California Festival of Speed

California Festival of Speed

The 12th Annual California Festival of Speed, the largest Porsche event in the Southwest, comes to Auto Club Speedway April 5th thru 7th.  With participation from Porsche Club of America (PCA), who is also the event host, the Porsche Owners Club (POC), and Pirelli GT3 Cup Trophy USA West, this Festival of Speed promises to be one of the biggest and most exciting in recent years.

In addition to the PCA Cup Race and Time Trial, this year’s California Festival of Speed will also include POC Cup Racers and Time Trialers, a PCA Enduro, a PCA Zone 8 Concours, a Taste of Autocross, a celebration of 50 years of the 911, a Porsche Corral, swap meet, and of course, a Vendor Row.

On Friday, the California Festival of Speed features practice session for all groups, track tours, and a Pirelli GT3 Cup Race.  Saturday’s schedule includes more practice and qualifying, PCA/POC Sprint Races, another Pirelli GT3 Cup Race, and a 60 minute Enduro to close out the day.  Sunday brings three more sprint races, Pirelli GT3 Cup Race, and a Time Trial to close the weekend.

Check the calendar for detailed information, the event schedule for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, and a free parking coupon.

Here is the track map for the Auto Club Speedway configuration used for the California Festival of Speed.

A handy web page for Schedule, Track Map, Time Trial entrants by PCA Class, & Results

Patrick Long Interview

Patrick Long

Patrick Long, Flying Lizard Motorsports

I was fortunate to sit and talk with Patrick Long, factory Porsche and Flying Lizard Motorsports #45 driver, on the day before the 2012 ALMS race in Long Beach.  Rain was pouring down in buckets, and it looked like a wet qualifying session was in the offing a couple of hours later.  As it turned out, qualifying was cut short by more heavy rain after a brief bit of sunshine, and IMSA reverted to standings for the grid – which was essentially Sebring results.  Patrick gave some great insights on racing strategy, racing with multiple classes on track, his career, the competition, the new 911 RSR, and race preps.  Unfortunately on Saturday, while charging through the pack – thanks to a poor grid position resulting from their Sebring misfortune – Patrick suffered a cut tire caused by carbon fiber debris from an earlier incident between other cars.  He had moved up from tenth on the grid to fourth when the unexpected pit stop ruined their chances for a podium.  Teammate Joerg Bergmeister took over for Patrick just past the halfway point and ultimately finished seventh.

 

Chet: What happened at Sebring?

Patrick Long: No coverage of it. Joerg just came over the radio and said ‘What the hell?  I’m sorry – i don’t know what happened.’  We talked to Dominick Farnbacher who’s close to the Porsche family, and he couldn’t really explain what happened.  Everyone checked up going into last corner, and that was it.

 

Chet: I’m amazed you could fix #45 and still take green within the hour…

Patrick Long: You know that’s a mixed emotion deal.  That’s a new rule in IMSA that you can get back under someone else’s power – ie, a flatbed.  Usually under ACO rules if you cannot make it back to the pits yourself, you’re done.  So it’s a new rule.  It helped us a lot because the main goal becomes getting to 70% so you can score points, and we were able to achieve that, so that’s really good, because starting with a 0 at Sebring is really hard to recover from.  Starting with anything below a podium is very difficult, but Sebring has not been good to the Flying Lizards.  Hasn’t been good to me really since 2005 with Peterson.  Snakebit always with Penske.  Finished on the podium with Tafel in ’07, but with Flying Lizards, its been…  It’s been very close – we’ve had the speed and strategy and all that to get there in certain years, but it’s just slipped out from underneath us every time.

 

Chet: When that happens, do you change the way you drive mentally the rest of the race just to survive?

Patrick Long: No, not so much.  What you don’t want to do is go for 12 hours just cruising around because you’re actually more prone to a mistake by driving around at less than full focus and full pace, but you do have to be more wary of the race that’s going on that you’re not involved with.  Because often times if you are selfish about that or get into other people’s business, it comes back to you twice in the future.  Drivers remember – they’re like elephants.  So you’re just very respectful to your competition who are on the lead lap regardless of how quick might be are or how much you want to be on TV.  You just have to have that respect.  Other than that we push pretty hard for a lot of reasons – development, setup, to know what could have been with how hard we worked in the off season.

 

Chet: What do you think about the WEC & ALMS together on the track at the same time?

Patrick Long: I think that’s good.  First of all, in sports car racing it’s such a fragmented, complex equation.  So many different series, so many different classes – here, there, everywhere.  Class names, series names – everything always changes – it’s a moving target.  I realize there are two sides to the story.  There’s our side where we’re like, ‘I don’t get it, why is there every single acronym ever known to man.  Why can’t we just simplify this?’  But I also understand the sanctioning body and trying to make it more understandable and trying to make it attractive to new teams and sponsors.  I just wish there could be some uniformity.

