Friday, October 10, 2014

Web geekery mostly finished


The msrpk.com website is now moved to a new host, along with the corresponding e-mail addresses and the public links for our on-line performance of Radio-Road-Test, our audio archives, and our RSS/podcast feeds.   I'll take this opportunity to remind you of the links:

Radio-Road-Test listener page:  http://msrpk.com/listener.html

Radio-Road-Test audio archive for past tests: http://msrpk.com/archive.html

RSS feeds of Radio-Road-Test:
http://msrpk.com/podcast/roadtestrss.xml
http://msrpk.com/podcastroadtest.rss.xml

Wednesday, October 08, 2014

msrpk.com just about back to normal operations; contest in future?



Our domain transfer was finally approved overnight; I've uploaded 90 per cent of the site to our new host, and will, by the end of the week, restore the playback functions on our Radio-Road-Test listener page to full operation.  They may work with last week's episode in the interim. 

Access for our affiliated over the air radio stations will also likely be restored over the weekend and also our RSS feeds of Radio-Road-Test.  I'll leave the affected programs from the past couple of weeks in the podcast playlist so you don't miss one. 

Also, if you followed the Twitter feed, you saw a tweet that might suggest that we were about to have a contest.  I'm working on the details and hope to announce them once the partner (a car care product company) signs off on what we want to do.

Thanks for listening, whether over the air, on line or by RSS/podcast.

Monday, October 06, 2014

Website Update


Because of our change of web hosts, the on-line version of Radio-Road-Test will be delayed until the cut over is successful.  When you click on one of our links at msrpk.com, you deserve, and should expect to get where and what you want from our website in four or fewer clicks without a lot of pop ups and other on line drama.  The RSS feed is still up for the moment, but will be off line when the cut over takes place.

We have uploaded this week's episode to our SoundCloud feed. It's our test of the real-world 30 mile per gallon Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland Edition with the 3 liter V6 diesel engine and 8 speed automatic transmission.

Thanks for your patience.  Just a heads up:  I'll be testing the 2014 North American Car of the Year in early fall.  It is, of course, he Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.  I always upload a snapshot and a quick preview of all the vehicles we test to our Twitter feed (msrpk_com).

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Website migration for msrpk.com begins October 1, 2014

Our website, msrpk.com, will be migrating to a new hosting server beginning October 1, 2014.  During that migration, you will likely experience outages until the domain transfer is complete.  This will not impact our broadcast partners, but will affect podcasts and on line access for Radio-Road-Test.  Our access for SoundCloud.com will remain open, so those who listen via our RSS podcast feed and our listener page on line, are cordially invited to check in at soundcloud.com, and type in the search term "radioroadtest".

I'll apologize in advance for any inconvenience, but the present hosting server,  myhosting.com, is no longer able to provide us with the functionality I need for my broadcast partners, so a change has to be made.

The change will allow me to upgrade some functionality.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Temporary FTP Outage/myhosting.com drops the ball

If you have tried to access our Radio-Road-Test program from our listener page today (9/26/2014) you may have found a problem.  The company who hosts our site, myhosting.com, dropped a last minute upgrade on its customers like me that necessitated them disabling the FTP capabilities of our site.  They did so without notifying me in enough time so I could find a workaround or give you a heads up that that was about to happen.  To be fair, the company has had a good record with me and up time.   But you listeners deserve an explanation if something does not work as it should.  The company believes it will have the upgrade finished later in the day.  I am not happy about this, but it is what it is.

In the meantime, those who might like to hear this week's version of Radio-Road-Test may visit soundcloud.com, and search for "radioroadtest".  The last few episodes are available for your listening pleasure.

Monday, August 04, 2014

Radio-Road-Test Now on SoundCloud

To make it easier for listeners who might have missed the latest episode of "Radio-Road-Test", I've started uploading them to a SoundCloud account, user name "radioroadtest".  This is an additional channel, and will supplement the listen link on our listener page (msrpk.com/listener.html), our podcast, and our over the air broadcasts.

