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SCCA Touring 3 Nissan Nismo 370Z #109 โ€” Build Overview

Introduction

Every race car has a story, and our goal with these build overviews is to pull back the curtain a bit and share the why behind each one. Not just the spec list or the shiny parts bolted on, but the decisions that shaped the build, the lessons we learned the hard way, how the car performs today, and where weโ€™re taking it next. Think of this as a guided walk through the full journey โ€” the good, the bad, the breakthroughs โ€” so that whether youโ€™re dreaming up your first build, refining a current project, or planning something wild for the future, youโ€™ve got real-world insight to draw from. And hey, if any of this sparks ideas or youโ€™re curious about building a similar car, weโ€™re always happy to talk shop and help you get pointed in the right direction.

Gama shaking down and testing things to figure out the brakes in his 2011 Nissan Nismo 370Z in SCCA Touring 3 Class

How We Ended Up in a Nissan 370Z for Touring 3

Our path to campaigning a Nismo Nissan 370Z in SCCA Touring 3 didnโ€™t start with a Z-car at all โ€” it started with a fleet of BMW Spec E46s and a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

Back in 2021, the SCCA Runoffs were being held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Thatโ€™s bucket-list territory. There was absolutely no way we were going to miss the chance to race at Indy, so we brought our Spec E46 drivers and cars and dove into T3 with both feet.

That first year was awesome. The SE46 was decently competitive and, with a 2,950-lb minimum weight in Touring 3 (vs. 2,850 in the spec class), we still felt like the platform had room to grow. We were optimistic.

Even a hurricane couldn’t slow down the field enough to make a Spec E46 competitive at big tracks like VIR

But 2022 at VIR changed everything.

VIR is the polar opposite of Indy when what matters most is top-end speed. And in T3, you simply cannot hide from that reality. While the front-running cars were consistently touching 138โ€“140 mph top speeds, our Spec E46s were essentially tapped at 136 mph, and in reality at VIR, we were barely seeing 132 mph with a draft.

So even if the chassis could somehow theoretically match the lap times, the racing wasnโ€™t viable. It was a harsh reality check, but a necessary one.

Time for a Change

After the 2022 Runoffs, we evaluated realistic alternatives:

  • BMW Z4 M Coupe
  • Nissan 370Z

We also had a 2010 Porsche Cayman PDK ready to build, but the timeline and development curve didnโ€™t match our Runoffs schedule.

The turning point came when a proven, nationally competitive T3 370Z changed hands and landed with our friend Chris Hart. Suddenly, we had access to race-winning data and real experience. Combined with the 370Zโ€™s double-wishbone geometry โ€” perfect under T3โ€™s 3.5-degree camber limit โ€” the choice became clear.


Buying the Car โ€” A True Nismo

In mid-2023, we bought a 2011 Nissan 370Z Nismo โ€” a true, original-owner Nismo.

Because the shop was at max capacity, the entire initial teardown happened in the driveway. Full interior strip, seam sealer removal, weight reduction โ€” everything. We delivered a perfect rolling chassis to Fabtek for a cage that matched Chris’s championship-proven design.

Cage & Safety Fabrication

Once Fabtek completed the cage, we resprayed the interior in OEM Nismo red and began the race against time to assemble the car before the 2023 Runoffs at VIR.


2023 Runoffs โ€” The ABS Reality Check

We made it to VIRโ€ฆ but the first test day exposed the 370Zโ€™s biggest flaw: its factory ABS logic.

We experienced full-on ICE mode, where the ABS system dramatically reduces braking pressure unpredictably. It ended our Runoffs before the weekend truly began โ€” but thank God, the car and driver were safe.

Post-Runoffs: Fixing the Brakes

That failure changed everything. We went deep into:

  • pad compounds
  • rotor configurations
  • wheel-speed ratios
  • heat management
  • master cylinder behavior
  • ABS trigger logic

We broke things. Tested everything. Logged everything. Even pushed for rule adjustments when needed.

And now? The brakes are one of the absolute strengths of the car.


