Some people tape down the knob on the parking brake to make it easier. I'm not one of them as, being English, we are taught to use the handbrake on any slight hill in regular road driving.
Jayson Woodruff wrote:Don't forget there's often a slight uphill slope at El Toro that makes you roll back out of the stage. So practice that heal toe, or parking break hold.
Jay W
You can also try turning your wheel a little if the slope is slight enough, just remember to unwind when you launch.
Here's my $0.02. The course will be somewhere between 50 - 75 seconds, if last year was a guide. That means that shaving .5 second on the launch is essentially a rounding error. This is still an autocross. Focus on the rest of the course, looking ahead, getting the right line, and positioning your car to handle the rest of the course. Frankly, I think of the starts as a distraction that too many drivers focus on, and they loose sight of the bigger picture.
Now what will be hard for me is choosing which car. Last year I did this in my MazdaSpeed 3, which is FWD. This year I have a choice between the Speed3, which I know well, and an '89 RX-7 Turbo that has too much HP and not enough tire, and I'm very new to. The Speed 3 will be faster just due to tires and experience, but the RX-7 will be more fun. Neither will be competitive, so I just have to figure out what kind of fun I want to have.
Cheers,
Collin Webster
'06 Mazda MX-5 Miata - STR Starting Point
'08 MazdaSpeed 3 STU - FWD basket case
- The loosest nut in my cars is still the one behind the wheel.
Some people tape down the knob on the parking brake to make it easier. I'm not one of them as, being English, we are taught to use the handbrake on any slight hill in regular road driving.
Who remembers the "good old days" when we could have an assistant who helped stage you and put a rolled up rag under a tire to keep you from rolling out of the lights?
Since light is faster than sound...many people look bright until they speak...
Rick Brown wrote:Who remembers the "good old days" when we could have an assistant who helped stage you and put a rolled up rag under a tire to keep you from rolling out of the lights?
I do!!!
I also remember the abbreviated course at Fontana (due to Lake Fontucky) that you rolled forward on one side. That was much more difficult to deal with than the roll backwards.
Third yellow is a good starting point. But it can be even more specific than that. Some above mentioned to go when it starts to light, in the Integra I had to wait for the light to wain before going. I miss those consistent .5xx lights I used to get in the Integra.
Rick Brown wrote:Hmmm, seems to me I remember something in Brian Beckman's Physics of Racing that wheel spin was never the fast way to launch. Have to look it up.
i acknowledged the tiny window where minimal slip is better than excessive slip. but given that you're going to screw it up almost guaranteed (not like we're all John Force here), a spinny launch will be faster than a bogged launch. It's like saying ABS is slower than senna style threshold braking, while true us mear mortals can't pull that stuff off consistently.
Collin Webster wrote:Here's my $0.02. The course will be somewhere between 50 - 75 seconds, if last year was a guide. That means that shaving .5 second on the launch is essentially a rounding error. r
typically classes have a margin of victory on the order of a couple tenths of a second. considering how easy it is to leave .5 or more secs on the reaction time it's pretty tough to win a class if you're cutting sleepy lights. The 60' time is usually of less importance because the way cars are classes you will be grouped with cars that get similar 60' times.
i do agree though, the start is very challenging to deal with mentally. you have to switch from drag racer to autoxer about 2secs into your run which is not easy to do. the first several pro solo's I did I was a complete mess by the first turn.
Marshall Grice wrote:The 60' time is usually of less importance because the way cars are classes you will be grouped with cars that get similar 60' times.
Marshall Grice wrote:The 60' time is usually of less importance because the way cars are classes you will be grouped with cars that get similar 60' times.
Do you think your non-AWD BSP competitors would agree? ;)
Marshall Grice wrote:The 60' time is usually of less importance because the way cars are classes you will be grouped with cars that get similar 60' times.
Do you think your non-AWD BSP competitors would agree? ;)
3. The second (2nd) driver will grid in the Second Driver Grid adjacent to the
regular Grid, after the first (1st) driver has completed all of their runs for that
Heat. The second (2nd) driver will be held a minimum of five (5) minutes
before being directed to the stage lanes.
9. While the cars are in the Grid (not the Stage Lanes), any adjustments may be
made. This includes tire pressures, tire cleaning, cooling, suspension
settings, etc. If vehicles are being refueled in the Grid Area, the engine must
be OFF and another person must be standing by with a fire extinguisher. Any
spillage of fuel may result in a DNF for some or all of any remaining runs in
that Heat at the sole discretion of the Chief Steward.
Does this mean that in a 2 driver car, wheels/tires could be changed during the driver change?