Home » I Offered A Bunch Of Amateurs $5,000 Of My Own Money If They Could Drive Faster Than Me

I Offered A Bunch Of Amateurs $5,000 Of My Own Money If They Could Drive Faster Than Me

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If you’re a motorsports fan—or even a casual car enthusiast—be honest: You’ve watched F1, NASCAR, or another racing series and had the thought, ‘I could do that; all they’re doing is driving a car!’

Well, as professional drivers, we’ve always dealt with this by rolling our eyes and attempting to explain that driving your street car isn’t even using 1% of its capability. I always found this to be an inadequate way to try to prove it’s not as simple as it looks and that professionals make it look far easier than it is.

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I rarely watch players on the PGA Tour plop a ball inches from the cup on a green, or Patrick Mahomes throw a touchdown and think, “How hard can that be?” Like many others who played these sports as kids, I know exactly how hard it is. But because almost everyone drives a car, they assume driving race cars must be easy—that these select few professionals somehow just got lucky enough to get paid to drive in circles.

Then, last year, a gaming company conducted a poll called “Where Everyday Americans Think They Could Compete with the Pros.” Number one on this poll, with 32.89% of the vote, was “Driving a racing lap without crashing” An additional 6.24% thought they could win a NASCAR race—which is insane.

This got me thinking: how could we give people this delusional a chance to prove they are as fast as they believe? And how could we make it entertaining to watch? Because, as you know, without years of experience and millions in funding, they’ll never get an actual chance to compete in a NASCAR race.

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I am a NASCAR driver, and I have access to Lime Rock Park in Lakeville, CT. So, with help from my friends at The Autopian and Lucid—who graciously allowed us to use their car for a review and for this challenge—we attempted to see how total amateurs stack up against me and my 15 years as a professional NASCAR driver.

Oh, and to make it even more interesting, I offered a prize pool of $5,000 of my own money.

Meet The Competitors

Competitors Laughing At Parker
Photo: Dylan Madden

I spent months finding friends who had the bravado to think they could compete against me, who I could trust not to do something very stupid, and who wouldn’t mind a bit of public humiliation.

The four competitors who agreed were:

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My friends Austin and Tara Nelson have become some of the biggest NASCAR fans I know. They currently reside in Aspen, CO, where Austin works for one of Aspen’s favorite skiing outfitters and Tara works in real estate. Rick Cadotte is the VP of Growth at a coffee company. He has loved racing since he was a kid. His dad worked on NASCAR teams, and he even has one of my old racing simulators, which I’m told his entire family enjoys competing on during the holidays.

Lastly, my older brother, Bard Kligerman. This may seem odd, but who doesn’t love a little sibling rivalry? For years, I’ve had to hear him drone on about how he could beat me if given the chance to race, which is funny because we do not come from a racing family. Until I discovered racing on TV at nine years old, my family didn’t even know motorsports existed. Bard is six years my senior, and his only exposure to racing has been watching me. It was also an interesting thought experiment to see if driving skills are learned or possibly hereditary. His day job is as the CEO of a real estate company.

Parker In Car
Photo: Dylan Madden

Now that we had competitors, the next question was how we could do this in a way that was fair but also ramped up in difficulty while stacking the deck against me, so it wasn’t just a cakewalk.

The format became clear: the competitors would go against each other, with the fastest among them winning a prize. But they’d win double the award if they were quicker than me. To make things more challenging for me, each competitor would get multiple attempts at the challenges, and I would only get one.

We settled on three challenges, increasing in difficulty, allowing competitors to experience the car’s limits in braking and cornering before combining these skills in the final challenge.

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Challenge One: Stop in a Box

Stop In A Box

You’ve probably seen this in video games or racing schools. The premise is to feel the limits of braking ability and learn brake modulation. Now, in the Lucid Air, with its ABS, the brake modulation part is very different from what you experience in most race cars, but it still lets drivers feel the car’s maximum braking capability.