Current State of the Car

Chassis

  • 2011 Nissan 370Z Nismo
  • SCCA-compliant Fabtek cage
  • OEM interior respray (red)
  • OEM front strut bar
  • No additional chassis stiffening (per T3 rules)

Interior & Safety

  • Racetech 119 seat
  • Schroth 6-point
  • Safecraft nets
  • Lifeline fire system
  • OMP wheel
  • Helmet blower + cool shirt
  • Lots of heat shielding at the transmission tunnel to protect driver’s feet

Brakes

  • Paragon PA015 calipers
  • Paragon 2-piece rotors
  • Carbotech XP12 front pads / 1521 rear pads
  • Motul RBF660
  • Goodridge stainless lines
  • Racer on Rails custom brake ducts
  • Fully optimized ABS strategy

Suspension

  • MCS 3-way coilovers
  • Eibach T3-compliant springs
  • SPL adjustable arms & endlinks
  • AFE sway bars
  • Urethane diff mount

Engine

  • Nissan reman VQ37HR
  • Z1 baffled oil pan
  • OEM intakes (required)
  • 42mm restrictor
  • Motordyne test pipes
  • Z1 single-exit exhaust
  • ECUTek tuned on 100 octane
  • Comprehensive cooling upgrades
It's a Z battle at the 2025 SCCA Runoffs!
It’s a Z battle at the 2025 SCCA Runoffs!

Aero

  • OEM Nismo V1/V2 aero
  • Race Louvers center hood louver
  • OEM body panel constraint for T3

Electronics

  • AIM MXS v2 + SmartyCam 3 dual
  • Switch-Pro control system
  • Full auxiliary sensor package
  • Motorola long-track radio

Drivetrain

  • CAE shifter (350Z variant custom-adapted)
  • Tomei 1.5-way LSD
  • OEM mounts (urethane where allowed)
  • Diff & trans coolers
  • Enkei RFP1 18×10.5 + Hoosier A7s

Racing & Driving Highlights

???? 2024 Hoosier Super Tour Win โ€” NOLA Motorsports Park

The carโ€™s first national-level win (but technically a P2 due to post-race adjustment). New track, technical course, colder weather and still figuring out the brakes.

Video:

???? 2025 CAT Majors Win โ€” Road America

90ยฐF, extreme humidity, and the car delivered a dominant run once we were in clear air.

Video:

???? Global Time Attack โ€” The Ridge Motorsports Park

Unrestricted laps on Yokohama A052s showed the Zโ€™s true potential.

Video:


What Weโ€™ve Learned

  • The car loves mechanical grip.
  • Weight distribution & stiffness tuning are critical.
  • The ABS and braking system is both the biggest weakness and the biggest opportunity.
  • Heat management is everything in longer races/sessions and when air temps get above 80F.
  • The Z rewards smooth inputs and stability.
  • Parts availability is excellent with the right partners.

Future Direction โ€” Where #109 Is Headed

  • More engine & cooling refinement
  • Testing Paragon PA015 big-brake upgrade
  • Further alignment/tire data development
  • Weight management improvements
  • Full prep for 2026 Hoosier Super Tour + Runoffs

Thinking About Building a Production-Based Race or Track Car?

If this build sparks any questions, ideas, or โ€œshould I do this with my car?โ€ thoughts, reach out. Whether you’re dreaming up a production-based track car, considering something in the SCCA Touring 3 or Touring 2 world, or want to explore a power-to-weight package similar to this build, we’re always happy to help you think through the right path.

From full builds to setup refinement, from brake and cooling solutions to driver development, we love partnering with drivers to create fast, reliable, confidence-inspiring cars. If something here resonated with you โ€” letโ€™s talk.

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June Sprints at Road America โ€“ A Weekend of Grit, Growth, and Podiums

Turn 1 at the start of the Touring 3 race at SCCA Chicago Region June Sprints race!

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 tracksโ€”and then thereโ€™s 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, itโ€™s 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 donโ€™t just test your carโ€”they test your commitment. Turn 5 is the โ€œslowestโ€ min-speed corner at a target min-speed of 55-60 mph, depending on the car! That is the โ€œslowestโ€ with the rest of the corners having target min-speed of 65, 80, 90 and 110 mph. ????

And then thereโ€™s the June Sprintsโ€”a race weekend steeped in history. Since 1956, the June Sprints have stood as a cornerstone of American amateur road racing. Itโ€™s 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. Itโ€™s a place where history isnโ€™t just rememberedโ€”itโ€™s 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 carsโ€”from vintage Porsches to modern GT4 machines. Itโ€™s aย car loverโ€™s paradise, and for racers like us, itโ€™s 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 modelingโ€”he put in the kind of effort that sets great teams apart. We showed up with one of the most dialed-in testing plans weโ€™ve ever run, and it paid off.

