Posted on

SCCA Hoosier Super Tour – Buttonwillow The Circuit

High Performance Race Cars on Track at Racer on Rails.

The Setting: Why Buttonwillow Matters

The opening round of our 2026 SCCA season brought us to Buttonwillow Raceway Park for the first SCCA Hoosier Super Tour of the year, February 21 – 22, 2026.

We raced on The Circuit configuration — Buttonwillow’s newer layout that’s been operating for over a year now and we were here last year, for the very first competition race weekend and event ever held at the new track. Ron competed here twice last season. For the rest of the team, we’ve logged time here supporting customers. But this was our first time bringing the Nissan 370Z to this configuration in race trim.

Touring 3 remains one of the most competitive, tightly regulated classes in SCCA road racing. The cars are production-based, but execution is everything. Small setup shifts matter. Tire management matters. Driver discipline matters.

Buttonwillow’s The Circuit layout also brings a very different technical personality compared to the original “Buttonwillow 13CW” configuration that many West Coast racers grew up on. Traditional Buttonwillow rewards aggression, commitment over bumps, and managing long-flowing corner sequences with a little bit of chaos built into the surface and sightlines. The Circuit, by comparison, feels more modern and much more precise. The pavement quality is smoother, the transitions are faster, and the corners tend to stack technical decisions on top of each other.

Sun is setting at Buttonwillow The Circuit – when the sun goes down, the air and track temps drop fast in February.

Several sections reward sacrificing entry speed to maximize minimum corner speed and throttle commitment on exit, while other complexes punish even tiny balance mistakes with lost momentum that carries for multiple corners afterward. It’s also a track where aero drag, mechanical grip, brake release timing, and tire temperature management all become more interconnected than people initially expect. A car that feels “pretty good” for one lap can quickly become difficult over a race run if the balance isn’t properly managed. In many ways, The Circuit feels less like old-school club racing Buttonwillow and more like a purpose-built modern technical circuit that rewards disciplined engineering and adaptable drivers.

At just over 2.5 miles in length, The Circuit combines roughly two dozen corners and transitional elements ranging from slow, technical rotation zones to fast, committed sweepers that reward precision and patience. The layout constantly shifts between decreasing-radius corners, long loaded exits, quick direction changes, and several areas where throttle timing matters more than outright bravery. For Touring 3 cars, gearing becomes especially important because many sections sit right on the edge between carrying momentum in a taller gear versus risking upsetting the platform with an additional shift.

The track surface itself is relatively smooth compared to the original Buttonwillow layouts, but the environment still plays a huge role in grip evolution. Located in California’s Central Valley, the circuit is frequently impacted by wind carrying fine dust and sand onto the racing line, while dramatic temperature swings between cold mornings and warmer afternoons can significantly change tire behavior and overall balance throughout a race weekend.

Buttonwillow’s Circuit layout rewards rhythm and precision. There aren’t many places to hide mistakes. It’s a track that exposes imbalance — mechanical or mental.

That made it the perfect place to start the year.


The Mindset: Process Over Outcome

Coming into the weekend, our objectives were clear:

  • Establish a stable performance baseline for the 370Z
  • Continue refining Ron’s throttle application and adaptability
  • Validate our tire pressure management process
  • Execute cleanly as a team

We intentionally chose to run lightly used tires instead of bolting on fresh rubber. Not to handicap ourselves, but to operate with discipline and long-term planning in mind.

For Ron, this season is about expanding his toolbox. He’s put in serious off-season work — simulator training, Porsche ice driving, DirtFish advanced programs — all focused on becoming more adaptable and decisive with inputs.

Ron Tanemura carving corners in his Touring 3 BMW Spec E46

For the team, this season is about raising our operational standard. When something breaks, we fix it properly. When development is needed, we create bandwidth for it.

No chasing. No scrambling.

Build it right.


The Weekend Story

The Journey South

Jordan and Ian drove the truck down through snow over the Oregon passes. Enough weather to keep things interesting, but they maintained traction and avoided chains. We arrived in California clean and on schedule.