Tuesday, June 03, 2014

Episode 1050 of Radio-Road-Test

Since January 28, 1993, I've produced and hosted a radio program called "Radio-Road-Test", which is simply a program of driving impressions of American and foreign cars and light trucks.  The first vehicle was a Buick LeSabre.  Here is a picture of our 1050th vehicle, the BMW 535d:
The data for this, and road tests dating back to 2003, are available from the msrpk.com listener page, as is the ability to listen to the most recent episode of Radio-Road-Test.  The msrpk.com audio archive page allows you to download milestone programs and programs from this and the past test year.  Radio-Road-Test is also available as an RSS feed; the listener page has the link for that feed.  Comments are always welcome.
 

msrpk.com links:

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

2013 Test Year in Review

2013 Test Year Summary
 
This is something I should have done sooner.  Now that I've semi-retired, and no longer cover auto racing, I have time to dot the i's and cross the t's.  This summary of my 2013 Test Year for Radio-Road-Test is part of that.
 
I produced my 1000th episode of the program, with a roadtest of the Cadillac ATS, which won North American Car of the Year for 2013.  I didn't know it at the time, but I also got a jump on testing Chevrolet's 2014 North American Truck of the Year, the Chevy Silverado, when I drove its cousin, the GMC Sierra back last summer.  I expect to produce my 1050th episode of the program in May, 2014.
 
Now to facts/figures:
 
Total Miles Driven          35,316
Average Miles Per Test:       679
 
Average 0-60 Time Over all 52 Vehicles:    7.3 Seconds (timed in traffic conditions with a KAT Matrix Accelerometer)
 
Average Fuel Economy Observed over all 52 Vehicles:     27.6 Miles Per Gallon
 
Cost (sticker price) of all 52 Test Vehicles:     $2,068,834
Average Sticker Price of a Test Vehicle:     $39,785
 
You may listen to any 2013 Test Year episodes, along with this week's broadcast, by pointing your browser to msrpk.com/archive.html  You may also subscribe to our weekly podcast, which, thanks to advertisers, will not cost you anything but the time it takes to download to your computer, tablet or smartphone.
 
I sincerely appreciate your listening, comments, and your Twitter follows.
 
 

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

Episode 1000 of Radio-Road-Test

I reach a milestone in late April and early May, with my 1000th episode of Radio-Road-Test, since the program premiered in January, 1993.  The test vehicle is especially appropriate, since it also is the 2013 North American Car of the Year--the Cadillac ATS.  As these things go, it looks good for putting road test miles on the ATS, and then releasing the broadcast in mid-May.  It will be available from the msrpk.com audio archive page, and like our other milestone tests, have a permanent link there.  It's also available as a podcast  Enter this URL in your browser and subscribe: http://msrpk.com/podcast/roadtestrss.xml so you can hear our weekly programs.

I owe a lot of thanks to a lot of people, but most especially, you, my listeners and blog readers for this 20 year ride.

Thursday, January 03, 2013

Race-Talk, 4/1/1988-1/25/2013

Retirement--Yep! 

We've not posted here in a while...that's going to change as I downsize my business to concentrate on the "Radio-Road-Test" program, which is available from our msrpk.com audio archive( http://msrpk.com/archive.html ), or by podcast from this link:
http://msrpk.com/podcast/roadtest.rss.xml  ).

The media landscape, advancing age, and the economic uncertainty nudged me to start thinking about semi-retirement after the election.  When I found that I could not sell enough national advertising in Race-Talk to cover travel after November 6, ( travel's the biggest expense in covering all forms of auto racing), that sealed the deal.

So my broadcast of January 25th, will be the last "Race-Talk" broadcast from Motor Sports Radio.  It'll also be the last time I talk about auto racing on the radio for a while--perhaps forever.

I shall miss the people I met along the way and I shall miss the challenges of trying to distill 4 hours of racing into 35 or fewer seconds into network radio reports for award winning organizations like CBS Radio News.  I'll never quit being a newsman...but won't be actively following auto racing events.  You may likely find me at major American auto shows...or on the road enjoying retirement on my schedule...and not traveling to conform to a schedule made in Daytona Beach, Indianapolis, Pomona or Paris.

Thanks to all of you who listened throughout the years.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

"Yes, we still have a blog..."
Seems like I haven't posted in a while. Yep, that's obvious; most of what used to go here is now on Twitter. So I'm trying to figure how best to use the resource.
In the next few days, you'll see some on-line book reviews that I pitched in my "Race-Talk" program of July 22. The publisher links will be on the main site links page (msrpk.com/links.html). I'll be reviewing titles from my kumotre (Polish for friend) Jerry Bonkowski (whom you hear occasionally on SiriusXM Channel 90) and some other assorted NASCAR and Formula One titles. The idea here is to keep it short so you will go to the library or better yet, download it to your Kindle, or (gasp!) buy the dead tree version to see what I found in the book.
This is a work in progress. Listener/reader comment is always solicited; computer spam (not SPAM, a product of Hormel Foods) is not solited or tolerated.