We donโ€™t 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. Weโ€™re here to science the crap out of our race cars and racing!

Gama and Tyler discussing setup options, data collected and how to move forward.
Gama and Tyler discussing setup options, data collected and how to move forward at June Sprints.

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, weโ€™ll get into that more in a future post).

Every change delivered something newโ€”every lap taught us something valuable.

Dave Orem in his BMW Z4M Coupe bombing through Turn 7 at Road America during the 2025 June Sprints
Dave blasting through Turn 7, building speed and confidence lap after lap.

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 wellโ€ฆ until it didnโ€™t.

Dave Orem got dive-bombed in Turn 1. The hit spun him, left him stalled, and another carโ€”unable to avoid himโ€”collected the Z4M hard.

Bryce and Rene hammer away at fixing a nearly fully destroyed front passenger side corner.
Bryce and Rene hammer away at fixing a nearly fully destroyed front passenger side corner. Within 12 hours of total work time, across a couple days and with overnight delivery of parts, Dave and his Z4M Coupe were online and ready for qualifying session 2 and the race weekend!

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 wouldโ€™ve moved me to P2 or P3โ€”both times caught in traffic at the carousel and kink. Absolutely destroyed those laps.

Gama Aguilar in the Racer on Rails silver bullet rental Spec E46,

We finished the day P4. Not ideal, but we knew more was coming.


Saturday โ€“ Reset & Rebound

With Daveโ€™s car repaired, he jumped back in for qualifying.

โ€œI didnโ€™t 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 wasnโ€™t fully back to pace yet but showed strong progress.

Dave building confidence in qualifying after the hit that took him out of Q1.

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

Daveโ€™s 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 goโ€”reset 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.

Dave making moves through the Sunday main Touring 3 race at the SCCA Chicago Region June Sprints.
Dave making moves through the Sunday main Touring 3 race at the SCCA Chicago Region June Sprints. BMW Z4M Coupe T3 race car.

Gamaโ€™s Race

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

Turn 1 at the start of the Touring 3 race at SCCA Chicago Region June Sprints race!
Gama looking for a way through at the start of the Touring 3 SCCA Chicago Region June Sprints race.

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 3โ€“4 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 leftโ€”and completed the pass into Turn 5 with a wheel in or nibbling at the grass.

Gama looking to grow the gap to P4 during the SCCA Chicago Region June Sprints race at Road America in the Racer on Rails Spec E46 rental race car, the Silver Bullet!
Gama looking to grow the gap to P4 during the SCCA Chicago Region June Sprints race at Road America in the Racer on Rails Spec E46 rental race car, the Silver Bullet!

From there? Hit marks. Build gap. Donโ€™t 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.

YouTube player

What Racing Teaches Us

One of the things I love most about racing is how often weโ€™re proven wrongโ€”and how thatโ€™s a good thing. What we โ€œknowโ€ is always based on the best data and insight weโ€™ve gathered up to that point. The goal isnโ€™t to be right all the timeโ€”itโ€™s to stay curious, stay humble, and keep growing.

And thatโ€™s what we did at Road America.


Letโ€™s Build Your Path in Motorsports

If the way we raceโ€”the way we prepare, develop, and pursue excellenceโ€”resonates with you, letโ€™s talk.

Weโ€™re not just about cars. Weโ€™re about people, progress, and purpose.
And weโ€™d love to help you chase your motorsport goals.

???? Contact us and letโ€™s get started.

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Race Report 4: Virginia International Raceways SCCA Hoosier Super Tour 2022

The 4th and final stop of the 2022 Southeast Winter trip for the team was historic Virginia International Raceways, located just north of the Virginia/North Carolina border, in Alton, VA.

Before dive into the weekend, below is the map we took from January – April and covered nearly 7k miles and through the winter season across most of the country which resulted in catching the cold and wet weather at nearly each stop. Wow!

4 stops and ~7k miles over 4 months. Hats off to Jordan and Memo who drove our trucks, trailers and cars for every single mile.