That matters more than people think.


Testing: Cold Mornings, Steady Gains

Thursday brought cold temps and passing showers. Ron used early sessions to reacquaint himself with slip and rotation. By Friday he was back at 2:00.0 pace — only tenths off his personal best from last year at this track.

The 370Z test sessions were structured and deliberate. Controlled three-lap tire validation runs. Minor line adjustments through Turn 3, 5, 8, and 10. By Friday afternoon, we were consistently in the 1:56s with room left in the data.

The car was stable. Predictable. Repeatable.

Baseline established.


Mechanical Curveballs

Late Friday we discovered the Nissan’s clutch was nearing end-of-life.

Ian working his tail and back off, getting the clutch replaced on the Touring 3 Nissan 370z Nismo

Saturday morning became paddock surgery.

Transmission out.
Clutch replaced.
Qualifying missed.

Ron’s clutch was also right at a season’s worth of cycles, so we proactively replaced his as well. Two clutch jobs in one weekend.

It wasn’t glamorous work, but it was done calmly and correctly.

That’s culture.


Saturday Race: From the Back

Starting P28 overall after missing qualifying, the only direction was forward.

The opening lap was tight but clean. From there, it was controlled aggression and patience.

Twenty-two passes in twenty-five minutes.

Finished:

  • P6 overall
  • P2 in Touring 3

Fastest lap of the race would have placed us P2 on the grid for Sunday.

Gama in his Nissan 370z Nismo working his way through field during race 1.

All on used tires.


Sunday: Clean Execution

Sunday qualifying required careful temperature management after diagnosing a cooling fan issue. Despite traffic on both flying laps:

  • P2 in class
  • P4 overall
Gama and Ron making laps and loving every braking zone at Buttonwillow The Circuit

The race start was steady. The leaders stretched a gap as the rear tires began to show their age around lap five. Turn 1 required finesse and progressive inputs to manage increasing rotation.

Post-race inspection confirmed tire edge wear consistent with heavy cycling.

Final result:

  • P2 in class

Not quite the fight for P1 we would have liked, but an honest and disciplined run.

Starting the Race 2 from the front of the grid but not enough pace to truly challenge for P1.

Ron: Double Podium Weekend

Ron started P3 in class Sunday and battled closely with Spec MX-5 cars running in STL for additional seat time. Those cars were quick and the racing was tight.

There was side-to-side contact exiting Turn 3 that pushed him wide, but he stayed composed and fought back.

He finished:

  • P3 in class
  • Double podium weekend

Both races resulted in an all-Pacific Northwest podium sweep, with Scotty B White completing the trio.

Ron left energized and sharper. More sensitive to the car. More decisive on throttle. Clear on what to improve next.

That’s exactly what this weekend was for.

Tyler and Ron obsessing over the data, trying to figure out how to go faster, faster!

What We Take With Us

We worked through:

  • Snow-covered travel
  • Two clutch replacements
  • Cooling fan troubleshooting
  • Traffic-filled qualifying sessions
  • Tire degradation management

None of it materially impacted our results.

More importantly, the 370Z now has a clear and repeatable performance baseline. The upgraded big brake kit performed flawlessly. The car responds predictably to setup changes.

That’s a full PNW podium sweep for the Buttonwillow Hoosier Super Tour

We leave Buttonwillow not chasing something unknown — but building on something understood.

That’s the difference.

Goals were pursued with discipline.
Smiles were earned in the paddock and at dinner tables.
Memories were made in the moments that required composure.

Next stop: Sonoma Raceway with NASA.

The foundation is set.
Now we build.

Gama making most of the camber near corner apex to get the most speed through the corner.
Posted on

2026 Racing Schedule Announcement

Where Racer on Rails Will Be — Come Drive With Us

The 2026 season is officially underway, and our calendar is set. If you’ve been thinking about getting on track, racing more seriously, or stepping into a new program, then right now is the moment to get aligned. Once the season starts stacking, and things are heating up now, prep windows tighten quickly — especially for multi‑event campaigns.

