My interest in the automotive world began when I was born, in Sonora, Mexico in the 1990s. My name is Jesus David Serrano, but you might know me by my moniker: BigBootyRacing. I use the name when I participate in your casual weekend HPDE time attacks in my naturally aspirated 2003 Buick Regal LS.
I assume my interest in cars is something baked into my DNA because my mother says I started recognizing and naming the brands of automobiles that would pass by around the time I learned to talk. When other kids would be focused on learning and deploying important words like “gimme” and “tummy” and “more” I, instead, used what few words I could form on “Honda” and “Ford.”
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Eventually, my curiosity began being fueled by the same sources that inspired most kids in the ’90s. In particular, the boom of Hot Wheels led me to collect 1:64-scale diecast cars that expanded my passion for anything with wheels. Fast forward in time, fresh out of high school I had a ’90s Chevrolet pickup truck that provided some unforgettable (and possibly unprintable) memories that I had to drop due to the terrible fuel economy.
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I decided to replace the truck with a 2001 Buick Regal LS. The car was your standard American sedan from the early 2000s with no performance credibility unless you got the supercharged variant, and even that was still very much under the radar. But, probably like you, I knew this car had some potential. Under the hood of this General Motors golden chariot was the 3.8 Liter L67 Naturally aspirated 3800, an engine known for its reliability, punchy torque, and surprisingly decent fuel economy on the highway.
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It wasn’t as boring as it seemed, although my friends at the time were all following the JDM craze (Mazda Miatas, Honda Fits, all your Honda Civic variations) or buying your usual domestic muscle cars. Those are the cars you buy if you have money, which I did not, which is how you end up with an old Buick Regal. It didn’t bother me, though, as I would casually attend canyon runs and quickly realized that I could keep up with most cars and motorcycles I’d run into.
I would explain to my friends that the car had some serious potential and they would, unsurprisingly, laugh at me. It is a Buick, after all. Fast-forward in time, again, I purchased a ’90s Nissan Sentra for $800 to get me going again after moving back to the West Coast from New York. An old friend later on convinced me to sell the Nissan and look for something a little safer.
The Birth Of Big Booty Racing
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While looking for something that was both safe and satisfied my itch as an enthusiast, I happened to find another 2003 Buick Regal LS for sale. This example only had 52k miles on the clock and was donated by an elderly lady (who else?) to a rehab center out of Culver City. After a quick perusal of the car, I knew I had to have it–especially after the new owner cut me some slack and said I could have it for $1,750.
With that, the spark ignited my passion for Buicks all over again. The difference was that this time I was a bit more mature and I had more engineering-educated friends. I evidently bugged them enough with my crazy ideas to convince them to help me modify the Buick and, through some old forums, we found solutions for a few of the Buick’s shortcomings as a track car. A huge thanks to my friends and the old forum posters who helped engineer solutions to my problems.
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Braking, obviously, was a concern. The Buick has about 190 wheel horsepower and can get out of its own way, but what it can’t do is stop. The aftermarket brakes were mostly a bolt-on mix of parts from other, more performance-oriented cars. That means 2007 Cadillac CTS-V calipers with 2007 Ford Mustang GT500 rotors up front, and 2007 Pontiac Grand Prix 5.3L V8 rotors and calipers out back. The main part needed to make them work were some extended stainless steel brake lines.
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In terms of other modifications, the Buick has a rather simple and straightforward build. There are stiffer anti-roll bars front and rear, revised strut bars, and a more track-oriented alignment (shout out to Monrovia Alignment) with some new camber bolts The Buick currently rides on stock struts in combination with lowering springs. I’m overdue for coilovers, but those are out of my budget for the moment.
In terms of powertrain, the engine is “tuned” with an intake. The four-speed automatic is, no surprise, the biggest weak point of this platform. An aftermarket cooler helps there, at least a little. The Buick also features a Pypes Turbo Pro muffler to keep the car as quiet as it is slow while increasing the airflow. I also added 2.5-inch exhaust tubing from the catalytic converter and back, up from the stock 2.2 inches.
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I got the wing off an ’03 Chevrolet Impala that was the same color, and a friend added an aluminum lip to the car. The wheels are Circuit Performance 18X9.5 5X114.3 +25 usually wrapped in whatever 200TW I can find on sale at the time. The interior is now graced with a Cleetus McFarland steering wheel that’s fitted with an NRG hub and quick release. I added the Buick logo to give it the perfect look.
