Uncle Hud
Just another blob of protoplasm using up your oxyg
Leg 3 is gonna be a beast. Lots of prep and planning, followed by riding LOTS of miles to collect those high-value strings.
Fantastic!!! Nothing is spurious. And 7 is no accident, take two dice and roll them infinitely, "7" will come up much more frequently than any other number. (16.667%of the time, vs 2.778% for the numbers 2 and 12)I am working up a full list of spurious stats for all of you that I shall get posted a little later today. However, I have noticed one little stat that surprised me...
Those riders(5) with 7 characters in their name outscored the rest of the field by an average of 4,000 points in Leg 1. The next 2 were riders with very long names, 21 or 23 characters.
The Seven Character Riders as they are now known, also out mile'd the rest of the field by about 300 miles, but rider 23 took the overall crown by 467 miles over the 7's.
I have a pile of spurious stats to share soon...
Me Too Igster. It's really quite daunting and fascinating ..alone, before factoring in the other things you mention. I'm going to make a big prediction. You heard it from Reno first: Look for very solid performances from Erik Lipps, Ken Meese and Eric Bray. They all have minds for this puzzle, they also aren't handicapped by being on a gen3I'm still grinding on the subtle yet dramatic trend of doubling and tripling last bonuses of category strings....as they trend across multiple legs.
Yes, this is his third on the minimalist 250. First one was a DNF due to a late navigation error. Second was proper finish. He is a beast.He is definitely amazing! Is this his 3rd IBR on the Ninjette? Really have to give kudos to someone who gets off the barcalounger rides and puts in those kind of hours and miles on a little sewing machine. Surely a testament to mental toughness and will..... two items I am obviously lacking!Kurt Worden on his Ninja 250 is currently in 16th place, riding a very efficient rally. Mileage that puts most in the bottom half, but he's up with more than 17,000 points and 2300ish miles.
Wow!
I fixed my spreadsheet. Here's the link to the new one: https://1drv.ms/b/s!AqfFHIB477eTiDvKALBG3psW44AlI'm not seeing the 3-up team of the Boges in that sheet. My calculations have them at 3.408 pts/mile (5842/1714). That puts them in 100th position.Here's the leg 1 results sorted by points per mile:
https://1drv.ms/b/s!AqfFHIB477eTiDmoRm7ycoe_5YIW
Tim
I'm on a PC, and for me the easy way to get the data from a PDF file is simply to use CNTRL A, CNTRL C, in the PDF. I open EXCEL, and press CNTRL V and all the data is there in columns. I then delete the unnneeded data that may be copied over. IHTH.Timmer beat me to the punch - was cranking out a spreadsheet to sort by points/mile as well. Except I had to go teach myself how to get a pdf table into Excel first...
https://docs.google.com/a/activeindytours.com/spreadsheets/d/1rHdxZq1_hUPfvYDpce3LcbwKIC7b_s5cvQsA8evR3g4/edit?usp=sharing
Left mine sorted by actual current placing. Also added a column assuming that a rider averaged 60 mph for the miles they covered - how many hours were they on the bike during this 60 hour leg. Obviously the 60mph number is arbitrary...
I don't think brute forcing will work in this rally particularly on Leg 3 and especially if one is competing with the field we see in this rally. Mr. Earls appears to have done a masterful job, and we haven't even seen the rally book.Awesome Timmerest, thanks for sharing. Really fascinating to break this down. One observation I made before you made it obvious is Bob Lilly BRUTE-FORCING himself into 2nd place. We'll see if these Brute force guys (Like Slayton) can stay fresh enough for the long hall.Here's the leg 1 results sorted by points per mile:
https://1drv.ms/b/s!AqfFHIB477eTiDmoRm7ycoe_5YIW
Tim
Kurt Worden needs to be efficient being that he spends his sleeping time rebuilding that Ninja at each CP LOL.
This is going to be a good event to follow. OH, I didn't break it out, how are the riders that choose gen3 doing on efficiency vs the other FJR riders?
RJ
I am curious to know this one too. If a rider can only bag a bonus once during the rally, they could have hamstrung themselves if they went for the big bonuses during the first leg and got double value for them instead of triple, or who knows how much on leg 3.So all the bonii are available for all three legs... if they already got certain bonuses on leg 1, are they off the table for leg 2 (i.e. they can't get them a second time)?
Yes, cutie pants. All the bonuses are available all three legs. You could get the same one each leg. But they don't know the value until THAT leg. Make sense?So all the bonii are available for all three legs... if they already got certain bonuses on leg 1, are they off the table for leg 2 (i.e. they can't get them a second time)?
Really awesome. How are those riders who choose the Gen3 doing?Here's a listing of the FJR riders. It's sorted by Year Ascending.
I can't say for sure since I don't know the points and the bonus details, but competing against and riding in rallies created by Jeff Earls--he's not a sucker bonus kind of guy IMO.But aren't there always some sucker bonii?
FYI...I have ridden in over 45 LD rallies (2-IBR's), so I have a little concept of what goes on. The new twist in this rally is the introduction of a 3rd variable ( category). You and the dear Miss Kitty have both guessed that the first letter might be the code for what category. I had the same thought...but do not KNOW as fact. That might make the laying out a map to lay out a route a little easier. Another variable, is the riders can go to ANY bonus (except maybe a leg specific bonus like the group photo) during any leg. Kicker there is the rider may not know what the point value is for that bonus ( leg one some values given, leg two more bonus site values given, and assuming for the big leg 3 ALL point values will be known. If you are just trying to get some needed bonus capture to bag a super high point bonus for the 3rd in the string, not too big a deal. So I guess the thought process there is, "choose an unknown point value bonus wisely."JohnF, look at the Day 2 summary here. There's an small excerpt from the bonus packet .JohnF posted: Does anyone know what the riders are seeing that shows them 1.) what category the bonus location fits under .... <snip>
The bonus code is "APC", for "Air - Prairie Chicken", most likely. I'll assume other animals have other codes: Air, Land, Water, and Mythical, perhaps.
The excerpt goes on to show that bonus "APC" is located near I-94, exit 38 south, Rothsay, MN, at GPS coordinates 46.4814 / -96.2816. There's also the time window when this bonus can be claimed: 1400 hours, June 26, 2017. Show up 5 minutes late and you'll miss the photo and 1,203 points -- just like the Boge family did.
You can enter those GPS coordinates into Google Maps, hit Street View, and see the World's Largest Prairie Chicken yourself, though not as well as in the Day 2 summary.
My technique is to use shapes/colors to represent point value -- gold stars having the highest values, of course -- but that only works since the Big Money Rally has fixed point values for each category. You plan your route to hit the time-limited spots when they're open (don't leave that to chance) and the daylight ones in the daylight.
Once you start riding, there's not much you can do except ride your plan. Adding bonuses into a well-planned route is a rare occurrence.
<edit 5 mins later> I see Hello Kitty has the same lines of thought. I'm a very amateur rallyer, flattered to be considered a kid, and use Google Maps to plan. The final route can be converted to GPX and stuffed into a Garmin, but I just bring it up on my iPhone (Google Maps App) and follow the blue line across the southeastern US. Since I have to stop at each bonus for a photo, it does just fine for my point-to-point navigation.
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