Preparing for VIR

Road Atlanta ended up being a primer for VIR for the team. VIR is almost like a bigger Road Atlanta in that it is made up of mostly medium and high speed corners. Proper technique and equally proper commitment are critical to get into a groove and start attacking the lap times.

Just as before, each driver logged multiple hours in the simulator so that we all knew the track by heart and could dive into the test day with a focus on establishing a baseline performance and chipping away at the times.

On average, each driver (and crew member) had nearly 100 laps at VIR on Assetto Corsa with similar or the exact same cars as we were driving in real life.

Thursday Test Day – More Inclement Weather (Massive Thunderstorm Edition)

We all arrived and were fully setup on Wednesday night for the weekend and Thursday morning we awoke to some dew on the grass, dry track and chance of a shower here or there throughout the day. The first session was dry and we all got out and started familiarizing ourselves with the track in real life. Conclusion? The simulator model was pretty spot on!

A few minutes after our session ended, a thunder storm rolled in and another, and another, and another. We had 2, maybe 3 cells roll through and the middle two sessions were shot. Not just because it was raining but torrential downpour and the poor souls who decided to go out (and survived) ended up getting black flags in each session as the conditions were just horrible. Further, the forecast didn’t call for rain during the weekend so using up new rain tires under those circumstances wasn’t a good use of the tires.

Completely unedited and it only took a few minutes of rain before we had water running on the ground.

By the afternoon, the cells had passed and the track started drying. We all went out and while times were slower (transitioning to dry conditions), it was valuable time to further familiarize ourselves with the track.

Learning, Improving and Delivering Results!

The weekend had a similar progression as we’ve had at the other stops but we arguable started off at the highest point to start the weekend. All three drivers came out strong out of the gate and were within striking distance of podium positions, just needed to put our heads down and keep chipping away at the times.

Every session was an opportunity to learn and while unseasonably cold air rolled through on Friday night, everyone steadily chipped away at the times and at worst, were in a mid-pack battle but still within striking distance for a podium.

BMW Spec E46 Touring 3 SCCA
Simon in his Touring 3 Spec E46 managing transitioning conditions.

Below is a look at three of the corners we focused on across most drivers.

Sweet track map of VIR full course with a clear plexiglass on top that makes for great white board discussions about lines, markers and passing zones.

VIR Corner Focus 1: NASCAR Bend (Turn 3)

NASCAR Bend is the first left-hand corner/complex of the lap where it’s a bit of an awkward, somewhat off-camber corner where there isn’t a ton of time to be gained but very easy to over-slow and lose time. It feels a lot like Turn 6 at Portland International where it’s key to maintain minimum speeds and spend as little time as possible in the complex.

None of us really felt like we consistently hit the corner right but we aimed at being on-throttle at the apex, ascending to full throttle and carrying enough speed that the car had no choice but to use all of the exit curbing on the right. Getting out on that curbing then gave us a wider arch for the next left hand corner, which then left us track left to setup the run through the esses.

BMW M240iR in Touring 2 class at VIR NASCAR Bend
Gama in the Racer on Rails #110 BMW M240iR using all the exit curbing coming out of NASCAR Bend at the start of the Sunday race.

VIR Corner Focus 2: Southbend (exit of the Uphill Esses)

Before there is any controversy, yes – the Uphill Esses (Climbing Esses) are a pretty unique experience. There are few tracks in the world where you are flat out in 5th gear (or 6th gear) and you enter a corner section… without lifting. Thanks to the hours each driver spent in the simulator, after the first few laps in dry conditions, we were all able to take them flat but once you have the right line and rhythm, there’s not much more to them. HOWEVER! What you do on the exit of the Esses is something else.

Check out the Sunday Race 3 video in the M240iR and specifically this video is placed on a flying lap where the car gets light at 129mph and while being flat full throttle. (Note – rewind to start to watch the climb from P5 to P3 in Touring 2 class)

YouTube player

First, yes – it is possible to stay flat through the entire uphill essess complex but doing so compromises the entry into Southbend, of which is a high-speed left hand corner where you’re trying to keep your minimum speed above 90mph.

We found in the simulator that under most conditions, that was the trade-off and instead focused on having the car balanced and turned correctly to brush off minimal speed at Southbend and then carrying that speed into Oak Tree.