Finally, I named my Instagram page and my personal motorsports program “Big Booty Racing” because this car, indeed, has a big thang hanging out the rear. Also, I think it’s important we normalize a better picture of body positivity from a male perspective; not all men need to look like models, we can be thick, too!
What It’s Like To Track A Bush-Era Buick Regal
Driving a Buick Regal luxury sedan from the early 2000s on track involves some heavy commitment, literally. The car has flaws like most street cars do and it’s rather easy to drive around those limitations. For example, the biggest downside is probably the stock LAZ-E-Boys leather seats–imagine ’60s racing on bench seats.
As you approach your first corner and hit a peak of 1.4Gs, you realize quickly that you’re dancing with a 3400-pound FWD Buick. This feeling is only enhanced by your own body floating in the air, with only the door and the steering wheel preventing you from being chucked out the door. Imagine being hustled side to side holding onto for dear life, while your left foot does its best to keep you planted as you brace yourself for each corner.
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The steering wheel is your dance partner, hand in hand corner to corner, the Buick isn’t fast although once you get momentum the torquey 3800 V6 will carry that momentum wherever you’re brave enough to go.
While the car’s inhabitants get tossed around like shrimp at a Benihana, the Buick handles unnaturally well for what it is. You have to really commit to corner entry to maximize the low power disadvantage for corner exit, otherwise, you’re just cruising at what feels like highway speeds most of the time in a hot-rodded Buick while unsuspecting people on track check their rear-view mirror and notice something unnatural getting closer and closer with each approaching corner
Don’t Let Your Car Stop You From Getting To The Track
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Overall, I know I’m not going to set any track records. I just want to prove a point that you shouldn’t let your car stop you from getting yourself out there on a track day if that’s what you want to do.
So many people in this hobby get mired in self-loathsome excuses about their car needing this or that when, in reality, all you have to do is run it as is and you can have a great time. Trust me, this is as low budget as you get in terms of performance and you’ll gain the priceless experience of teaching yourself the importance of driving dynamics. In the end, I hope I’m an example you don’t need your stereotypical automotive vehicle (a Corvette or a Miata) to go out to a track day and have some of the most thrilling experiences of your life.
You’ll also learn that not everything goes to plan: cars break, crashes happen, and wheels bend. I’m just saying, that you don’t need the hottest car to show up to a track day to show other people how it’s done.
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In a world full of hard-to-obtain Porsches, with the Internet trying to convince you that you need massive horsepower figures, just know that there are car enthusiasts out there who take what they got–like Grandma’s Buick–and make it work at world-class racetracks as Laguna Seca.
You know there’s always that one guy who enjoys his Alfa Romeo no matter how often it breaks? Be that guy!
Top photo: Feels Fast Photography
Man….did you get insurance for track days?
You inspired me to look into this kind of thing for my Prius v, but suddenly the prospect of a $400 premium for one day and a potential deductible of $2000 makes it less appealing.
For this Buick it’s not worth it, if the car is under $20k I wouldn’t bother with insurance, you just have to accept it’s part of the sport. I don’t even think I can get track insurance for my Buick because of how unvaluable it is. The only thing of value on my car is the brakes.
This article is inspiring.
I did a few autocross events in high school in my friend’s dad’s Ford Lotus Cortina. And that was a blast. Driving home in my Datsun 510 seemed so pedestrian in comparison.
Many years later, I now have a ’17 V6 Accord (automatic) which has a ridiculous amount of power to try to get to the ground on all-season tires. In a straight line, if you get into it too hard and early, it will just roast the front tires. And then it will break traction again when it shifts to second and then chirp hitting third gear.
The most extreme thing I’ve done in it was braking hard, going onto the shoulder and avoiding a head-on collision with an F-150 making a stupid pass on a two-lane road in Texas. Full ABS going off. But even the swerve onto the shoulder didn’t really come close to exploring the chassis’ potential.
Teaching my kid to drive in an ’06 CR-V, in a school parking lot on a weekend, I had him floor the accelerator and understand what it was capable of. I put a trashcan out and had him speed at it and then nail the brakes, so he knew what ABS felt like, and then steer around it. Fourteen years later, he’s never been in an accident.
