Talk to me about "rotation" of the car early in th

A place to hang out and discuss all things Porsche.

Postby MikeD on Thu Nov 04, 2004 4:12 pm

David J Marguglio wrote:Mike: I m4eant the venue of our choice as opposed to where their school is located.


OK, I wasn't 100% sure based on what you said.

David J Marguglio wrote:... but they would need to curtail the school to what we wanted.


I think that would have to be the case for any of the programs, wouldn't it? I think there base program is to assume the drivers are a beginner. In our case we would outline certain criteria that the driver would meet (maybe Club Race qualified [12 track days after TT permit] or licensed).

P.S. I was mentioning PDE mostly because I've been wanting to do that for a while just for grins and to meet the instructors (R. Pobst used to be there, but is not on the current list :(, but H. Haywood is still on the list :D).
Mike Dougherty
'02 986 S - Arctic Silver/Black - #757 -- gone but not forgotten
User avatar
MikeD
Club Racer
 
Posts: 777
Joined: Mon Jun 28, 2004 8:31 pm
Location: Davidson, NC

Postby kary on Thu Nov 04, 2004 8:46 pm

David J Marguglio wrote:Kary: you and I have spoken about this before - I am in! Also, Tim W. (M.O.M) has wanted to sponsor this thing for years and has promissed to bring Randy Pobst in as our guest instructor. Thinking outside the box, I think it would be possible to contract with Dick Barber, Derick Daly, etc. to bring their instructors to our venue and we drive our cars it would be waaaaaaaaay cheaper than going to one of their schools. The added benifit would be not learning on a Formula Ford that we will never drive. If you are serious about this, I will be happy to put some time into it.


David, I am absolutely serious about trying to help put someting together. I like your ideas about Randy or any other professional driving instructors. While we can all learn different things from one another, learning from a pro is a whole other thing. Jack and I had instruction from a pro and learned so much more than I could have imagined. If we can some how provide some level of economy it would help.

So far we have David, Mike, and myself. Any others want to contribute around this idea as Mike and david suggested?
Kary
1997 993 PCA#131 POC#131
Group 9 Motorsports
www.group9motorsports.com
Image
User avatar
kary
Pro Racer
 
Posts: 1190
Joined: Mon Jun 28, 2004 9:35 pm
Location: Cardiff by the Sea, California, USA

Postby martinreinhardt on Thu Nov 04, 2004 9:26 pm

This is all great and I may be off subject (not a first) but, most top drivers never even took a driving school, they learn by driving GoKart on saturdays or after school (no rules at least that is how my brother and I did it) and racing their friends to the next pub or cafe. :lol: As an instructor this may not be the right thing to say (it may get me fired :lol:), but it is the truth. When you decide to race per example in Formula Ford series a) buy the car b) get a race license (3 day event were you learn the basics and this is as much school as you'll get) c) you are on your own and go race.

GoKarting is the best and cheapest racing school in my eyes.

Just my 2 cents.
Last edited by martinreinhardt on Thu Nov 04, 2004 9:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Martin Reinhardt
http://www.youtube.com/flatsixracer
Past - Timing, Registration, Webmaster, Certified Instructor

'07 Cayman S
'07 Formula Renault 2.0
'16 Cayenne
User avatar
martinreinhardt
Pro Racer
 
Posts: 1039
Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2004 7:32 pm
Location: Zone 8

Postby kary on Thu Nov 04, 2004 9:29 pm

Martin, so I take it from your reply you are not interested in this sort of instruction :shock: :lol: :shock: :lol:
Kary
1997 993 PCA#131 POC#131
Group 9 Motorsports
www.group9motorsports.com
Image
User avatar
kary
Pro Racer
 
Posts: 1190
Joined: Mon Jun 28, 2004 9:35 pm
Location: Cardiff by the Sea, California, USA

Postby martinreinhardt on Thu Nov 04, 2004 10:02 pm

Kary,

Yes, but I don't want to trash the idea. I simply think that we are already too advanced for those schools and may kick the instructor's asses.