To your question – maximum starting entry at Sebring is great.  It was supposed to be more of a headache than it actually turned out to be.  Of course we had lots of yellows, but that’s always part of Sebring.  Practice was easier to navigate than we would have expected.  You don’t really get a clear lap.  I’m sure the prototypes had a more difficult job than we did in GT.  It did add to confusion of classes and finishing order and the podium ceremonies.  I think you’ll see less of that in the future.  I think everyone’s decided that if the WEC is going to do their thing and want to be who they are, they need to exist on their own.  I think it’s a testament to American racing to American Le Mans Series and Sebring that they want to be part of the club.  It shows how much of an icon that race is.

 

Chet: I guess you also hope that someone who is in one of the other classes that’s not even in the ALMS race doesn’t affect the outcome – like almost happened?

Patrick Long: Yeah, exactly.  That move was uncalled for and really just shows a lack of integrity or understanding of the whole way the world works.  There may be more to the story but to the outsiders perspective it was bad.  You know there is a different culture in racing – I lived for a while and raced over there, and it is much different.  You know in the paddock and also on the track, for better or for worse it’s just different.  So I see that – it’s more of a cutthroat nature in European sports car racing.  It’s probably not seen as regretful to them as maybe it was to the rest of the US contingent.

 

Chet: Can you be friends with guys on the other teams in the paddock?

Patrick Long: Yes, you can.  More so in this culture, in the US/North American culture; less so in the European culture.  You know I had a mentor, Kenny Brach, and I asked Kenny when I was a 19-year old aspiring driver, ‘So how does it work amongst you and all the other IndyCar drivers?’  And he said, ‘Well, the way I see it, the fewer friends I have that are competition, the fewer times I’m going to have to second guess you know, putting a wheel into a guy come the last lap, last turn.’  I came over from Europe hardened after 7 seasons and not really putting my best foot forward to reach out and meet my coworkers.  I was enlightened by a mentor of mine who just said, ‘Look you might not know that person officially, but you guys are all feeling the same thing.  You’re all on the road 300 days a year.  Your families are at home.  And this is your office.  You might not know every department, but at you can at least have the respect of others and give the respect to others, but still be competitive.’  So I’d say that Corvette and the ESM guys, and there’s a lot of guys out there – the Falken guys – they’re main competitors of ours, but we still have a great amount of respect, and we still really get on well.  I’d say I have about the middle of the road to fewer paddock friends, per se.  The people I have the most in common with are usually inside these walls.  So it’s a balance.  To me it’s more individual.

 

Chet: Do you miss competing with the Risi guys?

Patrick Long: Yes, who’s to say they won’t be back, but I certainly will miss that if they don’t come back.  It got sticky there last year at Laguna, and there’s a few things that I’m not thrilled by, but I know they’re not thrilled with a few of my choices, and I think that’s what a real rivalry is about – its coming together and moving apart and keeping everyone on their toes.  Great, great competitors and a really, really different mentality in that organization – very unique.  And I think people would say that about the Lizards as well.  So hopefully it holds a little piece of the sportscar history book.

 

Chet: You have had a great rivalry – there’s been some great battles between you guys – and it’s not good for ALMS that they’re not here?

Patrick Long: As brutal as it has been, and as intense as it might have seemed, that’s actually one organization where at least the crew guys – a lot of the energy that we follow is based on the interaction of our respective crews.  The drivers are kind of like high school kids.  But with the crew guys you can see which organizations really radiate integrity because they respect each other.

 

Chet: Plus they have had a complete turnover of drivers there since some of the most intense things happened, right?

Patrick Long: There are certain people that have come thru those doors on the driver’s side that are just awesome.  There are others who have a bigger more personal agenda that we don’t miss as much.

 

Chet: You mentioned about your time in Europe; tell me about your path to being Porsche’s only American factory driver.

Patrick Long: My ticket from Southern California, wheels-and-engines, crazy toddler to being employed by a company such as Porsche really comes down to opportunity and more specifically competing against the best.  And it raised my game thru osmosis and exposure.  I don’t believe if I took the traditional Americana route of road racing that I would be employed as a professional today.  And that’s nothing against our ladder system or our drivers or our teams.  It’s just that I don’t consider myself a phenom, genetic freak of nature.  I think that I got to where I did because I had people who were willing to take a chance on me who saw something and were willing to give me a shot.  It started with my family – with my Dad specifically leveraging every dollar he’s ever earned out of a woodshop that started in our garage – to go kart teams to just people who really took me under their wing for no apparent reason other than to try to help out a hungry kid.  But Europe is what solidified it all because at the go kart level and the junior formula level it’s the best kids from every respective country in the world in one little rainy, foggy island of the UK.  That was sink or swim for me.  There were a couple of touch and go seasons or parts of seasons where I was laying in my bedroom that I was renting from a lady and just asking myself, ‘am I cut out for this’, ‘what is it going to take’ and just stuck with it.  The timeline is go karts locally, regionally, state, national, toe-in-the-water exercises international, full time international, and then the formula ladder.  Never had the money.  There were a couple of contracts put in front of me where I could have signed my life away for 25% of my career and had money infused into a bank account and had managers and all that stuff.  But I always remained primarily independent, and that was probably a good thing.  Sitting today it would be hard to write a check – a portion of every dollar that I worked hard for – to someone who invested in me, but I understand that there’s a trade off.  The last part of the question would be the real pinnacle was being selected by Red Bull for their inaugural Formula 1 US driver search.  It’s a group of 16 that had people like Hunter-Reay, Almendinger, Speed and Giebler, all the people I grew up racing hard against.  Most were Californian. And at that point – I still consider myself immature – at 21 years old I was mature enough to understand that all 16 of us were going to come out way ahead of where we went into that deal.  There were only going to be a couple of winners, but every single one of us was going to have the steps we needed in that ‘burst onto the scene’ type ride.  And sure enough – I kept my options open because I had been through so many of those driver selection things, and it’s a crap shoot and you’re trying to look into a crystal ball and see where do you put your money on for your future.  It’s like looking at a bunch of puppies and trying to decide which one is going to be the best dog playing catch with.  You’re just grasping for little clues.  So along that way I met the Porsche guys – Uwe Brettel who was head of SuperCup and all the one make Cups and the junior team, and his colleague Helmut Greiner who really grandfathered the whole UPS junior team that brought Lucas Luhr, Timo Bernhart, Marc Lieb, Marco Holzer, and Mike Rockenfeller along.  I met those guys, and I put a lot of energy into finding out who they were and spending some time with them where I’d say some kids in that program were just destined in their minds for Formula 1 and no one else mattered. Red Bull was the only way to the top and piss on anybody else who wants a piece of them – they were there for one reason.  And a lot of those kids made it, and that was their issue.  I just thank my lucky stars that Porsche saw something in me, and we connected more on a personal level than what they saw on a race track.  Uwe Brettel is here this weekend who runs international motorsport.  He’s the guy who took the chance on me from day one.  They wanted an American, but they didn’t know where to access one.