Sunday, August 08, 2010

"Blog Extra August 8, 2010"


When reading Jim Donnelly's collaboration with Don Miller (retired VP Penske Racing South), I wasn't expecting to find out much more than what he did with Penske and the full fendered cars.


The book ("Miller's Time A Lifetime at Speed, Coastal 181 Publishing http://www.coastal181.com/) opened a window into the life of someone who changed the way drivers in all of auto racing make money. For it was Miller, working with Roger Penske, who put together what today would be looked at as a tiny trailer with what at the time was called "trinkets and trash" and discovered a revenue stream that, today insures racing drivers in all series a comfortable income--that is, of course the souvenir trailer. Miller was a drag racer of some repute, but was an even more effective marketer and builder of relationships. His relationship with the Captain's long time PR whiz Dan Luginbuhl, and what those two men would do to get the job done, were crucial to the success of Penske Racing.


Miller and Donnelly didn't sugarcoat the incident at Talladega in 1974 which cost Miller's right leg, and left him with injuries that plagued him through the years. Those would have sidelined a less dedicated person.


The most interesting facet of this book is the relationship building; not just those with Roger Penske, the Goodyear tire people, sponsors, drivers, media and fans--it includes the relationship he built, and maintains with Pat, his wife of some 48 some years. Some were fruitful, others not so much.


The net proceeds from this book are pledged to help fight child abuse and neglect in the Carolinas, which is reason enough to buy it. The other is for the window that Miller and Donnelly opens into the world of big time stock car racing.


We'll also link to Coastal181 (who's published books with Ken Schrader and the racing equivalent of the Eveready Energizer Bunny, Kenny "Herman" Wallace) from our listener page. That link is http://bit.ly/pHP28 .


Now more comments.


If a person or organization has built a relationship on openness and candor, then it causes the parties in the relationship--be they customers, fans, employees, contractors or competitors--cognitive dissonance when the first party in the relationship backs away from the openness and candor, and begins to suppress that in the name of protecting the "brand" or "relationship" (Our Twitter page says we tweet for thinkers; we've always blogged that way, and encourage you to research cognitive dissonance). Hint: it concerns perception and reality and the differences between what you think, and what really is.


If a party to a relationship backs away from candor, or punishes it, it begs some questions:




  1. Can the relationship ever regain full trust?


  2. What is the other party hiding?


  3. Is the relationship mutually beneficial, or is the other party trying to exert unfair control over the other party, when confronted with a show of equal power?


Let me state for the record that NASCAR is a private organization, and can do or say anything they please that is legal--and will most likely continue to do so. Their past history shows that they like to have a "gotcha" sanction and vague hammer that they can hold over the independent contractors who drive and compete in their series (Rule 12-A actions detrimental to stock car racing, and the absolute lack of specificity in all but the construction of the cars that compete in its series).


One does not build trust for the long run by having "gotcha's" in a relationship, be it personal or business. When Moses came down from the mountain with the Ten Commandments, there were no vague clauses--just simple, measurable, definable rules on a tablet for all to see.


NASCAR--get back to being Moses, and not a Pharisee.


Comments are welcomed, and moderated for propriety, grammar and length. The best ones may be mentioned on a future "Race-Talk" program.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Information on Podcast Links
I upgraded the software which is used to encode our Motor Sports Radio podcasts so you can find them with programs like Juice, etc.
It generates a different file, with a different file extension.
The updated link is at our listener page, which is: http://msrpk.com/listener.html
In case you enter links manually, here they are:
I wanted to make sure that all subscribers to the podcast (all over the world--thanks!) notice no disruption in the download.
If you have any questions, comments or concerns-don't hesitate to contact us on our feedback (a) msrpk.com e-mail address.

Friday, April 16, 2010

"Yes, I Am Still Here"

I have been Tweeting, much more frequently than I've been blogging; those of you who have discovered our listener blog and have bookmarked this site see the Twitter links, which update much more frequently.
With BlackBerries, iPhones and mobile web updates, it is sometime easier to Tweet than blog.
Be assured that if there's a situation that demands more than a special podcast or a Tweet, you'll find more information here. I believe that you listeners and blog readers deserve an explanation of how I make editorial judgements on how I get information and commentary out.
If you think I need to blog more, shoot me a note to feedback (at) msrpk.com, and tell me where I can do better.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

The Pothole


I posted this earlier on Twitter, but thought it might be useful to have it available for you to look at, and see for yourself why this was a problem for the Daytona International Speedway and NASCAR in its biggest race of the year. Pity it happened. In any other time, the pavement holds up. Given the age of the pavement (August 1978), the below normal temperatures, the position on track (where it goes into shadow quickly and loses the benefit of direct sun for warmth), the rains, and the propensity for water to seek its own level. The beat scribes + scribettes are trying to create controversy by suggesting that there was some nefarious scheme to cover up the defect.