I have never taken the Accord to a track day or autocross event, and it would be fun/interesting to see what it’s actually capable of.
Perhaps I will when the weather gets nicer.
I love everything about this. I started off Autocrossing my ’04 Hyundai Accent on the 13″ Steelies and craptastic all seasons, so embracing “drive what you have” is huge to me. Also I have tons of fond memories driving the wheels off of my best friend’s ’01 Buick Century back in high school. The floor parking brake+loose surface was a recipe for tail wagging shenanigans.
I miss my Buick Regal GS and Grand Prix GTP. Had the GTP for over 20 years and had just about every mod made. I got compliments all the time and people always thought it was 10 years newer than it was.
The regal I bought as a daily but sold it with only 60K miles. Needed a truck, sure wish I would have kept it. Probably rusting away some were now.
I thought I could post pics on here but I guess I can’t. Here’s a facebook pic when I had both cars.
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Super clean, I plan on owning a low mileage GS one day I’m just trying to stomach the $10k usual asking price for when you find one.
Right. that’s the problem. I’ve been wanting to get back into one for a while now.
10K for a 20 year old GM sedan with 100K+ miles.. No thanks. lol
Theres a 99 regal gs listed at a ford dealer in Ogden UT for 1500 bucks, no pictures but it’s there. My little brother lives close to there and sends me any interesting buicks he comes across because I’m a weirdo too.
This is so cool! I’m on Buick Regal #3. Had a 1992 Limited, a 2000 LS, and now a 2015 former rental car. A car for those “who know!” Best of luck on the track.
What a fun and unique track rat!
About a decade ago, a guy that used to come to my local cars and coffee had the supercharged version of this car. It looked completely stock, but had for sure a much smaller pulley and supporting mods to make the thing absolutely rip. He had drag radials on the ugly little stock front wheels as well. No idea what kind of power it made, but I’m sure he shocked quite a few people stoplight to stoplight.
I’ve casually (but never enough to actually buy one) wanted one ever since.
You don’t see typically over 380whp anything more then that it’ll likely blow the transmission.
GM W-body cars handle reasonably well for a cushy family sedan. My 2002 Intrigue was able to keep up with my cow-orker’s ’99 BMW 3-series in our weekly race-to-happy hour each Thursday for $1 draft beers and free roast beef sammiches.
The difference is, I got 10 years and 200K miles out of my Intrigue, the Bimmer was hobbled by a bad transmission at 75K and traded in for GMC Acadia.
now you just need a vanity plate that says “THE ICK”
Fantastic! The car, the author, the message — it’s all perfectly Autopian. Just threw a follow … hoping for more BBR updates!
Love it. This is what I love about the car community. There is a way to get involved at almost any any budget.
“Run what ya brung.” — some guy
“we can be thick, too!”
I keep getting emails hawking pills and dietary supplements promising this but they never seem to live up to the hype.
Kudos on a job well done!
Over 25 years ago, while attending my first SCCA club racing school, the instructor gave me this sage advice: don’t take anything to the racetrack that you can’t afford to leave there. This is why – even today – my endurance racing car is a humble Plymouth neon.
I ran my first track day 30 years ago while living in the Detroit area and working for one of the “big 3” automakers. I took my only car, a daily-driver Mk2 Jetta 4-door / 5-speed / 1.8L SOHC. It had high miles, but also a scattering of affordable goodies that were popular at the time: Dunlop D60A2 (4 season!) tires, Neuspeed Sofsport springs, Boge turbo gas struts, and a Techtonics cat-back exhaust. I had fun, learned a bunch and (crucially) didn’t break my car! I did flat spot my rear tires, though, so I had to hear and feel the thump-thump-thump on my work commutes for weeks after that. It was worth it!
Good advice honestly, some would say same goes for a relationship and falling in love.