I know I am not really good at heal and toe (I don't think it is required to be fast) at a autox (run out of time) I hope Tim or Burl will teach me this in detail one day. :lol:
Martin Reinhardt
http://www.youtube.com/flatsixracer
Past - Timing, Registration, Webmaster, Certified Instructor

'07 Cayman S
'07 Formula Renault 2.0
'16 Cayenne
User avatar
martinreinhardt
Pro Racer
 
Posts: 1039
Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2004 7:32 pm
Location: Zone 8

Postby Tim Comeau on Mon Nov 15, 2004 10:16 pm

Wow, I believe using heel and toe is absolutely neccessary to turn the fastest lap times because you need to be ready to accellerate the instant it's needed. If you don't match revs well on the downshifting, while trail braking into a turn, you'll oversteer and possibly spin. I suppose matching revs poorly while braking in a straight line would be more forgiving, but I wouldn't want to lose the time gained by trail braking. :)

As far as the "Higher Performance" driving school goes, I wasn't envisioning any long trips or expensive instructor fees, nor driving cars other than our own.
I wanted to pow-wow among our own instructors at the stadium, where spin outs are safe. It would be cool to have some pro drivers there, no doubt. I'd love to get some 1 on 1 time with Randy Pobst or Craig Stanton. I'll bet several of us could pull some strings to get some great pro drivers there. I might even be able to get a certain Formula 1 driver to share.
A written description of the techniques would be great. These could be posted on the website as a resource. (Legal disclaimer about not trying this in your own home, blah, blah, only on a closed race course, blah,blah.........)
Who could come? Whoever wants to be introduced to the advanced techniques. I was also envisioning a preliminary meeting to discuss interest/format, etc. I agree, alot of the meat and potatoes of the techniques is just describing how to do them and why we do them. Time, time, time.
Video of footwork would be the most helpful, don't you think? If a picture is worth a 1000 words, video must be worth a gigabite. :D
Tim
Comeau Racing Enterprises, Inc.
944 Spec racing specialist
New and used 944 parts source
http://www.comeauracing.com
PCA since 1985
Tim Comeau
Club Racer
 
Posts: 974
Joined: Fri Jul 16, 2004 10:49 am

Postby Kim Crosser on Tue Nov 16, 2004 9:56 am

I would really like to participate, and if it were done at the stadium, perhaps it could include AX drivers as well as TT and "big track" guys.

Another thought would be to take the "instructor day" and instead of a normal AX layout, set up a few specific "technique tracks". Perhaps an elongated oval with sharp turns for heel-and-toe practice, a wide oval for trail braking and left foot practice, etc. Then, get the drivers who really know these techniques to spend time teaching the rest of us how to use (and teach) them.
2012 Panamera 4
2013 Cayenne
2008-2009 Treasurer
User avatar
Kim Crosser
Club Racer
 
Posts: 791
Joined: Fri Jul 02, 2004 9:37 am
Location: Rancho Santa Fe, CA

Postby Tim Comeau on Tue Nov 16, 2004 11:51 am

Kim, THAT'S more like what I was thinking. :D We would need a long entrance turn into a decreasing radius to show the power of trailbraking. We would need a series of turns that you have to slow down for, but not downshift, to show the efficiency of left foot braking, etc.
Tim
Comeau Racing Enterprises, Inc.
944 Spec racing specialist
New and used 944 parts source
http://www.comeauracing.com
PCA since 1985
Tim Comeau
Club Racer
 
Posts: 974
Joined: Fri Jul 16, 2004 10:49 am

Postby MikeD on Tue Nov 16, 2004 11:58 am

While left-foot braking, trail-braking, heel-toe, etc are cool and I need to learn/practice them. I would also like to learn more about race-craft, tire management, drafting, setting up for the pass, etc. These are NOT just for Club Racing, they are also very valuable for the TT/DE participant.
Mike Dougherty
'02 986 S - Arctic Silver/Black - #757 -- gone but not forgotten
User avatar
MikeD
Club Racer
 
Posts: 777
Joined: Mon Jun 28, 2004 8:31 pm
Location: Davidson, NC

Postby Tim Comeau on Thu Nov 18, 2004 10:21 am

Race craft (car set up?)
Race strategy
Driving techniques

3 different subjects. I would want this school to cover only the 3rd one.
A race strategy school would be fun as well, but when you move from driving by yourself, to racing, different things become important. Lap times begin to decrease in importance. Using traffic, setting up the driver in front of you, going off line to pass all kill your lap times, but racing is more about attacking and defending. Taking positions and holding onto them. It doesn't matter how fast your lap times are as long as you're in the lead at the end.
Videos would be really important for a racing school. And hey, they're really fun to watch. :D
I'd be up for just having some beer and talking things over.......
Tim
Comeau Racing Enterprises, Inc.
944 Spec racing specialist
New and used 944 parts source
http://www.comeauracing.com
PCA since 1985
Tim Comeau
Club Racer
 
Posts: 974
Joined: Fri Jul 16, 2004 10:49 am

Previous

Return to General Discussions

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 72 guests