 

Chet: You make it look so easy: the pass on BMW 2 years ago at LB, chasing down opponents at Laguna Seca – what’s the toughest thing for you behind the wheel?

Patrick Long: Behind the wheel is walking that line.  The difference between between hero and zero at this level – that line is so small and so fine.  Every level that I went up in my career – even in sports car realms of different series.  Right now, ALMS, this era in GT racing, I am biased to say that there has never been anything like this since I have been around as far as competition.  So the hardest thing is – if we could just throw caution to the wind and pump our chests up and do whatever came to mind, and then just put a reset button on it if we screwed up, it would be a whole different game.  But because you’re dealing with a piece of machinery that’s worth close to a million bucks and you’ve got other lives on the line, you have to be very selective in a split second, fighter pilot type decision.  We take some of the fun out of racing.  Fun to me know is being out with my friends on a vintage weekend or POC or PCA event and just barbequeing and driving, but there’s nothing really death defying on the line.  These days this is what I love, and subconsciously it’s still my fun, but consciously it’s high stakes, high intensity.  So that’s the toughest part.  The off the track stuff is just a dream come true – from media to engineering to conditioning strength – all that type of stuff is what I always worked for.  But it’s tough right now.  No one’s going to deny that we’re behind the eight ball.  We rode a three-year glory train where we could do no wrong.  we won five in a row; it was our heyday.  And we’re doing our best to bring that back, but we’re not there right now.  And last year was a completely grounding, humbling scenario of situations for all of us, team-wide.  But certainly for myself – I can speak for myself – that it put me back to a realm of reality where I just had to look in the mirror and say, ‘you thought you were invincible, you thought you were the best.’  But we’re all human.  Things go our way some days and other days they don’t, and lots of things are in your control and lots of things aren’t.  Sometimes that’s just how the cards fall.  We were sitting at that blackjack table, and they kept dealing us 21.  Through preparation, through timing, through hard work, through a lot of things that people deserve credit for, but I also believe there was a little bit of – I won’t use the ‘L’ word, I just think it’s over used in racing and it’s over abused.  Too many sum up screw ups to luck.  But I do believe you make your own fortune.  And we’ll be back.  This makes it so much more gratifying when we do well, because we’ve gone through so much challenge and struggle.  But still, a bad day at the race track is better than a good day at a real job.  We’ve got to remind ourselves of that.  Results – that’s was drives us all – lap times and podiums and all that.  But really, what all of us struggle from in this room and this paddock is a sickness of racing.  We’re getting to do that, and if I think it was easy, it would become boring.

 

Chet: How is the new car; how is it different?  Does it make you more competitive?  Is BMW you toughest competitor right now?

Patrick Long: I would say the product that Ferrari has put on the track is the biggest challenge right now.  Thru sheer pace that we saw at Sebring, but also because they’ve made their speed the good old fashioned way – with their own two hands rather than politicking.  There are other manufacturers that are racing with a ton of waivers.  A substantial amount of rule breaks.  And without getting to far into a political discussion that’s as opinionated as any type of politics, I just give Ferrari a lot of credit for what they’ve found in pace.  People can say what they want about Italian cars and about Ferrari and all the rest of it, but those guys have done a great job.  And we’re right on their heels.  It didn’t equate in Sebring, but I think we’ll learn more tomorrow, and as we get on into the summer months.  Sebring’s its own apple and so is a street course.  We’re always going to be pretty good on street courses and at Lime Rock – the smaller road courses – but when you get to the Road Americas, the Mosports, the Mid Ohios that’s kind of when the cream rises to the top, and we’re not oozing with confidence, but we know we’re a lot better than we were last year – substantially.  It’s just that a lot of our competition is substantially improved as well.  But that will all kind of even out as we get into the thick of the season; it’s still to early.  But for us, a wider front track, a taller front tire, a much more aerodynamically efficient car – those are huge, huge steps in the right direction.  It’s not just aesthetics, these guys have worked tirelessly in Weissach, and we just kind of cracking the surface.  We got our car right before Sebring, and we’re going to go test after this for a few days and get into some trial and error stuff.  On a race weekend your basically just fielding limited track time and trying to get everybody comfortable.