I will be asking for your Tweeted comments on what Daytona should do to fix this once and for all.




Friday, February 12, 2010

"Crown Royal Presents the Heath Calhoun 400"--May 1, 2010
Tweets say it all about this soldier.

Monday, February 08, 2010

"Fame Monster" Doubles Down; Stock Car Debut Part Deux
Danica Patrick, as you have seen and heard in the Twitterverse, and soon elsewhere, will continue her learning process this weekend at Datytona International Speedway when she enters and runs the NASCAR Nationwide Series race on Saturday, February 13. Her entry will get the guaranteed points from a car acquired by JR Motorsports--so Kelly Bires ought to be able to compete.
Her debut in the ARCA race was not spectacular, but solid. She dodged flying sheet metal, felt a few nudges, gave some back, and brought the car back into the garage area 6th--on the lead lap. Patrick showed some car control skills during a spin--which will be necessary to perfect as her time in stock cars continues. Randy Bernard, IndyCar Series CEO, can only hope that her new found notoriety in the stock car arena is a good thing for Patrick's day job--competing in the IndyCar Series full time for Michael Andretti.
We're taking care of other business, and will have a very busy Race-Talk this week. We will likely be busy for CBS News, Radio, as the hype continues for the 52nd Daytona 500--which, it seems, is being overshadowed somewhat by Patrick's stock car debut

Saturday, February 06, 2010


"The Danicar"
Mattel's iconic Hot Wheels brand of miniature cars returns to the racing market with JR Motorsports and Danica Patrick. Kelley Earnhardt (left) says the company will have an associate sponsor position for Danica's foray into the world of full fendered racing in NASCAR's Nationwide Series. In August at Michigan International Speedway, Danica's #7 Chevy Impala will wear full Hot Wheels livery.
When asked if she had Hot Wheels when she was younger, Patrick replied, "I'm a girl--I had Barbie dolls." Dale Jr. didn't say too much except that he had Hot Wheels in his youth.
Keep your eye on the Tweets for fresh info.

Friday, February 05, 2010


"When the Iron's Hot, Strike!"
Danica Patrick, meeting most of the NASCAR beat reporters after the final ARCA practice was washed out at Daytona International Speedway, who kept asking her the same questions shw was asked yesterday--and weeks before, about her motivation to try racing full fendered stock cars.
We called her the "Fame Monster"--and I submit that the attention she'll receive from this race, the Super Bowl commercials, the CSI episode (where she plays a race driver, go figure!), and her long awaited Nationwide debut (whether that's next week here, but definitely at Auto Club Speedway at Fontana on February 20) qualifies her.
With the birth announcements for Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards and Elliott Sadler and the Kyle Busch engagement--the old-school NASCAR scribes are eagerly awaiting some racing action to talk about, instead of the minutia that masquerades for news in the off season. So too, are we.

Thursday, February 04, 2010


Danica-Mania, Shootout Style
Thanks to Mark Williams of MrNews Productions (halifaxareanewswatch.com) for this picture of Danica Patrick, just a few hours before a four hour and 50 minute practice for the ARCA cars at Daytona International Speedway.
Jim Hunter, the VP for Corporate Communications at NASCAR is battling cancer. He stopped by media days, and reporters offered well wishes. I knew he was on the mend when he told me "not today" when I asked him if he was ready to play nine (holes of golf, Hunter enjoys his time on the links) with a wink. Everyone hopes Jim will get back to the trail (and the links soon).
Danica Patrick suggested that she was not aware that the ARCA race here could, and has in the past turned into a crashfest. That was a rather curious remark.
Jimmie Johnson met the media and said that he'd really like to win Daytona for his crew chief, Chad Knaus. One will remember that Knaus spent time in NASCAR's doghouse for rule violations here, and his replacement, Darian Grubb, won the 500 in 2006.
The Rolex Series gremlins that befell AJ Allmendinger still haunt him--but he says running the #43 Ford with Yates horsepower gives him confidence for the 500.
More later.