VIR Corner Focus 3: Oak Tree

Very much wish we could have been here when Oak Tree had the actual tree still standing. It’s an interesting and challenging corner to begin with but having the tree creating a arch across the corner, would have been majestic. But that’s life and we still enjoyed the scenery and challenge of the corner.

Open wheelers/formula cars showing the line through Oak Tree.

While it’s referred to as a single corner, it’s more like two corners in one and it is *not* a slow speed corner. The entry is best when you can brake into the corner and in a straight line. You can also brake less than you initially think, because the entry is uphill so the grip increases, the further into the corner you go. There is a moment of releasing the brake about mid corner, a focus on getting wide to the left to open up the radius of the corner and then attack the apex with full throttle application right at or before the apex.

In recent years, VIR has added extra pavement beyond the traditional FIA exit curbs which means more track and thus the ability (and requirement) to use all of that extra track on exit. Oak Tree leads to the longest straight away, which makes it the most important corner to hit well and consistently. In the BMW M240iR, we were hitting in the low 140-142mph without a draft and up to 145mph with a draft. The Porsche Cayman GT4 Clubsport was consistently hitting 150mph+ before braking for “Rollercoaster”, which was indeed, a roller coaster!

Race Results: Gains and Podiums

Saturday was a tough day for everyone – full course yellows (not caused by any of our drivers) were rampant, despite dry conditions. There were no gains on personal bests and we all found ourselves battling below the pace we each had demonstrated but struggling to get past cars with better straight line speed.

Dave looking for a way past a T3 Mustang at VIR

Sunday, we all hit the reset button and focused on getting solid starts, creating our own track position/space and getting after it.

Touring 3 Race: Dave and Simon both pounced on mistakes by other drivers and picked up a spot individually, putting Simon in P3 and Dave in P7 before a full course yellow came out that eventually ended the race due to an STU car that had gone deep into the tire wall at the end of the back straight away. Driver and car were all okay. Both ended up with their personal best lap times right before the FCY and were it not for the FCY, each felt like they had the rhythm and pace to further improve.

GT2 Race: Ann started in P5 with a mega qualifying effort and quickly jumped into P3 on the first lap with some assertive moves. With a gang of TA2 cars, tube-frame chassis RX7’s and many other ground pounders, her nimble and incredibly impressive under braking, Cayman GT4 Clubsport was under constant attack on the long back and front straight aways but she was able to create distance in the handling sections of the track.

Unfortunately there was a 3 lap long Full Course Yellow which took away the entire gap that she had built up and as soon as the green flag was thrown for the restart, she was back under attack and sitting duck for cars that had nearly a 10mph speed trap advantage.

Ann defended hard but ended up losing two positions by the end to finish in P6 BUT she fired in her fastest lap of the weekend on the final lap of the race.

Touring 2 Race: Gama was once again behind the #110 BMW M240iR for this race and faced similar challenges to the previous races – great under braking, handling but lacking 8-10mph to other BMW’s and 10-14mph to the Porsche’s. It became very clear on the Saturday race that if he wasn’t able to keep them behind them before the end of the back straight (coming off of Oak Tree), he’d be stuck behind them for the rest of the race.

The goal was simple – get a solid start (tough with a turbo car), get positions and keep them behind before T13 (Rollercoaster) and then create a gap in the handling sections.

The start was above average but still nothing compared to the naturally aspirated cars. Fortunately, they left a giant gap going into braking for T1 and was able to recover a lost position under braking. The next two laps (switching to first person mode) I was looking for a gap and specifically coming out of the uphill essess because I had noticed the Porsche’s were struggling to carry speed and get a good exit out of Southbend.

In lap 3 of the race, it happened – 997 Porsche got too sideways on the exit and I pounced, getting by him before braking for Oak Tree.

I was getting better exits out of Oak Tree than the Porsche but by about the middle of the straight away, I was a sitting duck so for one lap, I defended like a lion. Right after exiting the corner, I signaled to the Porsche that he’d have to pass me somewhere else on this one lap as I slowly moved from one side of the track to the other so that I could break a draft he might get (not that the Porsche needed it). He got the message and stayed behind.

From then on, I put my head down and carried as much speed as I could through Hog Pen (final corner sequence of the lap) and onto the front straight. I had created just enough of a gap that I didn’t think he could make a credible move into turn 1, so last second, I moved back to the left to brake at normal spot and line. The Porsche ducked in to out-brake me into Turn 1 but the line was WAY too shallow for braking that late and with the additional speed the Porsche’s carry, so he easily washed out and off-track.