 

Chet: How do you determine which of you two is the qualifier?

Patrick Long: The way we work things out is to sort of split it down the middle.  Tracks that Joerg really likes and the tracks I really like – kind of decide to qualify at those tracks.  Some might argue maybe that’s not the best thing to do because usually the qualifying driver starts, and if it was your best track and you felt like you were really in the zone, you might want to be in at the end of the race.  But we just kind of split it up half and half.  The bottom line is the qualifying driver spends more time in the car during the week leading up to the race and gets more allotment of the new tires.  In our internal policy we choose that before the race begins so that it doesn’t become a pissing contest or something that is a variable.  We try to remove all the variables.  So we do that ahead of time.  It’s not one week on, one week off, but it sometimes it turns out to be like that.

 

Chet: In a situation like this where you have to go out in the rain, do you have historical rain setup data to qualify in the rain and then go back to historical dry setup for the race tomorrow?

Patrick Long: In a situation like this we know the ‘go-to’ two or three changes that we usually make in a certain direction on a certain part of the car for the rain.  We still fine tune like we would this morning, and that would be our baseline for qualifying.  We put a few changes in, and then we debrief after each session with both the #44 and #45, cross compare notes, etc., and see what we can learn.  Nothing big and drastic between sessions, but sometimes in a situation we’ll make a diff change or something like that that needs to be really evaluated by the same driver.  And the wild card is the way it looks now going into the race tomorrow with zero time in the dry – that’s a real roll of the dice deal.  We have existing notes for years – I mean every note we’ve made for 10 years we have in files.  But with this new car and the tires constantly evolving a lot of it kind of goes to what we know from Sebring and what we know gets translated from Sebring to Long Beach.  There I believe we have the best guys in the business – Craig Watkins and Roland Kussmaul.  They know how to just compute it and calculate and somewhat just go by intuition and gut and put something on the car that’s always good.  A lot of that is a testament to difference in thinking, but the ability to listen to one another.  They really balance each another; they have such different backgrounds.  Roland’s an old school driver turned engineer who’s worked on everything from 959 at Dakar to 962s and GT1s and Spyders and everything else.  He’s really just a 911 specialist, and bleeds Porsche literally.  And then Craig has a background as a mechanical engineer.  He’s very innovative and very quirky and just brilliant – I mean, intelligence beyond computing.  It’s a cool setup there, and we just go with what they have to say.  And Joerg is very, very technically inclined.  Very switched on.  He can tell you about cuts in a rain tire and how it all works.  So as a driver he’s probably as knowledgeable on the engineering side as anybody in this paddock.  And he’s not shy to get in their face and tell them what he wants.  I consider myself one the best at giving seat of the pants, inch by inch feedback, and tipping the scales if they ask me if we should do diff or aero, but I kind of pride myself on not getting into something that’s not my expertise.  I don’t want them questioning how I turn into Turn 1 or how come you turn in early or how come you exit late.  Let me deal with that, and that’s kind of how I let engineers deal with their stuff.  Bottom line is we’ve got a good team, and we’ll be fine tomorrow – as good as anybody.  And we’ve done this before, I forget where.  Actually we did it last year or the year before.  We qualified in the wet, practiced in the wet at Lime Rock, and then we went straight into the race.  And lucky enough we have enough laps around these tracks that lap 1you’re pretty close to the limit straight out of the box.  You don’t need ten laps to get up to speed.  That’s one of those expectations that at this level it’s incumbent upon you.  And honestly we have enough laps and enough pedigree to be expected to do that.  It’s not something over the top they’re expecting us to do.

 

Chet: Okay we’re about out of time.  Last two questions: what is your favorite track in the series and what your favorite track all time, anywhere.

Patrick Long: It’s always a tough question.  I’d say Long Beach is home.  It’s such a cool street course.  I love street courses as it is, but it has such a great flow, and it has some real character corners where a lot of street courses are cooking cutter – 90 degree, 90 degree, 90 degree.  So it’s tough to beat this place.  Lime Rock, Road America, we have got great tracks in this country.  Not a fan of Mosport.  Nurburgring Nordschleife is still the best piece of asphalt in this world if you ask me.  It’s a bastard of a race, but it’s a great track, and it tests you like no other track.

Chet: Thanks very much, Pat.  Good luck tomorrow.