Great article! My parents’ first new car was a 1986 Olds Delta 88 Royale Brougham (no cheese, sorry, couldn’t stop myself) with the 150 hp 3.8 V6. It was a sea change from the 1979 Ford LTD S 2 door that they stepped out of (and I got to buy it from them, but that’s another story/time). It was (relatively) responsive, handled decently, and it was doused in whorehouse red velour (what teenager in the 1980s wouldn’t love that?). They put 175k on the car, then bought their last Olds in 1997. My 89 year old mama retired from driving, so now we have a 1998 Olds 88 with 82k one-owner and son-maintained miles. The kiddo and I have been tossing around the idea of getting into autocross with a low-buck build, and perhaps some of your creative ideas could transfer from the W-body to the H-body. Thanks!
Brav-o! You got that Regal with that mileage and a 3800 for 1750? That’s practically theft. Buicks are (usually ) great and I will die on this hill.
It wasn’t cosmetically perfect and the abs light was on, also needed maintenance definitely still worth it, as I’m now at 110k miles in under four years.
I had a 2007 supercharged Grand Prix GT and significantly tightened up the handling with the following: front/rear strut tower braces and solid antisway bars, stiffer sway bar bushings, beefier rear sway bar end links and trailing arms, front sway bar end links with stiffer bushings.
Love this!
So few people realize how easily modifiable the W body cars are. GM made them for almost 30 years and sold probably 1/2-1 million per year for most of that run. Lots of aftermarket potential for relatively inexpensive to address the highway-tuned suspension and lack of high-rpm power.
Plus they had almost no curb appeal by the mid 00’s, so they were dirt cheap and flew under everyone’s radar.
Great article! I have a 2004 Impala cop car with he 3.8L and never really considered its track potential. It definitely has a beefed up suspension – I’ve never seen bigger sway bars on a passenger car – and extra coolers on everything. I do worry about the transmission though. None of the gauges work and it has overheated several times now but nothing seems to kill it.
I can relate, as all of my track time has been behind the wheel of a 90’s BMW 5 series (E34). I don’t have the money and space to have a separate track car, nor do I want to deal with daily driving a compromised sports car, so I just track the daily driver 5 series. I do enjoy pointing out to people that my old 5-er weighs less than the current generation M2/M3/M4 and is smaller in a lot of dimensions, and people track those plenty.
Bravo!
This is one of the greatest things I’ve read in a long time.
Huge pints for style, originality and a fantastically unique and pragmatic approach to a way-too-expensive hobby.
Good attitude: don’t make excuses, just sign up and run what you’ve got. Please tell me those are HVAC vents cut into the hood—or, have I just been so blind to these cars that I somehow never noticed them??
Great article, and hope to see your byline again soon.
I had a guy make them for me out of simi valley, CA. They are in fact aluminum vents.
Keeps that hood acting like a parachute eh…and I suppose reduces underhood temps a bit.
I was shocked at how much more effective aero is vs. power at track speeds. Add some underbody with a diffuser and brake cooling ducts and you become smoother than Jif PB.
The car currently runs too cold during winter temperatures, I have to block air flow with cardboard it’s only warm on track, or above 55F anything below have to block stuff, unless on track.
I’m pretty sure that’s because with a slushbox you can’t keep that engine’s revs up, with a manual there’s no way to keep an engine too cool on the track if you really try to go fast (even with a missing/open thermostat)
I actually can keep the revs if I leave it in second but I don’t want to be mean to the transmission.
My first car was a 98 lesabre and i spent time chucking it around the dirt roads of my old town! The big thang out back slid out surprisingly easily for a front wheel drive boat that it was! Im glad someone was able to make something truly fun out of it! Mine faced the oem coolant elbow flaw that i didn’t know was a thing until after my uncle helped me fix it up and sell it. I miss that comfy cruiser but now i have a 1996 Toyota Aristo V8 I-four that scratches my comfy sedan itch (last year of the first gen) and a pretty rare variant with only a few thousand made a year im pretty sure!
My first car was a 69 LeSabre, 350, 4 barrel, positrack, high test. Still RWD back then. Hand me down from dad when the rear quarter panels were so rusted the car wash wouldn’t let dad take it through, cause it tore up their cloth scrubbers. Easy to swing the back end out, even sometimes when you didn’t mean too. Going around a corner in a snowstorm once I rotated 180 degrees, kissed the snow bank with the left rear corner, did another 180, and continued merrily on my way. It was so badly rusted out (New England) by the time I went to college in 76 we junked it. Glad car makers finally started using galvanized steel for car bodies.