Sebring DavidMurry Jan 29/30 and 48hours Jan31-Feb3
#256
Rennlist Member
Fun weekend, didn't take the RS, but a new race car I built off a '08 non S Carrera to race in Stock H class. Finished the car's build the night before it shipped to Sebring, so it was a test and tune event for me. Struggle with the brakes all weekend. Talk about "ice mode" On Thurs it happened every other corner. Finally gave up because to dangerous. We change the master cylinder, adjusted brake bias using different compounds in the rear, disconnect the yaw Sensor, and programmed a few things out of the gateway, and got so it only happened about 10 time per race. Not ideal, but drivable, yet not to it's potential yet. Survived the first 2 sprints while still figuring out the brakes, then on Sunday won the Enduro in my class (H) and came in 2nd overall. Car runs 2:25s, but once brake are fixed, should do 2:23s. Thanks for runnin the radio Clark
#259
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there are full caged race cars that cant produce those times
No question that south florida attracts a great circle of GT3 owners/drivers.
#260
Rennlist Member
It's the weather.
Was the event open passing/no point like super solo? Half of those cars overtaken never even had the change to put their arm out
Was the event open passing/no point like super solo? Half of those cars overtaken never even had the change to put their arm out
#262
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+1,000,000!
__________________
-Peter Krause
www.peterkrause.net
www.gofasternow.com
"Combining the Art and Science of Driving Fast!"
Specializing in Professional, Private Driver Performance Evaluation and Optimization
Consultation Available Remotely and at VIRginia International Raceway
-Peter Krause
www.peterkrause.net
www.gofasternow.com
"Combining the Art and Science of Driving Fast!"
Specializing in Professional, Private Driver Performance Evaluation and Optimization
Consultation Available Remotely and at VIRginia International Raceway
#263
Three Wheelin'
Here's the Video from the 993 GT2.
Talked to the owner.
about 2800lbs no driver and a healthy 500WHP... maybe a little more
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpUf3yfVTxA
Talked to the owner.
about 2800lbs no driver and a healthy 500WHP... maybe a little more
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpUf3yfVTxA
It was nice to meet you on Sunday and I'm sure we'll meet again at Sebring sometime soon!
#264
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Eddie, your line into and through T17 on that first lap (haven't yet looked at the whole thing) is EXACTLY what VR, David Tuaty and I are looking for. The timing and execution of braking/acceleration can be optimized, but the PATH you are drawing is right on the money.
#265
Drifting
#266
Drifting
Fun weekend, didn't take the RS, but a new race car I built off a '08 non S Carrera to race in Stock H class. Finished the car's build the night before it shipped to Sebring, so it was a test and tune event for me. Struggle with the brakes all weekend. Talk about "ice mode" On Thurs it happened every other corner. Finally gave up because to dangerous. We change the master cylinder, adjusted brake bias using different compounds in the rear, disconnect the yaw Sensor, and programmed a few things out of the gateway, and got so it only happened about 10 time per race. Not ideal, but drivable, yet not to it's potential yet. Survived the first 2 sprints while still figuring out the brakes, then on Sunday won the Enduro in my class (H) and came in 2nd overall. Car runs 2:25s, but once brake are fixed, should do 2:23s. Thanks for runnin the radio Clark
#267
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Probably the strongest concentration of GT3 drivers in the country IMO. And they are really just getting into the potential of the cars. We are all of a sudden talking about 2:14's and possible 2:13's from a 3.8 on slicks with amateur driving. With some practice, setup, more familiarity with the tires and more competition running REAL tires. That number will continue to go down.
#268
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It goes to show that this is a learned skill. IMO, ALL drivers bleed red. Pat, Leh, Dominik, Jeroen as well as the best Club drivers like Klaus, Cory and Kasey. If they can do it, you can do it. Obviously, one of the key factors that make people better is the frequency they undertake it and the dedication that they apply to the craft.
But the bottom line is THIS; "proper execution of fundamental skills coupled with course knowledge SO detailed that the driver knows EXACTLY what they're going to do, BEFORE they get there..."
Going this fast is a skill capable of being taught, capable of being assimilated and, as comprehension of ever finer details and knowledge take root, confidence improves and people subconsciously begin coming off the brakes at a slightly higher speed, brake in a more consistent way, closer to the car's capabilities, picking up on the throttle in such a graduated but proactive way that the car yaws OUT of the corner!