Code Of The Curve

Code Of The Curve

On Tuesday, 40 Porsche Cayman fans converged on Las Vegas, courtesy of Porsche Cars North America (PCNA) and the Porsche Club of America (PCA) for the Code Of The Curve.  The purpose: an enthusiastic celebration of Porsche’s critically acclaimed but largely unsung model, the Cayman.  The Code Of The Curve details were rather vague in the invitation, but hey, who can pass up a meeting of like minded enthusiasts, potential track time at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, and a night’s stay at Encore as a guest of Porsche?

The drive from SoCal to Las Vegas couldn’t happen quick enough in anticipation.  The only thing that made it bearable was the fact that I had recently had the engine of my Cayman S rebuilt, and this was the first chance I had gotten to drive it more than a short local test drive.  More on the smile on my face thanks to my ‘new’ engine on a later post…   Anyway, the nice folks at Encore had a section of their parking garage reserved for us Cayman devotees, so a quick park and into the check in and reception area.  I have to say, when Porsche does an event, they really do it right, and if you are ever invited to one, don’t pass it up.  For me, 918 unveiling at The Quail, Porsche Motorsports reception at Long Beach Grand Prix, breakfast reception at the LA Auto Show – all done right.  In this case, the Encore had set up a dedicated hotel check in at the entrance to our briefing room, so we lost little time getting sorted out for the event and our room.

Code Of The Curve – The Reception & Briefing

Here we learned what was in store for us.  But first, a briefing on the new Cayman (Porsche 981) by Mr. Jan Roth, Cayman Program Manager.  We were sworn to secrecy on some details, but suffice it to say, this is one outstanding car.  I am predicting another slew of awards from the automotive press like when the Cayman was originally launched in 2006; it’s also been on just about everyone’s top driver’s car list perennially since then.  We happened to find a new 981 when we made our way back out to the garage to embark on the driving fun:

As for the rest of the Code Of The Curve program, we’d be creating a Cayman Parade down The Strip, then heading out to Las Vegas Motor Speedway for a little friendly competition and some other ‘surprises’.

Code Of The Curve – Behind The Wheel

Any idea how long it takes to stop traffic on Las Vegas Boulevard AKA ‘The Strip’ for a private parade that’s being filmed?  Longer than I thought.  Once we got out onto The Strip, we moved along south pretty well, turning heads and dropping jaws as we went along.  I’m sure from the street it was quite a sight (and sound).  I’ve got some in-car video I’ll post later.  Anyway, we were at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in pretty short order where we encountered the second biggest surprise of the night – laps around the NASCAR oval at a decent speed.  (Video to come on that, too…)  After not enough laps around the track, we were formed up on the front straight in the biggest group of Caymans I’ve ever seen:

Lurking off on the pit straight was another added treat – a Porsche 904, which most look upon as the spiritual predecessor to the Cayman:

And just beyond the pit area near the paddock garages was the surprise and for many the highlight of the night, the new Porsche 918:

On to the driving – the real Code Of The Curve – the Cayman is, after all, nothing if not a drivers’ car.  Two groups, two preliminary events – slalom and threshold braking – and then a short driving course finale for the top three in each.  Pretty simple in concept.  We’d be driving the 2012 Cayman R.  Nice!  The slalom was run on the slightly banked back straight to add a little twist. Hit a cone and your time is thrown out; hit two and you’re done.  The threshold braking was on the pit straight. Everyone got two runs at each preliminary event. King of the Curve would be the fastest short course driver.

As an added bonus, Porsche arranged to have Justin Bell ride along during the short course to provide instruction, encouragement, or harassment as the case may be.  There’s still some surprises to come from this event, and in the interest of being a good sport, I won’t spoil it just yet.

Code Of The Curve – Post Track Fun

By the time we got back to the Encore, it was past Midnight – still early for Las Vegas.  The lobby bar was the perfect place to set up our Bench Racer’s shop, sip some good drinks, and rehash the Code Of The Curve.  Everyone had to walk past this place on the way to their rooms, so we just kept collecting folks as the night went on, including our King of the Curve, Carl Vanderschuit from San Diego.  Word has it, Carl gave Justin quite a ‘white knuckle’ ride!

The next day, about a dozen or so of us were invited to a Cayman owner/driver focus group breakfast by Porsche.  They wanted to know about us, who we were, what was our view on the Cayman.  Others went on a spirited desert canyon drive out toward Pahrump and Spring Mountain Motorsports Ranch.

Code Of The Curve – The Wrap

Wow!  The Code Of The Curve was one first class event!  I can’t say I’ve every experienced such a varied and top quality event compressed into such a short time before.  Great job to Porsche, the PCA, the Encore staff, the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the Las Vegas Police escort – everyone.

One of the great things about this event is that along with many others, I have participated on the Cayman Register for years.  For the most part, aside from people we meet locally at events, we just know each other as login names – and there are some interesting ones at that.  Well, here we got a chance to meet each other in person – a bunch a Cayman nuts from all over the place – and that was pretty cool.  Thanks to Mike Souza, head of the PCA Cayman Register for doing a fabulous job reaching out to the Cayman community and helping to coordinate this event.  If you are a Cayman owner/driver and aren’t part of the register, get yourself over there!   You’re missing out on a great community and lots of fun.

POC Auto Club Speedway – Racing in the Heat

POC Auto Club Speedway

Kevin Roush and Eric Oviatt into Turn 1 at Auto Club Speedway.