In racing terms, this would be a “Threshold braking” challenge. You’re trying to achieve the maximum braking force available (like a straight braking zone at the end of a long straight into a tight hairpin). To do this in a race car without ABS, you want to get the tires to their grip threshold and then let off the brake as the vehicle slows. This gets a lot more complex with high-downforce cars, but for the sake of brevity, this is a standard first step in learning to be a race car driver–knowing how to slow the car down properly. When done wrong, this is when you see race cars with puffs of smoke off the tires in a brake zone as a tire locks and is then sliding, which means you’ve gone past its threshold for braking performance.

In our version of this challenge, the competitors started far enough back to reach around 60-70 MPH (the Lucid Air Grand Touring reaches this speed in about 3 seconds) and then had to slam on the brakes to stop in a box barely larger than the car. A timing loop triggered past the start point and ended right as the vehicle entered the box. The time was invalid if any part of the car was outside the box.

Sounds easy? Let’s just say it didn’t go exactly as I hoped.

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Challenge Two: Max Cornering Ability

Skidpad Lucid

This challenge was designed to let these amateur drivers feel the limits of the car and tires through a corner. We utilized the skid pad at Lime Rock not to get sideways but to use the limit of tire adhesion to go around the skid pad as fast as possible.

From a standing start, drivers would trip the timing line right as they entered the skid pad and drive three-quarters of the way around before crossing the finish line, almost back where they started. Some of you might think, “well duh, that’s NASCAR,” but it’s trickier because it’s a continuous turn.

You can either maintain consistent speed or “diamond” the corner to straighten the car at the exit for maximum speed. This is also probably one of the most essential skills for a race car driver–feeling the tires and the feedback they give you to get them to their ultimate grip limit but not exceeding that, where you end up sliding and losing time through a corner. When you go over their limit, this is where you see race cars get sideways or go straight past a corner because the speed the driver is taking through that corner is far past the available grip of the tires. Often in racing, we joke about how this is when the driver’s enthusiasm surpasses the grip level!

The video shows several different approaches, some definitely not ideal for cornering but excellent for destroying tires.

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Challenge Three: A Corner Complex

Corner Complex Lucid

The final challenge combined all these skills into what we in racing call a “corner complex”—a set of linked corners that require sacrificing speed in some areas to gain more speed overall.

On the Lime Rock FCP Euro Proving Grounds autocross course, we had the perfect set of corners: a not-so-straight straightaway into a double-apex right-hander, quickly connecting to a double-apex left-hander over a blind crest.

This meant competitors needed maximum braking capability, correct apex speed placement, careful throttle management between corners, and visual references when cresting the hill to accelerate correctly across the finish line.

This is where I should have had the most significant advantage. Even with all the driver aids in the Lucid Air, navigating these corners should have separated me from anyone who hasn’t tackled racetracks for over half their life.

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The Results And Future Events

Bard Wins
Photo: Dylan Madden

As you’ll see, my brother was freakishly good—maybe there’s something to that whole hereditary thing—and the format seemed to work. At least it wasn’t a cakewalk for me!

Regarding the car, the advanced electronic aids closed the gap by preventing significant mistakes. But my brother might have just been a weird outlier because, compared to the other three, I would have comfortably won all three challenges.

I plan to do many more of these in the future. There are nearly unlimited ways we can see who secretly has the skills of a race car driver. We can change the car, challenges, and track, and even get creative in designing ways to mimic moments and skills professional drivers use.

I hope you enjoy what we created. If you have feedback, ideas on improving this, or suggestions for future videos, let me know in the comments. And if you think you deserve a shot, tell us! We hope to feature some Autopian members in future episodes.

But first, I need to win more races to afford all that!

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[Ed note: But you won Daytona!?! – MH]

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Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
3 days ago

“Driving a racing lap without crashing”

That is such a low bar for “success”.

Would anyone think they could play a guitar as well as a pro could just because they managed three minutes without smashing the guitar?

I’ve done a lot of driver training. Some basic safety stuff so I can do my job, some more advanced so I could instruct others, a few seasons of competitive drifting, and some track coaching from a range of drivers going all the way up to one amazing half hour with a former F1 driver.

This is my current level of driving skill using the guitar analogy: I can play a chord if I look at my fingers.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
3 days ago
Reply to  Captain Muppet

But can you play Freebird?