With that in mind, here’s where Racer on Rails will be throughout the 2026 racing season. If any of these events are on your radar, reach out ASAP so we can map out your prep with intention.

SCCA West Coast — Majors, Super Tour & Runoffs

  • Feb 20–22 – Buttonwillow
  • March 27-29 Thunderhill SCCA Regional
  • May 8–10 – Portland SCCA Hoosier Super Tour (Mother’s Day Weekend)
  • May 23–24 – Pacific Raceways SCCA US Majors (Memorial Day Weekend)
  • Sept 25-27 & Oct 2–Oct 4 – Road America SCCA Runoffs

If you’re aiming for a Runoffs qualification campaign or national level competition, this is the ladder.

ICSCC Conference — Pacific Northwest Core Program

  • April 24–26 – Portland
  • May 15–17 – Pacific
  • June 19–21 – Portland
  • June 26–28 – Pacific
  • July 31–Aug 2 – QRP
  • Aug 14–16 – The Ridge
  • Sept 18–20 – Portland
  • Oct 9–11 – Portland (8‑Hour)

For Northwest‑based drivers looking to build racecraft, consistency, and confidence in a tight‑knit paddock, this is home base.

NASA — HPDE, Time Trial & Racing Ladder

  • Mar 6–8 – Sonoma
  • June 5–7 – ORP
  • July 17–19 – ORP
  • Aug 14–16 – Portland
  • Sept 4–6 – Pacific
  • Oct 23–25 – The Ridge

NASA offers one of the clearest progression paths from HPDE to Time Trial to wheel‑to‑wheel racing.

PCA Club Racing

  • Jan 30–Feb 1 – Sebring
  • April 10 – 12 – Road Atlanta
  • July 10–12 – Watkins Glen
  • Sept 4–6 – Road America

If you’re running a Porsche platform and want structured, national‑level competition, this is a strong calendar.

OnGrid Time Attack — Full PNW Calendar

We will be supporting the full OnGrid PNW calendar in 2026.

  • March 27-29 – The Ridge
  • May 22-24 – The Ridge
  • May 29-31 – Thunderhill (GTA)
  • June 19-21 – Pacific
  • July 24-26 – The Ridge

If you’re building a time attack car, refining aero, or sharpening qualifying pace, we’ll be there.

GLTC — Laguna Seca

We will be attending GLTC at Laguna Seca in 2026 as part of our Time Attack and related driving programs.

  • April 17-19 – Carolina Motorsports Park
  • May 8-10 – Road Atlanta
  • June 12-14 – Gingerman Raceway
  • July 24-26 – Watkins Glen
  • Aug 21-23 – Lime Rock Park
  • Sept 18-20 – Laguna Seca – committed to this event only for 2026

If national exposure, high‑energy sprint racing, and a dynamic paddock appeal to you, this is an event to plan early for.

Track Days & Competition License Schools — ProFormance Racing School

For drivers earlier in the journey — or those ready to earn a competition license — we will continue supporting participation in track days and competition school programs with ProFormance Racing School.

ProFormance Racing School Calendar

ProFormance Racing School Accredited Competition Race Licensing Calendar

ProFormance offers:

  • High‑quality foundational instruction
  • Structured HPDE progression
  • Competition license schools
  • A strong on‑ramp into wheel‑to‑wheel racing

If you are:

  • Brand new to the track
  • Looking to build fundamentals
  • Working toward a competition license
  • Or simply wanting more seat time

We can help align your goals, prepare your car, and integrate your track day progression into a broader racing plan.

Track days aren’t separate from racing — they’re often the first step toward it.

What This Means for Your 2026 Season

If you:

  • Want to run even one of these events
  • Need race prep, dyno, setup, or Test Ready certification
  • Want coaching support
  • Are exploring a full‑season campaign
  • Are starting with track days or license school

Our shop capacity, coaching calendar, and trackside support structure are built around this schedule. Aligning early ensures we can support your goals with the time and attention they deserve.

Tell us now.

Goals. Smiles. Memories.                 2026 is here.