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Thread: Track Day for Newbies...general track day questions here

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Posts: 61-70 of 83
2009-01-25 19:28:24
#61
Originally Posted by llaprad1
A couple of more tips for car prep...

  • Upgrade now to AD22s or get absolutely killer pads. And bring cheap extras.
  • Bleed the brakes.
  • Make sure your coolant system is 100%.
  • Add Water Wetter.
  • If you've got the resources/time, add a water temp gauge.


I have very little money, my car never ever over heats even under very heavy driving. I do only have one fan, will this be an issue if I do proper cool downs? I have stock brakes, so what is a recommendation for some killer pads?

Originally Posted by Bowlcut
Rule of thumb is no more than 10 year old certification. So look at the cert date. SA has fire retardant in it, where the M is just basic impact. Less chance of fire on a bike, just your head bouncing on the pavement.

most all tracks will want
Cotton clothes, no artificial fibers. Those tend to melt and just laminate you in a fire
Long sleeves and long pants.
Close toe shoes. Dont wear your birks to the track ok...be a man

Tech for your car.
Wheel bearings tight? no rocking back and forth apparent.
Battery secured down well?
No loose items in car. Take everything out. No floor mats, and if you can empty even the glove box. Dont want things flying arround. Empty trunk, dont have to remove spare most the time, but some will do it for performance of 10lbs
Lugs tight
Brake pads of decent thickness
windows rolled down, sunroof is your choice.
seat belts...you didnt take them out did ya?
and basic road worthyness of the car from a quick go over.


Are slip on shoes ok? I know it sounds silly, but my vans slip ons are my favorite driving shoe. They cover the whole foot snugly. Also, I have no rear seatbealts, I assume this is not an issue but I have to ask?

Originally Posted by Fosters

I disagree. For guys who have never done a HPDE, I would tell them to just put fresh brake fluid (something decent like Valvoline Synthetic) and make sure everything is functioning correctly - brakes, ball-joints, etc. Don't worry about buying 2 tires that may not be used again or special brake pads. Most newbies won't push their car hard enough to put that much of a strain (you do have to realize the cars limits as prepared). If your tires get greasy, then let off for a lap - let the car and you relax and re-focused.

Make sure the car is good, and get out there and have fun. The key with the low price is to get people involved and do it - not scare them into thinking they need $100 track pads, $300 front tires, etc. A stock SE-R will be just fine on track if in good shape.

Make sure to bring a quart of oil and check it after every session.

Josh


I am worried about my brakes. I had a little HPDE of my own on the highway the other night, and experienced some brake fade. I can't afford AD22s so I need some good pads I guess.

Also about tires, I was just going to get some Azenis because I don't have the cash for an extra set of wheels and NT-01s. Would the NT-01s on the front with Azenis in the rear cause terrible oversteer? Should I just stick with the Azenis? I am worried about massive wheelspin.

Originally Posted by BenFenner
Will there be helmets to rent at the track? (I heard some mention of this.)


Originally Posted by BenFenner
I feel the helmet talk deserved it's own thread so here it is.

http://www.sr20-forum.com/sr20-national-convention/12157-lets-talk-helmets.html#post158559


Thank you I was thinking that too.

Originally Posted by nx2kautoxer
Hey guys. I am planning on bringing my 1991 NX2000 and maybe a few friends to this track day. I am a local Chapter Cooridnator for the SCCA and have access to 6 SA2000 helmets(various sizes). I would be glad to bring them along for anyone who does not have access to one. This may help some of the newbies out a bit.


That would be really great, especially for passengers

Originally Posted by CleanSER
Are we allowed to take passengers for a ride?


Good question
2009-01-25 20:01:20
#62
This is merely my opinion, and Joe (or whomever's ass/checkbook is on the line will probably make the final decision):

Passenger: if this is your 1st or 2nd HPDE, I think NO passengers other than an instructor (which ideally will be for every one of your runs). If this is 3+ events, you probably could have a passenger IF an instructor has ridden with you; and they feel you are safe. SERCA isn't as strict as PCA, BMWCCA, etc.

Shoes: not my call, but if you can prove your slip-ons won't slip off while on track; you probably are OK. Normal tennis shoes should be fine - some people swear by Chuck Taylor's, wrestling shoes, indoor soccer shoes, if you don't want to buy special ones (really no need for that for most of us).

Tires: Azenis should be fine. Honestly, street tires will probably be even better for most people doing their 1st event. I wouldn't buy special tires just for this. If you need to take cool down laps every 3-4 laps then just do that - do the event, and worry about tires later. The most aggressive I've ever run is Azenis - I need to upgrade though.