Last edited 3 days ago by Cheap Bastard
Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
3 days ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

Not without smashing the guitar at turn 3.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
3 days ago

I’ve done some go kart racing and to make a good time, all the stuff in this video comes in to play.

PLUS in actual professional racing, I know enough to know there are some extra factors like drafting other cars in a strategic way with the right timing to give you a speed edge to enable you to pass someone very evenly matched against you.

And in actual racing, the challenge is also stamina… both mental and physical… and being able to drive every lap as close to perfect as possible… lap after lap, hour after hour.

I would do this competition… But I would only do it to see how close I could get to you. I wouldn’t be under any delusions that I’d beat you… especially in the last test.

I know enough to know that if I wanted to race professionally, I’d have A LOT of practicing and learning to do.

But I already have a career… so I do the Go Karting only for occasional fun.

And I know that the tests in the video are maybe testing a quarter of all the skills and stamina needed to be a professional race car driver.

MattyD
MattyD
3 days ago

“….faster than me.”???? Grammar, my friend, especially in a headline. It’s “….faster than I.”

Me’ve made my point. Me’ll go now.

Last edited 3 days ago by MattyD
Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
3 days ago
Reply to  MattyD
Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
3 days ago

Oh yeah, Parker? I won an ARCA race at Darlington on iRacing, I’m pretty sure I could outqualify you and the rest of the truck series.

Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
3 days ago

About time I received some acknowledgement! I’ve been expecting my trophy in the mail from Massachusetts for quite some time now. A race winner should have his hardware overnighted by DHL, not handed off like some commoners Amazon delivery.

In the meantime, I’ll be by your shop this week. Tell your engineer that I WILL setup the truck, I’ve paid good money for these iRacing setups and I intend to use them!

Jack Stevens
Jack Stevens
3 days ago

Another ability that was not tested in this challenge was the sheer stamina needed by professional drivers. I remember how exhausted I was after a one-day performance driving class sponsored by Mini (despite leaving the a/c on!) due to the G-forces and concentration required.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
3 days ago
Reply to  Jack Stevens

+1

I’ve done some Go Kart racing. Doing a few laps is one thing.

But try a 40-100 lap race. Unless you’re fit and strong, you’re gonna really start feeling it in your arms and it gets harder and harder to hold the unassisted steering wheel steady as your arms get more and more tired.

And that’s just non-professional Go Kart racing.

Top tier racing requires being very physically fit.

Thomas Ogle
Thomas Ogle
3 days ago
Reply to  Jack Stevens

I run iRaces in my climate controlled basement and I am drenched in sweat and my shoulders ache after 150 virtual laps at Homestead. Don’t even get me started on the Rolex 24 and the amount of focus and stamina it takes…..in my basement…on a sim.

Curtis Loew
Curtis Loew
3 days ago

Driving a normal car at it’s limits like this is way harder than driving a properly set up race car. So this probably favors a race driver. I’ve seen some very inexperienced people buy their way into arca, get plopped into an old cup car and be able to make fast laps. Well until something goes wrong in front of them and they don’t have the skills to avoid trouble. So I guess my rambling point is a person with some driving skill, but not a professional could probably do fast laps on a superspeedway or short track.

Last edited 3 days ago by Curtis Loew
Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
3 days ago
Reply to  Curtis Loew

Driving a normal car at it’s limits like this is way harder than driving a properly set up race car.”

Drive a Go Kart with unassisted steering and brakes around a track for 50-100 laps and then see if you still have the same opinion… LOL

Lotsofchops
Lotsofchops
3 days ago

I’ve been fortunate enough to get multiple opportunities to get humbled, on both cars and bikes. To watch an amateur racer throw a bike into the corner while it was still snaking around under braking, and still do it faster than I could ever muster with it under control…. that’s saddening in one way.
I also drove a decently prepped GTI around Spa; 400HP, stripped interior, caged, sticky rubber and stiff suspension. That was my biggest “wow I could never compete with real drivers” moment in my life. I might as well be my gramma on a drive to church.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
3 days ago

Signed up to be considered for next round. As someone who frequently talks to other people about their cars, I am obviously well qualified and going to win.