The POC Auto Club Speedway weekend was an exercise in dealing with extreme, 100+ degree temperatures at a favorite SoCal track.  Over one hundred drivers braved the intense late summer heat in Fontana for a great weekend of racing and time trials including a one hour enduro on Sunday afternoon.  The Porsche Owners Club (POC) was returning to Auto Club Speedway (ACS) for the first time since its Tribute to Le Mans event and two weeks after the IndyCar Championship race at the same venue.  The weekend’s activities featured two race groups, Red and Orange and two time trial groups, White and Yellow.

POC Auto Club Speedway – Saturday Events

Red Cup Race

In the Red Cup Race, Dan Aspesi jumped into the lead early on and took the overall honors as well as the GT2 class title and a best lap time of of the race at 1:43.120.  An early spin by Jesse Menczer put him back in the pack and playing catch up most of the race to take second in GT2.  Kevin Roush took the third spot in GT2.  Bill Dawson came in second overall while winning the GT1 class from Dan Davis in second..  Loren Beggs was third overall and won the GTC-4 class.  Doug Baron won the GTC-3 class while finishing fourth.  In the hotly contested GT3 class, Eric Oviatt won what became a two car battle from Duane Selby after John Gordon dropped out after 1 lap with engine troubles.  Vali Predescu won GT4, and Chas Wirken won R4 in his beautiful Cayman R.

Orange Cup Race

Mike Monsalve took first in the Orange Cup Race along with the V3 class and fastest lap of the race at 1:50.220.  Second and third the race and the V3 class were Steve Alarcon and Athan Aronis, respectively.  Monsalve led from the pole, and Alarcon kept it close for the first half of the 12 lap race with Monsalve stretching out his lead until the last lap when Alarcon closed to within 0.156 seconds.  Dwain Dement in his new, blue, Boxster based V3 machine was running well and making some nice passes between Turns 4 and 5 before he dropped out from third with raising oil temperature to let the V3 season class leaders have at it.  A total of eight V3 cars finished on the lead lap in this popular and competitive class.  Regan Steadman won GT5; Jason Huang won CSX; Brad Keegan won JP; Mark Foley won BSR; Keith Hulley won IP; Peter Busalacchi won GSR; and Carolyn Pappas won GT6.

POC Auto Club Speedway – Sunday Events

On Sunday, we were treated to a couple of particularly exciting battles – the GT3 contest within the Red Cup race and the grueling one hour JE Pistons Enduro.

Red Cup Race

POC Auto Club Speedway

Kevin Roush & Eric Oviatt in GT3 Class Battle in Red Cup Race.

In the Red Cup Race, pole sitter Jesse Menczer took the overall win, GT2 class win, and fastest lap of the race at 1:43.619.  Dan Aspesi, Saturday’s winner, took second.  Early in the race Jesse and Dan traded the lead multiple times.  Doug Baron took third overall as well as the GTC-3 class win.  In GT3, we were treated to a fantastic battle between Eric Oviatt and Kevin Roush that was wasn’t over until the last lap with multiple passes throughout.  Eric and Kevin put on a clinic of close, clean, and exciting racing with Oviatt holding off Roush by just a couple of ticks at the flag.  See Eric’s in car video below:

Steve Vandecar won GT4 from Kip Waterhouse by less than a second; Chas Wirken won R4.  Loren Beggs in GTC-4 retired after 4 laps while running third overall.

Orange Cup Race

POC Auto Club Speedway

Orange Cup Race Leaders.

The usual V3/R5 suspects were running at the front of the Orange Cup Race.  Mike Monsalve won his second race of the weekend as well as the class from second on the grid.  Steve Alarcon took pole and finished second by 2.409 seconds while setting fast lap of the race at 1:50.665.  Bob Thacker finished third overall and in the V3/R5 class.  Athan Aronis, who typically runs near the front of this group accidentally released his harness buckle and lost a couple of laps getting himself buckled back in.  Regan Steadman won GT5 with Paul Young second; Richard Yochum won V4; Brad Keegan took another JP win with Brent Gokbudak second.  Drake Kemper won BSR with Mark Foley second and Nathon Johnson third; Jason Huang won CSX; Keith Hulley won IP; Carolyn Pappas took GT6; and Peter Busalacchi won GSR.

POC Auto Club Speedway

Orange Cup racers in the Auto Club Speedway infield.

JE Pistons Enduro

By the time the field gridded up for Sunday afternoon’s JE Pistons Enduro, the heat had taken its toll on cars and drivers resulting in a slightly smaller than expected grid.  However, that did not diminish the competition or excitement of the race.  I have to really hand it to the guys who raced for an hour in the still nearly 100 degree heat after a full two days of practice and racing.  In a really tough break, Jae Lee of ‘Gang of One’ lost the fire in his machine at Turn 1 on the final lap.  Paul Young of ‘Dead Pets Racing’ took the win in his 911.  Seems like Paul is making a habit of this.  Doug Baron finished second, and Nathon Johnson took third.

POC Auto Club Speedway

Start of JE Pistons Enduro.

 

POC Auto Club Speedway

Green Flag Flies To Start JE Pistons Enduro Race.