From then on, I put my head down and hammered out two new personal best lap times (in the 2:04’s) and was chipping away and making my way through traffic. Aside from a big mistake, I simply didn’t have the straight line speed to compete for better than P3.

Full course yellow came and my gap had been erased. The following 10-12 minutes were some of the most nerve racking of my life – I was sitting duck on the restart so I’d have to pull some magic out again but luckily, the race ended under FCY and for the first time in my life, I was beyond grateful for that result. P3 in Touring 2 class at Virginia International Raceways and against a fleet of Fall Line Porsche’s and BMW’s – what a weekend!

What’s Next?

We’re a little late in publishing this report but after this we make our way back to the Pacific Northwest to start the regional racing season with races at Portland International Raceways, Pacific Raceways and Spokane County Raceway in May.

VIR was an amazing experience overall and great practice and data gathering for when we return in September for the 2022 SCCA Runoffs.

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Race Report 3: Micheline Raceway Road Atlanta SCCA Hoosier Super Tour

Tyler doing his Road Atlanta Happy Dance

The third stop in our 2022 race schedule and “Winter Sun Bird” trip took us to Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta! Extra emphasis on the quotes re the Sun Bird portion as that was the goal behind the trip – go chase the sun during the winter, warm up and hit some bucket list race tracks.

Want to know how the previous two stops went? Get caught up by checking out our Buttonwillow and Circuit of the Americas Race Reports.

Rolling into the Road Atlanta main paddock on load-in day. Lifetime achievement unlocked!

For the third race in a row, the northern cold decided to chase after us! We landed on Wednesday, got everything staged up and finally got a full day’s worth of testing/practice on Thursday which made a massive difference for each driver in terms of getting up to speed on the track and a baseline direction for a setup.

On Friday we had an AM practice and a first qualifying session but while we were all catching some Z’s overnight, a massive weather system came through the area, dumping rain everywhere and putting on a solid light show. By the time the system had moved through, a deep cold front had settled in and we awoke to 22F air temps and snow flurries throughout the day.

Yes – it was SNOWING throughout the day, coupled with a friendly breeze that included 30-40mph gusts of wind that dropped the windchill into the mid-teens. We still got out there and made progress but that might have been one of the toughest days for drivers and crew to be at the track – bone chilling air temps, super cold track, multiple laps needed to warm up tires and nice and slick grass waiting to give anyone who dares come off the track surface, an express trip into the comfy arms of the walls surrounding the Road Atlanta.

Thoughts on Road Atlanta as a circuit

This was the first time for all but one driver to drive Road Atlanta but that one driver only had a half lap under their belt from the previous experience because of black flag incidents of people going off spectacularly. This ended up being an indicator of things to come for our weekend as well.

Sunset shot of Turn 5 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta – the uphill exit elevation change is MUCH larger than it seems from in-car videos and even this picture.

For those that are from the Pacific Northwest, Road Atlanta has a similar feeling and characteristics to Pacific Raceways – it’s old school. Both tracks were built and opened up in the 1960’s/1970’s and are filled with mostly medium speed to high speed corners. All corners and segments are high commitment with an emphasis on getting into a rhythm and flowing speed into the corner.

The slowest corner at Road Atlanta is Turn 7 with a minimum speed in our cars of around 47-50mph and multiple corners with minimum speeds of 70 and 90mph at the apexes.

The back straight from Turn 7 to Turn 10a is about as long as front straight away of Pacific Raceways – pretty dang near terminal velocity for many cars.

Looking back counter-course to Turns 10a and 10b at the end of the back straight away where the goal is to brake as late as possible while still clipping the apex curbs hard and getting to full throttle as soon as possible past the 10a apex.