Jason Snooks
Jason Snooks
3 days ago

I grew up playing Gran Turismo and thought I was awesome because I could beat everyone I played against. Then this little thing called “the internet” came along and suddenly I was up against the rest of the world. Now I’ve found my limit is within 2-3% of the fastest times in the world, which while not terrible is still a massive gap when it comes down to it.

The most impressive part to me though is the consistency of racing drivers. Seeing them be able to go out on the track and hit nearly identical lap times lap after lap and be able to adjust that time up or down at will depending on the state of their tires and the competition is massively impressive. Even if it were my job and I practiced all day, I know I’d never be best of the best. Better, sure, but I just don’t have the concentration or reaction times to be anywhere near the top.

Dr.Xyster
Dr.Xyster
3 days ago
Reply to  Jason Snooks

Yeah. It’s insane the talent that is out there. I’m a sim racer, and have been doing it for over 6 years now. I got to the point on a few tracks where I could max out AI on solo races and still win with massive margins. Then I jump online in the same car on the same track, and I’m lucky to get 15th.

I put it about 20-30 hours a week into my racing. (Full time job and full time dad makes finding time a bit hard.) The hardcore elite, Sim Racing is their job. They’re putting 60+ hours a week into it, working on consistency and form. And, unless you can put in the same amount of time and dedication, there’s pretty much a ceiling of where us “Weekend Racers” can get to.

Jason Snooks
Jason Snooks
2 days ago
Reply to  Dr.Xyster

These days I get about an hour per week, and I rarely race against other humans, so my racecraft is not the best. Outright speed I would probably place somewhere at “decently above average” but nowhere close to the top. Race craft I’d put near the bottom.

Leo T.
Leo T.
3 days ago

I love the little FCP Euro proving grounds. I’ve only done one event there (One of the driving clinics with SCDA), but I learned more on that day than I ever could have. The small course keeps you thinking, (no long straights to clear your mind) and by the end an hour, I was just as burnt out as my poor Michelin Pilot Sport All Seasons (learned real quickly how greasy tires get once you abuse them, I definitely was not Allmendinger in tire save mode). Also, learned how easy it was to overdrive corners; tire squeal sounds fast and feels fast, but isn’t.

I need to make more money so I can afford to do more of these.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Nsane In The MembraNe
3 days ago

I’m not sure if I’ve ever been more humbled in my adult life than I was last year when I went from Track Attack days to HPDE days at the local track. Even that was an entirely different world and there were only a handful of pro level drivers there, it was mostly still civilians taking out their toys. The instructor I had taught me more in those 4 lapping sessions that I’d learned in my entire life up to that point. I thought I was hot shit for a hobbyist, and it was immediately apparent that I was not.

I think stuff like this is really cool. IMHO the worst professional driver is better than the best civilian driver. You can learn as much as you’d like but there’s definitely something innate that separates the pros from the Joes. Anyway, I’m heading back for another HPDE day in a few weeks. I have no delusions that I’ll ever be amazing, but I know I have it in me to get better.

Teokiya
Teokiya
4 days ago

When I was about 18, Vauxhall released the new Vectra (the previous version was called the Cavalier in the UK). My dad was a loyal customer of the local Vauxhall dealer, so he ended up with an invite to a “Vectra Drive” day at Silverstone. The letter just said “Mr Green”, so I say, “hey, I’m also Mr Green, so I can go instead!”… My dad isn’t into cars, so he agreed but came as my plus-1…

Anyway, we had a fun day on the skid pad, being driven in Caterham 7s etc., then I went to do the track thing. This involved driving around the National Circuit in a Vectra with a pro driver telling me what to do. It was fun, I felt I did ok. Then the pro drove me round the circuit… Bear in mind, the Vectra was a pretty boring salaryman saloon, nothing special. But it felt insane how fast we went… Pro drivers really are different from us normies!

Xt6wagon
Xt6wagon
4 days ago

The “free” school for gt350 more tought me there is a huge difference between a better than avg driver and a la mans driver. Like a gt350 driving at the limit feels/sounds just like a STi and how little I cared that he overcooked a corner and recovered just fine. I’m apparently not a nervous passenger for drivers who know what they are doing.