I just want to say how cool it is to see Eddie, GT3DE, TrakCar, Grady, wanna911, mkk62 and the rest of this group get better and better. I appreciate the use of the TBL to establish that they DID parts of a lap that were even better than what they were able to string together all at once and use that to strive further. It's cool, it's fun.
Thanks and stay safe. Now back to the Rad/DE Cup show!
#269
Rennlist Member
You know, I know there is a lot of "pro driver" love shown here, but I've had a lot of fun watching the SoFla crowd get better and better, finding less of a difference between their own performance and the people they hire to help them.
It goes to show that this is a learned skill. IMO, ALL drivers bleed red. Pat, Leh, Dominik, Jeroen as well as the best Club drivers like Klaus, Cory and Kasey. If they can do it, you can do it. Obviously, one of the key factors that make people better is the frequency they undertake it and the dedication that they apply to the craft.
But the bottom line is THIS; "proper execution of fundamental skills coupled with course knowledge SO detailed that the driver knows EXACTLY what they're going to do, BEFORE they get there..."
Going this fast is a skill capable of being taught, capable of being assimilated and, as comprehension of ever finer details and knowledge take root, confidence improves and people subconsciously begin coming off the brakes at a slightly higher speed, brake in a more consistent way, closer to the car's capabilities, picking up on the throttle in such a graduated but proactive way that the car yaws OUT of the corner!
I just want to say how cool it is to see Eddie, GT3DE, TrakCar, Grady, wanna911, mkk62 and the rest of this group get better and better. I appreciate the use of the TBL to establish that they DID parts of a lap that were even better than what they were able to string together all at once and use that to strive further. It's cool, it's fun.
Thanks and stay safe. Now back to the Rad/DE Cup show!
It goes to show that this is a learned skill. IMO, ALL drivers bleed red. Pat, Leh, Dominik, Jeroen as well as the best Club drivers like Klaus, Cory and Kasey. If they can do it, you can do it. Obviously, one of the key factors that make people better is the frequency they undertake it and the dedication that they apply to the craft.
But the bottom line is THIS; "proper execution of fundamental skills coupled with course knowledge SO detailed that the driver knows EXACTLY what they're going to do, BEFORE they get there..."
Going this fast is a skill capable of being taught, capable of being assimilated and, as comprehension of ever finer details and knowledge take root, confidence improves and people subconsciously begin coming off the brakes at a slightly higher speed, brake in a more consistent way, closer to the car's capabilities, picking up on the throttle in such a graduated but proactive way that the car yaws OUT of the corner!
I just want to say how cool it is to see Eddie, GT3DE, TrakCar, Grady, wanna911, mkk62 and the rest of this group get better and better. I appreciate the use of the TBL to establish that they DID parts of a lap that were even better than what they were able to string together all at once and use that to strive further. It's cool, it's fun.
Thanks and stay safe. Now back to the Rad/DE Cup show!
#270
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Watching Sean Edwards qualifying/race videos, Leh driving flat footed sideways while completely relaxed or Pat Long correcting and saving a bump to the rear while still holding position at Lime Rock makes me think all of us amateurs have a long way to go. Some of that stuff is pure God given ability + intense training and adaptation to the level of competition that we don't have and won't get from DE.
The question is how close can you get to that level without either growing into it, or buying into it and seeing where you stack up. And how you drive like that when you have a car that you put 100k or 200k of your own money into. There are plenty of drivers racing pro with 100/1 money/talent ratio working with pro co-drivers and coaches non-stop, and still WAY off the pace.
The only way IMO to truly compare DECup to GTC is to have GTC driver driving the GT3 like they would the GTC car. That's the level I'd like to measure myself up against. But until that happens, I will continue to improve as if a pro could get in my car and go 4 seconds faster on my home track with the same setup. (1:22.3)
The question is how close can you get to that level without either growing into it, or buying into it and seeing where you stack up. And how you drive like that when you have a car that you put 100k or 200k of your own money into. There are plenty of drivers racing pro with 100/1 money/talent ratio working with pro co-drivers and coaches non-stop, and still WAY off the pace.
The only way IMO to truly compare DECup to GTC is to have GTC driver driving the GT3 like they would the GTC car. That's the level I'd like to measure myself up against. But until that happens, I will continue to improve as if a pro could get in my car and go 4 seconds faster on my home track with the same setup. (1:22.3)