More pics here.

POC Auto Club Speedway – Time Trial

Amazingly, even with brutal heat and a pretty slick track, multiple class track records fell on this POC Auto Club Speedway weekend.  On Saturday, Brandon Griffith, who set fast time of the day on both days, broke the GT2 class record by nearly 7 seconds at 1:41.783!  Unreal.  Also on Saturday, Steve Radenbaugh set the GT4 class record at 1:54.308 and Chet Kolley set the CSX class record at 1:56.434.  On Sunday in GT4, Bob Mueller broke Steve Radenbaugh’s Saturday time with 1:53.074.  Also on Sunday, Paul Young set a new GT5 class record at 1:57.639 – yes, that’s the same Paul Young who took second in class in the Orange Cup Race and won the Enduro overall.  Great job Paul!  Troy Evarts set a new LS class record at 2:02.751.  Congratulations to all the new record holders and class winners

Another POC Auto Club Speedway event is days away with a combined Performance Driving Series (PDS) and Time Trial (TT) event.  See the calendar for more info.

Porsche Owners Club at Laguna Seca

Wow, what a weekend!  The Porsche Owners Club (POC) made its annual pilgrimage to Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca this past weekend for three great track days, some good food and drink, and a fundraiser for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.  Of course, the highlights of the weekend were primarily on the track with great racing in all three race classes on both days.  In fact, this was some of the best amateur racing I have seen: competitive and clean.  The Porsche Owners Club had four run groups throughout the weekend at Laguna Seca – three Race groups and a Time Trial group – and also shared the track with Speed Ventures, who had one run group.

POC Red Cup Race - Laguna Seca

POC Red Cup Race - Laguna Seca

POC Red Cup Race - Laguna Seca

POC Red Cup Race - Laguna Seca

POC Red Cup Race - Laguna Seca

If you ever have a chance to drive at Laguna Seca, the same place that ALMS and Grand-Am race today and IndyCar raced in the past, you MUST take advantage of it. There’s no track in SoCal that’s even really close to Laguna Seca.  One of the unexpected highlights of the weekend was a track walk led by Kelly Collins.  Walking the track gives a completely different feel and appreciation for the driving/racing lines, corner camber, and elevation changes than you get from driving the track.  At Turns 5, 6, and 10 you really get a sense of how the camber can help you carry serious speed thru these corners.  Of course, walking the corkscrew is something else as well.

POC Red Cup Race - Laguna Seca

POC Green Cup Race - Laguna Seca

POC Green Cup Race - Laguna Seca

POC Time Trial - Laguna Seca

In this case, add in the professionalism & organization of the Porsche Owners Club, excellent cooperation with Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca track management, and also a worthy fundraiser, and it was truly an unforgettable weekend!

Le Mans – Final

With about 2:45 to go in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Audi #2 and #3 both crashed in separate incidents.  The #2, driven by Allan McNish was in the lead at the time, and it crashed into the barriers when McNish attempted a pretty aggressive maneuver in the Porsche Curves.  McNish’s crash promoted Audi #1 into the lead.  Astonishingly, the Audi team was able to get the #2 back on the track so fast, they only went  down one lap, so they were still in second place and still in the race – albeit with a long shot at this point.  The Audi team was able to get the #3 back on track in short order as well.  Simply amazing that the Audi teams could repair both of those cars simultaneously so quickly.

Final Le Mans Results:

LMP1:

  1. Audi Sport Team Joest, Audi #1 – Lotterer/Fassler/Treluyer
  2. Audi Sport Team Joest, Audi #2 – McNish/Capello/Kristensen
  3. Audi Sport North America, Audi #4 – Jarvis/Bonanomi/Rockenfeller

LMP2:

  1. Starworks Motorsport, HPD #44 – Potolicchio/Dalziel/K-Smith
  2. Thiriet By TDS Racing, Oreca #46 – Thiriet/Beche/Tinseau
  3. Pecom Racing, Oreca #49 – Perez Companc/Kaffer/Ayari

GTE-Pro:

  1. AF Corse, Ferrari #51 – Fisichella/Bruni/Vilander
  2. Luxury Racing, Ferrari #59 – Makowiecki/Melo/Farnbacher
  3. Aston Martin Racing, Aston Martin #97 – Mucke/Fernandez/Turner

GTE-Am:

  1. Larbre Competition, Corvette #50 – Bornhauser/Canal/Lamy
  2. IMSA Performance Matmut, Porsche #67 – Pons/Armindo/Narac
  3. Krohn Racing, Ferrari #57 – Krohn/Johnsson/Rugolo
For those who have a Speed2 subscription, you can view race highlights here.

Le Mans at 15 Hours

Well, unfortunately, the battle between Audi and Toyota was short lived: the #8 Toyota was taken out by a Ferrari GTE-Am car – bringing out an extended safety car period for barrier repairs – and on the first lap of the ensuing green, the #7 Toyota tangled with the Delta Wing car.  The #7 sustained damage that seemed to bring on an endlessly cascading series of troubles until the team threw in the towel.  Audis are currently running 1-2-3 overall and in LMP1: the #1 and #2 R18 e-trons first and second and the #4 R18 ultra third.