Brakes: I was a very big fan of my Carbotech Panther +'s when I had AD22's. I am only guessing, but their Bobcat pads would probably be a decent pad for this that could also be used as an auto-x pad - I only say that after reading opinions of people who have run that pad.

Cooling: flush your coolant system, clean coolant, no leaks, and spend $8 for a bottle of Water Wetter. You live in FL for crying out loud.

Rear seat belts: no passenger back there = no need.

For most people with typical bolt-on cars, your car is probably significantly more capable on track than your driving (no offense). Listen to the car and have fun.

My $0.48.

Josh
2009-01-25 20:22:42
#63
^^^I agree on the tire thing. I drove my Se-R at CMP with Falken Ziex 512's and the car was just fine. If you pull back on your driving once the tires start getting greasy you'll be alright. This track also is not heavy on brakes. Only one semi hard brake zone which is the brake zone after the main straight.
2009-01-25 20:32:15
#64
Originally Posted by Fosters
This is merely my opinion, and Joe (or whomever's ass/checkbook is on the line will probably make the final decision):

Passenger: if this is your 1st or 2nd HPDE, I think NO passengers other than an instructor (which ideally will be for every one of your runs). If this is 3+ events, you probably could have a passenger IF an instructor has ridden with you; and they feel you are safe. SERCA isn't as strict as PCA, BMWCCA, etc.

Shoes: not my call, but if you can prove your slip-ons won't slip off while on track; you probably are OK. Normal tennis shoes should be fine - some people swear by Chuck Taylor's, wrestling shoes, indoor soccer shoes, if you don't want to buy special ones (really no need for that for most of us).

Tires: Azenis should be fine. Honestly, street tires will probably be even better for most people doing their 1st event. I wouldn't buy special tires just for this. If you need to take cool down laps every 3-4 laps then just do that - do the event, and worry about tires later. The most aggressive I've ever run is Azenis - I need to upgrade though.

Brakes: I was a very big fan of my Carbotech Panther +'s when I had AD22's. I am only guessing, but their Bobcat pads would probably be a decent pad for this that could also be used as an auto-x pad - I only say that after reading opinions of people who have run that pad.

Cooling: flush your coolant system, clean coolant, no leaks, and spend $8 for a bottle of Water Wetter. You live in FL for crying out loud.

Rear seat belts: no passenger back there = no need.

For most people with typical bolt-on cars, your car is probably significantly more capable on track than your driving (no offense). Listen to the car and have fun.

My $0.48.

Josh


Passenger: I am just hoping to take Lisa for a few laps around the track in my car

Shoes: My slip-ons never come off, I'm sure I could prove this somehow. I couldnt shake them off if I tried. I don't own any other shoes at the moment, and this will just be another convention expense.

Tires: If I bought special tires, they would be for future HPDEs and conventions, not just this. I suppose the Azenis are really my only affordable option, but I know I am going to spin them in second coming out of the corners.

Brakes: ok Carbotech it is, leaving my stock pads would be stupid.

Cooling: I was going to get the watter wetter!

I know my car is far more track capable than I am, I'm just worried about it being more track capable than my tires.

Thanks for the help Josh, you always seem to be sending it my way.
2009-02-11 00:06:33
#65
yea, if your boosted get some good pads. I used up my oem nissan pads (AD22's) in 4 sessions.

Corrections, it was 8 sessions total, not 4.
2009-02-12 06:59:33
#66
Originally Posted by LOUROK
yea, if your boosted get some good pads. I used up my oem nissan pads (AD22's) in 4 sessions.


very good to know
2009-02-12 08:27:58
#67
Holy cripe 4 sessions? How long was each session? Were they new?

I have Axxis ultimate's up front on my ad22's and I am considering getting the same for my rears.

You guys really think we will be eating the pads out? I'm not trying to set any track records in braking distances here.


Dudeman
2009-02-12 13:29:39
#68
He is boosted, so he will (probably) be seeing higher speeds than you. Also, aren't the Axxis Ultimates basically a decent street pad? I ran them on my Z32 for street use, but never tracked that.

If you do run those just make sure and bring some spare pads.
2009-02-12 13:39:13
#69
This track really only has one braking section. I wouldn't worry about brakes too much. Track newb here though, so take that as you will.
2009-02-12 19:41:36
#70
Originally Posted by Dudeman258
Holy cripe 4 sessions? How long was each session? Were they new?

Dudeman


Sorry I need to correct myself. It was 2 track events 4 session each. I forgot I went road racing 3 weeks before.
Each session was 15-20 mins long. This was at the 07 Chicago convention. Before boosted oem pads were fine for a track day.


Originally Posted by BenFenner
This track really only has one braking section. I wouldn't worry about brakes too much. Track newb here though, so take that as you will.


Very good point. This track does not seem to have corners were braking is harsh.
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