While each driver had at least 10 hours of simulator preparation and training before the weekend, everyone had at least a little shock when we finally got on track. Here are a few comments from the drivers after the first couple of sessions:

  • The elevation changes from entering and exiting the esses are real and much more dramatic than it seems from in-car video.
Looking back at the entry of the esses, counter-course. Picture is taken from the hillside on driver’s right and about level elevation to the entry of the esses.
  • Use as much of the exit curbing of Turn 5 is critical but if there’s gravel or the painted surfaces are wet, forget about it. The car is already barely holding on as it goes through bumps and any extra steering input or unanticipated wheel spin and the car can come around real quick.
  • The elevation drop for braking at T10a is real – it takes a few laps to gather the confidence to brake where you can in the simulator but that compression helps slow the car down.
  • The hill at Turn 11 and more importantly, the downhill run from it afterwards is STEEP! Like very, very steep. As you crest over the hill, there is nothing to see but the bridge and the sky – is a similar feeling to the bypass or the crow’s nest at Thunderhill but you stay full throttle flat the whole time and are in 5th gear shortly after the peak.
  • Staying flat at Turn 12 is ‘easy’ in the simulator but not so much in real life. Some drivers got near staying flat throughout the weekend but with it being the first time racing here, slick grass conditions and MANY cars that met their ends on the front straight (and ruined multiple sessions and races), we decided to optimize for completing the weekend and having all the cars in one piece.
Dave and Simon bombing through Start/Finish in their Spec E46’s in Touring 3.

A weekend of massive breakthroughs and results!

The goals for these race weekends have been simple: 1. Have fun and 2. Become better drivers.

We’re firm believers in that when we focus on the improvement process and having fun, the results will come on their own and that belief continues to pay dividends.

Spec E46’s in Touring 3 Class

Both Dave and Simon put in 10+ hours of simulator training before weekend so from the start, they knew where they were going but with the conditions being extremely cold on qualifying day 2 and race 1, the biggest challenge for both was trusting that the car could do what they’ve done in the simulator and seen some of the super talented drivers in the Southeast do on race weekends.

Simon took the approach of picking out one single corner and with the help of Ray Phillips, sending it harder than he had sent it before and more than he felt like the car could do but trusting in the guidance from Ray and that the car could handle it. The result? During Race 1, Simon sent it into Turn 5 faster than he had done in any session and was so committed that he stayed flat through the whole exit and even through an almost opposite lock correction AND that ended up being his best lap time of the race.

From then on, he built on that confidence to establish a new normal, made some moves and ended up with his first race win ever and at Road Atlanta in an SCCA Super Hoosier Tour race! WOW!!!

Simon driving through Start/Finish on the final lap of Race 1 to claim his first race win at Road Atlanta!

Dave had been chipping away at rebuilding his pace after the rollover at Buttonwillow to start the season. It might seem like a simple thing – you have a major incident, no major injuries – just jump right back in right? Well that’s exactly what Dave did but even then, it still takes some time to work through the mental blockers of simply sending it and trusting the car and track will hold.

On Sunday afternoon, the biggest breakthrough came with Seth Thomas on the radio coaching him through traffic and making moves. Unfortunately Dave’s battery was low and when we finally were released from grid, the car wouldn’t fire – so we had to push start his car which meant he’d start the race at the back of the entire field which isn’t great but that might have been the extra fuel for letting things go – what was there to lose?

With Seth’s help, Dave turned it up, made pass after pass, improved his personal best lap time by nearly 3 seconds and finished in P2 after Simon had contact during a FCY restart and did a precautionary drive through the hot pits to make sure the car was safe to continue racing.

Simon and Dave making up a Racer on Rails double podium on Sunday!

To top it all off, we found out after the weekend that P3 on the Saturday race was disqualified so Dave ended up with two podium finishes at Road Atlanta!

Porsche Cayman GT4 Clubsport in GT2 Class

Ann came into the weekend looking to build on the gains she made at Circuit of the Americas and did she ever! Similar to Dave and Simon, Ann had multiple mini moments of simply letting go, trusting the car and driving the pee brains out of her car.

Ann’s Porsche Cayman GT4 Clubsport exiting Turn 3, squatting and putting down the power! Chris Green | ChrisGreenPhoto.com

In each session she found more and more pace. Saturday’s Race 1 looked like it would be the big breakthrough but traffic hurt her start and a high horsepower Corvette got around her which ended up being nearly impossible to get around once it got in straight line. Further, the race had 3 lengthy full course yellows and in the end, there was 5-6 actual flying laps in the race.

For Race 2 on Sunday, the air had warmed up and the races had gone green flag for most racing laps and Ann turned it on. Per Ann, she let her car do her thing and switched from trying to force the car to do things and instead let her free. Her personal best lap time dropped by nearly 2 seconds from the prior day, moved up 4 positions into P9 overall, P5 in GT2 and she had the pace for a P3. At the rate Ann is developing, she’s going to need to start making room in her bags for souvenirs.

