LOT of races on the starting line.
Once AGAIN....!!!

1) One updated version of the system includes a provision that locks out the pre-stage and stage bulbs from coming back on once the system thinks the car has left the beams (ie., stage light out), until the computer is reset. This prevents the pre-stage and stage lights from flickering when the rear tire goes passes through the starting line.
2) This red light phenomenon has occured at multiple tracks. One instance included a car that was footbraked: staged at a low rpm, then was brought up on the converter and was there for several seconds. The car was *solidly* staged with absolutely zero posibility of it having backed out of the beams.
3) The above incident, as well as several others that we have seen all show the red light displaying BEFORE the pre-stage and stage lights go out. This is a critical point that everyone continues to completely ignore.
4) If a car did in fact rock back out of the beams, you would see the stage light and pre-stage go out simultaneously due to the stage bulb lockout system (see #1 above) along with the red light being displayed. The only case in which the red light should be displayed BEFORE the stage light going out would be in the case of a deep stage foul in the classes that do not permit it.

YES, it is still possible to have a red-light from rocking out of the beams on systems not utilizing StageLock, and in fact it just happened in Super Comp last weekend at Gainesville. The multiple incidents we have been discussing are demonstrably different situations.
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Old 02-22-2013, 10:30 PM   #4
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

What are photographers doing there anyways? There's too many bodies around that starting line anyway at that race, and although we can't change history, we can eliminate that possibility real quickly. It's also a safety issue. Drive line failure on the line could eject parts, somebody that close could get hit, there's also the distraction factor.Good photos can happen from other locations, why do they have to do that right there?
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Old 02-23-2013, 01:43 AM   #5
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

There is plenty of evidence both video and people right there to prove one way or another if DeFrank's car moved. My opinion for the zero it's worth is his car didn't move.

There is no evidence so far to prove that a camera flash did indeed cause the false red so it's NHRA's "that's our story and we're sticking to it" once again. This isn't an isolated incident and getting to the truth of the matter would be a big step in getting it fixed.


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Old 02-23-2013, 02:06 AM   #6
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

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Originally Posted by Greg Reimer 7376 View Post
What are photographers doing there anyways?

They are there to take the blame for timing system failures, obviously.

Don't know who or what they will blame it on now when it happens again.
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Old 02-23-2013, 06:26 AM   #7
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

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3) The above incident, as well as several others that we have seen all show the red light displaying BEFORE the pre-stage and stage lights go out. This is a critical point that everyone continues to completely ignore.

This isn't that big of a deal. The video camera just catches the stage light as it's going out and the red light as it's coming on. Here are just a few examples I found. There are plenty more.


2011 Winternationals, incandescent stage bulbs:




2012 Winternationals, LED stage bulbs:




I have a question for you, Michael, since you seem pretty well versed in the stage-lock system. In Mr. Cotten's meeting with Jeff Foster and Mike Rice they told him: "It is not impossible to have a roll back red light with the stage lock on. But, it requires a motion of at least of a half inch to the rear."

My question to you is: How does the system know if you are a half inch behind the beam? I don't think the computer can tell how far you are behind the beam unless the infrared sensor can tell from how much infrared light it's receiving from the reflector. If not, I would think you could roll back until you turned the pre-stage light off.

And this begs the question, if the infrared sensor can tell how much infrared light it receives, why can't it differentiate between infrared light and a flash from a photographers camera?
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Old 02-23-2013, 11:12 AM   #8
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

another interesting point is that on another post on here is that someone posted that this doesn't happen at ihra races. wonder if that is true?
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Old 02-23-2013, 11:36 AM   #9
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

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This isn't that big of a deal. The video camera just catches the stage light as it's going out and the red light as it's coming on. Here are just a few examples I found. There are plenty more.
Not a big deal? That is a HUGE deal! With incandescent stage bulbs, it is completely plausible to see the red light prior to the Stage light *appearing* to be out, due to the amount of time that an incandescent bulb retains glow after the power to it ceases. This should NOT be the case with an LED! The stage light going out and red light coming on should appear simulatenous at best. If there was a visibly discernible difference, then the stage light should appear to go out before the red light, not the other way around.

Seeing multiple instances of the red light coming on before the stage light going out makes me MORE concerned, not less.


Quote:
My question to you is: How does the system know if you are a half inch behind the beam?
That'd be a question for Foster.

Old stories:
http://www.competitionplus.com/drag-...-not-red-light

http://www.competitionplus.com/drag-...tem-guard-beam

In the comments section, there was a claim that it happened at Charlotte to multiple cars. So it's guard beams one day, and camera flashes the next...
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Old 02-23-2013, 03:06 PM   #10
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Default Re: Question for Jeff Foster and Dave Kommel

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Originally Posted by Michael Beard View Post
Not a big deal? That is a HUGE deal! With incandescent stage bulbs, it is completely plausible to see the red light prior to the Stage light *appearing* to be out, due to the amount of time that an incandescent bulb retains glow after the power to it ceases. This should NOT be the case with an LED! The stage light going out and red light coming on should appear simulatenous at best. If there was a visibly discernible difference, then the stage light should appear to go out before the red light, not the other way around.

Seeing multiple instances of the red light coming on before the stage light going out makes me MORE concerned, not less.

Well, both the Brand and Mason red lights happened with the incandescent stage bulbs. And in the DeFrank video, you can see the stage lights are on only in the frame where the red light is starting to come on. So it does happen faster with the LED bulbs. If you had a camera that took more frames per second, I'm sure you could see it on every red light. Most video cameras only take 30 FPS.

They could change the programing to make sure the stage light is completely off before they turn the red light on. The program probably turns the red light on first and then turns the stage light off. Depending on how fast the computer is, there is going to be a little delay.

As somebody said before, they need to overhaul the timing equipment. Starting with a complete rewrite of the software.




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