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Old 04-05-2021, 12:39 PM   #30
Capt Spaulding
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A couple of suggestions starting with a caveat. First - I don't track my BRZ. Haven't and don't have plans to start. That said, I roadraced motorcycles for a number of years and can lay claim to having been passed by both Doug Polen and Kevin Schwantz on the same lap in the same race.

OK. ON to suggestions. 1) Get instruction. There's nothing like having someone who knows what they are doing critique your work.

2) Work on your lines. Study a diagram of the track and identify potentially good lines through the corners. Identify what seem to be reasonable apexes, turn in points and where you want to be on track as you exit. When you get to the track test those lines and see if they still make sense. Often, what looks good on paper doesn't work in the real world. There may be big gross bumps on the ideal line that upset the bike/car so you alter the line to compensate. Once you find what seems like a good line, find the braking points, turn in points, and exit points and burn those into your memory.

3) Get more instruction. A good driving coach can help correct errors and spot things you didn't see. Racing a car makes this easy - the instructor can ride with you. IN my bike racing days, one of my very good friends was an expert level multi-class champion. Every practice session he'd spend a few laps following me and the make suggestions when we got back to the pits. It helped, but not like having thee person in the seat next to you.

4) Learn to visualize. When I started racing bikes I was working 1500 miles away from home. I'd fly in on alternate weekends and when there was a race, I'd head to the track on Saturday and fly out on Sunday. I was SLOW. Painfully slow. Sitting in my hotel room I analyzed my laps and thought about mistakes I thought I was making. Then, I'd close my eyes and run lap after lap in my mind - picturing myself hold the throttle pinned for that second longer, or apexing this corner later, or earlier, or double apexing that hair pin. It was a profound revelation. My first time at the track after that, the track felt much more familiar. I picked up two seconds a lap.

More visualization - more seconds off the lap times.

5) This is big. Learn to control your visual focus. One of the best life lessons racing taught me is - You Go Where You Look. Focus on where you want the car to be. Look through, not at the corner. If you overcook a corner, don't panic, don't focus on the edge of the track or the guard rail, because if you do, that's where you'll wind up.

The beauty of tracking cars is they are soooo much more forgiving than motorcycles. You fuck up on a bike and they will bite you - often very hard. Cars are less likely to try to kill you and less likely to be successful when they do.

Just look where you want to go. If your body knows how to maneuver the car you'll find that will get you out of a lot of scary situations.

Throttle Blipping - The problems with throttle blipping are several. First, as you are approaching a corner there is a lot going on. You're looking for your braking marker and thinking about your turn in point. Once you're on brakes the car's wiggling around and you're doing that delicate balance with friction as you try to get the car rotated and release the brakes. And, on top of this, you need to be in a lower gear.

Back to bikes for a second. On a bike you face a similar problem with a wrinkle. Every part of your body has to do something. Left hand - clutch; right hand has two things - front brake and throttle; left foot - shifter; right foot - rear brake (unless you're riding a buddy's old Triumph in which the brake and shifter are reversed - as is the shift pattern). Lots of things to balance - braking pressure at both front and back, engine braking, gear selection are just the start. Ham fist a downshift and the rear end goes who knows where and the bike's very put out with you. Oh, and you have to steer. To make that even more complicated - on a bike you turn the bars to the right to make the bike turn to the left.

So - you adapt and learn and adjust. You learn to maintain braking pressure at the front, roll your wrist just so while timing your left foot on the shifter and your left hand on the clutch. And pushing on the clipon to turn that way.

Compared to this a car is cake. Fewer things to do and the steering isn't wonky. Now, I suffer from the same physical gift as Soundman - fat clown feet. Like Soundman. I long ago adopted an approach to throttle blipping in the car I called "fat footing." Instead of wrist rolling it's done with the ankle. The beauty for me is my ankles are among the few joints and bones bikes didn't manage to mangle. Strangely enough the heel pays a very small part. Ross Bentley's video and the video of Senna in the NSX explain and illustrate it really well.

The three most important things are practice, practice, and practice. Do it in the car. Do it in your head. But do it. Don't get discouraged. It will come together. I never got fast enough to keep Polen or Schwantz in sight for more than a couple of corners, but some friends and I won a couple of open class club endurance championships and it was a lot of fun.

Oh, and did I mention - get some instruction.
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