ShobThaBob
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- rosooftw
So yeah. I race. After I race I make threads about said races. You may have noticed many moons ago when I wrote about Road Atlanta. I was supposed to go to Buttonwillow. I did go to Buttonwillow. The car I'm going to be talking about today also went to Buttonwillow to be raced. But alas, it died an hour into the race. Something about eating valves and vomiting pistons. It wasn't pretty to see or hear.
So they fixed this car, a 1987 Porsche 924 S. It's the platform that was enlarged to make the 944. The 924 had a dinky **** VW engine with 90hp. It was later turbocharged, but was unreliable as hell, so Porsche decided to throw their 2.5 I4 in it. 150hp in a car that small made it lively and fun back then. It is still lively and fun even today.
The course that I ran was this configuration.
It's flat as ****. No elevation changes. It heavily favors momentum cars are there are several tight turns and very few sweepers. There's a good balance of straightline acceleration zones and technical areas to balance out high horsepower muscle and low horsepower handlers. On plenty of tracks throughout the country, there are ROval configurations which use the infield road course and the NASCAR oval. Texas World and Texas Motor speedway make excellent use of the these configurations. Due to the location of Autoclub being in LA, that meant that there were lots of events going on in addition to chumpcar. Saturday had a ridealong Nascar event where you would be taken out in a car with an instructor and then could drive yourself. There was also a Mario Andretti experience where a driver would take you out in a 2seat Indy car and zoom around the oval. There were also several carting events and a herp derp drive a ferrari or lambo around some cones or in a straight line in a parking lot event. The reaction of people driving up in their Land Rover for the Mario Andretti event when they saw me in shorts looking desheveled and smelling like a foot heading to the showers was priceless. Turnout for the race wasn't very impressive. There were only 26 cars in the field.
Turn 1 is a hard braking zone which, combined with the approach to turn 15 led to MANY squared off tires, and a couple flats which ended up burning straight through the cords. This track was brutal on tires. A quick right left after the heavy braking zone led to a short acceleration to the top of 3rd to a light braking zone to a very tight left right. It was very easy to lift off the brakes into a dab of oversteer to point the nose of the 924 into the turn and then stay on the gas through the 2 sweepers leading up to 9.
9 and 10 were very awkward corners over uneven pavement and tarmac which didn't transition well. It was jarring and led to several incidents and spinouts. It was also a good way to goad some of the heavy HP cars into going off if they felt like they needed to be carrying more speed to keep me off their ass, but had to take an off or brake when they found out they couldn't turn that much. The exact same can be said for 11. 12 and 13 were flat out with 13 and 14 being heavy braking zones at the top of 3rd gear. It was very hard to brake consistently, as the tarmac didn't seem grippy, and it's an off camber turn which wants to throw you off the track. 15 is the only place I dipped down into 2nd. Then onto the main straight and over again. Lap times were around 1:30, with my best being a 1:27.6, and the car owner putting down a 1:27.3.
So they fixed this car, a 1987 Porsche 924 S. It's the platform that was enlarged to make the 944. The 924 had a dinky **** VW engine with 90hp. It was later turbocharged, but was unreliable as hell, so Porsche decided to throw their 2.5 I4 in it. 150hp in a car that small made it lively and fun back then. It is still lively and fun even today.
The course that I ran was this configuration.

It's flat as ****. No elevation changes. It heavily favors momentum cars are there are several tight turns and very few sweepers. There's a good balance of straightline acceleration zones and technical areas to balance out high horsepower muscle and low horsepower handlers. On plenty of tracks throughout the country, there are ROval configurations which use the infield road course and the NASCAR oval. Texas World and Texas Motor speedway make excellent use of the these configurations. Due to the location of Autoclub being in LA, that meant that there were lots of events going on in addition to chumpcar. Saturday had a ridealong Nascar event where you would be taken out in a car with an instructor and then could drive yourself. There was also a Mario Andretti experience where a driver would take you out in a 2seat Indy car and zoom around the oval. There were also several carting events and a herp derp drive a ferrari or lambo around some cones or in a straight line in a parking lot event. The reaction of people driving up in their Land Rover for the Mario Andretti event when they saw me in shorts looking desheveled and smelling like a foot heading to the showers was priceless. Turnout for the race wasn't very impressive. There were only 26 cars in the field.
Turn 1 is a hard braking zone which, combined with the approach to turn 15 led to MANY squared off tires, and a couple flats which ended up burning straight through the cords. This track was brutal on tires. A quick right left after the heavy braking zone led to a short acceleration to the top of 3rd to a light braking zone to a very tight left right. It was very easy to lift off the brakes into a dab of oversteer to point the nose of the 924 into the turn and then stay on the gas through the 2 sweepers leading up to 9.
9 and 10 were very awkward corners over uneven pavement and tarmac which didn't transition well. It was jarring and led to several incidents and spinouts. It was also a good way to goad some of the heavy HP cars into going off if they felt like they needed to be carrying more speed to keep me off their ass, but had to take an off or brake when they found out they couldn't turn that much. The exact same can be said for 11. 12 and 13 were flat out with 13 and 14 being heavy braking zones at the top of 3rd gear. It was very hard to brake consistently, as the tarmac didn't seem grippy, and it's an off camber turn which wants to throw you off the track. 15 is the only place I dipped down into 2nd. Then onto the main straight and over again. Lap times were around 1:30, with my best being a 1:27.6, and the car owner putting down a 1:27.3.