BMW M240iR running in Touring 2

This was the second race weekend with the M240iR but the first knowing ahead of time that this would be the car. I (Gama) put in several hours of work in the simulator before the weekend and had a good sense of how the car would handle. At the end of the test day, I got a 4-5 window of traffic free laps to establish a consistent pace and on the prior weekend’s race tires. The pace looked good and we knew there was a bit more on the table with fresh tires and maybe a draft here and there. The big question was the track conditions.

Friday AM we scrubbed in a new set of tires so that they were prime for Qualy 1 on Friday afternoon. The whole day we were watching the weather and knew showers were in the order. Apparently the locals or regulars knew something was up because a race broke out on the out-lap and we completed one flying lap. I ended up backing up to give me space for a lap and potential second one but as we were halfway through the second flying lap (and I was almost a second up on the first lap), black flag came out and back to the hotpits we went. We ended up being released and I went out but the track had too much rain on it and was considerably slower (braking for 10a to test the track limits was “interesting”).

Gama testing the limits of the exit curbs of Turn 12

The Touring 2 field was small and there was a split start between the Touring cars and the ST cars so the net impact was negligible but it was still disappointing to not be able to put together a proper flying lap.

On Saturday, we were the last race group and while the snow flurries had cleared, the cold clear winter air started cooling down and it was a brisk 30F by the race start. It was so cold that the M2CS in P3 of Touring 2 spun right as we exited pit lane and went head first into the wall. Luckily the driver and car were okay and able to make the race but a lap down.

The two Porsche’s in P1 and P2 were well prepared and optimized for Touring 2 class as we saw right away their ability to stretch legs in 4th gear and pull away. It was clear that at the very best we could hope to stick close enough to catch a bit of draft and capitalize on a mistake if it were to come up. The race was plagued with FCY’s and only a couple laps after a restart, a Honda Civic lost it on the exit of T12 and made contact with the walls, ending the race under a black flag all.

Gama and Ann patiently waiting to be let loose at pre-grid during the Thursday test day.

On Sunday we got warmer weather and thankfully, many more racing laps. Started P3 and held P3 at the start with little contention but once again the Porsche’s ran away and there wasn’t much pressure from behind so the focus was on putting down consistent and fast laps. A few laps in, a FCY that last only 3 laps.

On the restart, my goal was to stick with the Porsche’s through the first sector where we had a better shot and be on their heels for the long back straight but as I got a jump on the Cayman, I had to move to the left to avoid tagging his rear. In doing so, I left a lane open on the inside of which the BMW M2CS pounced on and while I quickly reacted and moved to cover the lane, he had already established overlap or close enough to it that I had to concede the space.

Restart 1 of the Sunday race with the BMW M2 CS getting a run and the inside line through Turn 1. Chris Green | ChrisGreenPhoto.com

We went side by side all the way up to Turn 3 but he had the inside and it’s near impossible to go 2-wide into the esses with any speed so I gave up the position.

The rest of the race was a similar story to COTA where I was able to stick with the M2CS, eating up most or all of the gaps in the corners but the M2 having just enough additional straight line speed to pull away.

There was a point with a couple laps to go where we were catching lapped traffic and I saw the opportunity to box him in on the exit of Turn 10a behind the lapped car and impact his ability to accelerate. The move worked but the M2 still had the low end torque to squeeze through the two cars and that was the end of the race – P4 and less than a second away from P3.

Gama on the bumper of the BMW M2CS in the #110 Racer on Rails 2015 BMW M240iR at the finish of Sunday’s Race 2.

The written description not enough? Watch the whole race!

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All in all, a great weekend for the Racer on Rails Team as the cars ran well all weekend, drivers improved and we took home a collection of hardware!

Racer on Rails team signing off from Road Atlanta! From left to right: Seth Thomas, Simon Asselin, Tyler Campbell, Ann Doherty, Ray Phillips, Gama Aguilar, Dave Orem, Bryce Allen, Memo Calderon, Jordan Allen, Reid Morris.

Our next stop takes us to Virginia International Raceways on April 7 – 10, 2022. Can’t wait!