In LMP2, the #44 Starworks Motorsport HPD ARX 03b has a one lap lead over the #49 Oreca 03 Nissan of Pecom Racing.

In GTE-Pro, the Ferrari, Corvette, Aston Martin, Porsche battle has become Ferrari v. Aston Martin, as both Flying Lizard and Team Felbermayr-Proton are gone and the Corvettes are down to a single car that’s seven laps back.  The #51 AF Corse Ferrari is currently in the lead, the #59 Luxury Racing Ferrari is second, and the #97 Aston Martin Racing Vantage V8 is third.

In GTE-Am, there is a tight battle ongoing between the #50 Larbre Competition Corvette and the #67 IMSA Performance Matmut Porsche.

Le Mans: Pre-Race

Several interesting stories will be played out in the 24 Hours of Le Mans beginning 5:30 AM PT tomorrow:

LMP1Audi v. Toyota.  The top three qualifying places are three different cars – two from Audi and one from Toyota.  First of all, Toyota managed to qualify their brand new LMP1 TS030 Hybrid third on the grid at Le Mans within a year of launching the program.  That alone is a fabulous achievement.  The Toyota TS030 is a 3.4L V8 normally-aspirated petrol-powered hybrid prototype.  The electric energy is stored in a massive capacitor which powers electric motors.  Audi put its new R-18 e-tron quattro on pole with a lap time of 3:23.787 (driven by the same team that won last year’s race: Fassler/Lotterer/Treluyer.)  The R-18 e-tron quattro is a 3.7L V6 turbo diesel hybrid prototype.  The Audi stores its energy in an electric flywheel accumulator.  So it’s Toyota v. Audi, petrol v. diesel, capacitor v. flywheel, massive underdog v. overwhelming favorite.  A surprisingly nice story to replace the expected Audi v. Peugeot rematch that was dashed when Peugeot pulled out of the sport. Second on the grid is the Audi R-18 ultra, a car that is outwardly very similar to the 2011 Le Mans winner.  The R-18 ultra is the latest version of the Audi turbo diesel LMP1 car.  Spots four thru six on the grid are another Toyota TS030 Hybrid splitting another Audi R-18 e-tron and an R-18 ultra.  I really hope the Toyotas demonstrate some remarkable reliability in their very first 24 hour race to make it interesting to the end.

Delta Wing Nissan – The experimental Delta Wing Nissan qualified about 19 seconds slower than the pole sitting Audi at 3:42.612, putting it about 2/3 of the way thru the LMP2 cars.  The Delta Wing is being run by the experienced and successful Highcroft Racing outfit, and it will be very interesting to see how it fares.  Although I cannot say that I am excited by its looks in the least, opinions on the Delta Wing have been favorable for the most part.  I can understand how the Delta Wing could set a fast qualifying time, but I am eager to see how it does in real racing conditions.

GTE – once again, the GTE classes look to be outstanding, competitive battles.  In GTE-Pro, the top three qualifiers are the Luxury Racing Ferrari 458 Italia, the Aston Martin Racing Aston Martin Vantage V8, and the Corvette Racing Corvette C6 ZR1.  SoCal’s Patrick Long’s Flying Lizard Motorsports Porsche 911 RSR is seventh on the GTE-Pro grid.  The Flying Lizard’s other Porsche 911 RSR car was the fastest GTE-Am qualifier.  The Prospeed Competition Porsche 911 RSR is second, and the Aston Martin Racing Aston Martin Vantage V8 is third on the GTE-Am grid.  So it’s Ferrari, Aston Martin, Corvette, and Porsche set to battle it out in the GTE classes.

Weather – Rain is forecast for Saturday, which adds another dimension to this grueling event.  Man v. Nature.

Le Mans!

Just two days until one of my top ‘bucket list’ events – the 24 Hours of Le Mans.  It’s right up there with Belgian Grand Prix at Spa, and the Indy 500.  Unfortunately Peugeot pulled out of sports car racing months ago, so the awaited re-re-match of Audi v Peugeot won’t happen, but it will be interesting to see how Toyota fares.

The GTE battles should be awesome once again.  Corvette, Aston Martin, Ferrari, and Porsche all have competitive cars and teams.

For those looking to get up to speed on the pre-race situation – including class and team previews – head on over to Radio Le Mans  and listen to some of their excellent podcasts.  Also, the differences in driver classifications and how this relates to the GTE-Am and GTE-Pre classes can be a bit confusing.  The folks at Radio Le Mans have posted a very clear and concise driver classification table here.

Porsche Owners Club 20th Annual Tribute to Le Mans

A who’s who of SoCal Porsche Drivers converged at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana for the Porsche Owners Club 20th running of their signature Tribute to Le Mans weekend.  The four-hour enduro running into a beautiful sunset was the highlight of the weekend – attracting well-know teams & organizations such as Competition Motorsports, TruSpeed, GMG, and Werks II and drivers with ALMS, World Challenge, and Grand-Am pedigree.  Bob Faieta and Michael Avenatti of ALMS GTC fame took the overall top step of the podium handily turning fast lap after fast lap.