A few weeks ago, we were at Road America for one of the most iconic events in club racing: the SCCA June Sprints.
There are tracksโand then thereโs Road America. Nestled in the rolling hills of Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, Road America is one of the most iconic and demanding circuits in North America. At 4.048 miles, itโs one of the longest permanent road courses in the country, with 14 turns that blend technical precision with full-send bravery. Corners like the Kink, the Carousel, and Canada Corner donโt just test your carโthey test your commitment. Turn 5 is the โslowestโ min-speed corner at a target min-speed of 55-60 mph, depending on the car! That is the โslowestโ with the rest of the corners having target min-speed of 65, 80, 90 and 110 mph. ????
And then thereโs the June Sprintsโa race weekend steeped in history. Since 1956, the June Sprints have stood as a cornerstone of American amateur road racing. Itโs a proving ground for national champions and future pros, where every lap carries the weight of decades of racing tradition.
But what truly sets this weekend apart is Elkhart Lake itself. This little town breathes motorsport. Historic restaurants like Siebkens and The Osthoff are filled with old racing photos and stories, and the street signs and commemorative plaques around town proudly mark the original road course from the 1950s, when racing took place on public roads. Itโs a place where history isnโt just rememberedโitโs woven into the landscape.
Just down the road isย RealTime Racing HQ, a name familiar to any longtime fan of World Challenge or Honda racing, SO COOL! And everywhere you look during June Sprints weekend, the town is buzzing with performance carsโfrom vintage Porsches to modern GT4 machines. Itโs aย car loverโs paradise, and for racers like us, itโs nothing short of heaven.

Big Brains, Big Gains โ Engineering First
Before a single lap was turned, Tyler Campbell was already deep in the work: suspension geometry, brake data, tire modelingโhe put in the kind of effort that sets great teams apart. We showed up with one of the most dialed-in testing plans weโve ever run, and it paid off.
We donโt show up to look cool (or at least we think we try to look cool but look like a bunch of racing and track nerds! ????) and bench race. Weโre here to science the crap out of our race cars and racing!

Wednesday & Thursday โ Building the Foundation
We rolled in Tuesday night with storms on the radar. Wednesday morning was still wet, but once the track dried, we got to work. We missed the first test session due to the wet track and expected dry conditions through the rest of the race week, but kicked off our structured setup plan with back-to-back sessions focused on testing our hypotheses.
I ran our Spec E46, not because we expected to win overall, but because it gave us a solid, familiar platform to test against elite-level competition (and the Touring 3 Nissan 370Z needed another heart transplant, weโll get into that more in a future post).
Every change delivered something newโevery lap taught us something valuable.

Thursday, we mounted fresh tires and saw a measurable step forward. All signs pointed toward progress, and it gave us confidence heading into the official sessions.
Friday โ Contact, Recovery, and Grit
Morning practice started off wellโฆ until it didnโt.
Dave Orem got dive-bombed in Turn 1. The hit spun him, left him stalled, and another carโunable to avoid himโcollected the Z4M hard.

Thankfully, Dave was okay. And thanks to an incredible community, we pulled off a minor miracle: sourcing every part needed to get him back on track.
Shoutout to Trevor and Wyatt at Motion Control Suspension for building a replacement MCS shock on short notice and getting it to us overnight.
Friday Qualifying โ Almost There
Meanwhile, I was out for qualifying in the E46. Brand new tires. Low Super Tour points meant I was gridded at the back of the T3 field. But we knew we had pace.
Twice, I was on flying laps that wouldโve moved me to P2 or P3โboth times caught in traffic at the carousel and kink. Absolutely destroyed those laps.

We finished the day P4. Not ideal, but we knew more was coming.
Saturday โ Reset & Rebound
With Daveโs car repaired, he jumped back in for qualifying.
โI didnโt think about the car at all. I was able to focus on finding space and putting down lap times.โ
Exactly what you want to hear after an incident. He wasnโt fully back to pace yet but showed strong progress.

For me, Saturday qualifying locked in P4. Solid lap. Solid position. Not a perfect lap, but enough to put us in contention for Sunday.
Sunday โ Race Day
Daveโs Race
Sunday morning, Dave started deep in mixed-class traffic. Lost a few spots at the start, but once the field spread out, he got to work.
Lap by lap, he found rhythm, overtook competitors, and with just a few laps to goโreset his personal best lap time.
He finished P5 in Touring 3, proud of the recovery but wishing he had the two missed sessions to build more momentum.

Gamaโs Race
Hot, humid, and with storms on the radar. The goal? Finish to qualify for the Runoffsโand go for a podium if the opportunity was there.

Great start, dicing for P2 and P3 early. Lap 2 brought a jam up into Turn 3 behind a slowing T2 car. Another T3 car got through; I had to wait. That 3โ4 second gap to P3 took several laps to close.
Then it happened.
P3 (another Spec E46) dropped a tire into the dirt under braking. Big wiggle. Lost momentum. I got in the draft, faked right, popped left, held side draft as we bent leftโand completed the pass into Turn 5 with a wheel in or nibbling at the grass.

From there? Hit marks. Build gap. Donโt look back.
By the final laps, the lead over P4 was 30+ seconds. P2 and P1 had gotten through the local yellow before me, and that ultimately determined the gap. I brought it home in P3.
???? Watch the Race
Want to see the full race and that battle for the podium?
???? Click here to watch the in-car + SCCA broadcast replay.
What Racing Teaches Us
One of the things I love most about racing is how often weโre proven wrongโand how thatโs a good thing. What we โknowโ is always based on the best data and insight weโve gathered up to that point. The goal isnโt to be right all the timeโitโs to stay curious, stay humble, and keep growing.
And thatโs what we did at Road America.

Letโs Build Your Path in Motorsports
If the way we raceโthe way we prepare, develop, and pursue excellenceโresonates with you, letโs talk.
Weโre not just about cars. Weโre about people, progress, and purpose.
And weโd love to help you chase your motorsport goals.
???? Contact us and letโs get started.




























