Thatmiataguy
Thatmiataguy
4 days ago

I remember one time I was doing an autocross event at Auto Club Speedway (RIP) and Alfa Romeo was there doing this thing where people could take a (new at the time) Giulia around the course. I was there in my own car and didn’t bother at first, but later in the day I took the Quadrifoglio out for a spin. It felt alright, but I felt like I could have done better. When I parked it and gave the keys back, the Alfa Romeo rep looked at me all serious and said that I had set the new best time for the day in that car. Go figure.

Mad respect to the guys who race for a living though, I couldn’t pull off the kind of stuff they do by a mile.

I don't hate manual transmissions
I don't hate manual transmissions
4 days ago

I just mentioned the Dunning Kruger effect in a comment the other day. Sounds like a lot of the commenters here are plenty competent to know where their limits are.

Like Clint Eastwood/Dirty Harry once said, a man’s got to know his limitations.

This would be a fun competition to participate it, but it was smart to carefully screen the participants. I probably would have spun out on the skid pad.

Old Busted Hotness
Old Busted Hotness
4 days ago

Maybe next time use a car that doesn’t have modern driver aids, or even ABS. Run skinny bias-ply tires for extra fun.

Of course, those cars won’t have airbags either, so maybe the insurance guys won’t go for it.

Xt6wagon
Xt6wagon
4 days ago

Bad abs is harder than no abs. My SHO loved to turn off the brakes with the abs. Like on snow abs would send you flying past a corner no abs would slow you to a crawl at.

Beto O'Kitty
Beto O'Kitty
4 days ago

Of course sometimes you finish first but cannot collect first place money. Anyway, great idea and great post on the challenge
Maybe you could work some J turns or parallel parking into the mix We could test you hereditary theory vs. a geographic influence. Growing up in Corpus Christi, Texas I believe the LaBonte brothers rubbed off on me, so sign me up!

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
4 days ago

Cool article! I thought I was ‘semi pro good’ till I smashed up my 1st CTSV… driver mod is the best mod. Like the Stig on Top Gear

Dogpatch
Dogpatch
4 days ago

This reminds me of taking people for a ride in an airplane and having them tell me it wouldn’t be hard to be an airline pilot like I was.I never had anyone ever even hold altitude let alone a heading without training. I commend you for doing what you do. You own a very special skill set that very few in the world have,what you have can’t be taught just refined perhaps , is that the right term?

Livernois
Livernois
4 days ago
Reply to  Dogpatch

There are people who are convinced they could land a passenger jet!

Well, technically they could, just not survive it.

Sam Morse
Sam Morse
4 days ago
Reply to  Dogpatch

What counts as training?
Which plane are we talking about?

Dogpatch
Dogpatch
4 days ago
Reply to  Sam Morse

What used to be my personal Cessna 180,it’s gone now,sold.
Most people can solo sometime between 10 and 20 hours of training or at that’s the way it was 45 to 50 years ago when I was learning, not sure what the “ norm”is now.Im sure others can better update what the average is now if it’s changed.

Sam Morse
Sam Morse
4 days ago
Reply to  Dogpatch

It was just a single engine Grumman, very close cabin, but my training was mostly from a book I had when I was six years old.
It was astoundingly well done with a large full color shot of the controls and had all details of how it works and why.
I’ve been through stacks of technical NTSB books, but that book stuck with me.
I mentioned it to my friend, of course he laughed.
He asked me questions about controls and checked me out.
He did some touch and go runs, practicing side slipping.
After he was satisfied, he let me fly it.
Some basic flying and turns.
He says I am the only person he’s taken up that he thinks could be a pilot.
That was fun!

Dogpatch
Dogpatch
3 days ago
Reply to  Sam Morse

It’s a wonderfully expensive hobby that gets in your bloodstream and doesn’t let go.

Sam Morse
Sam Morse
3 days ago
Reply to  Dogpatch

I’m too aware of that.
My friend had the Grumman gone through properly, and upgraded to state of the art navigation. Cost at least as much as he paid for the plane.
Some California friends have a twin they have landed in the desert before.
That’s commitment.
I was in high desert when Fossett took off and buzzed the tent before leaving.
Beautiful plane.

Dogpatch
Dogpatch
3 days ago
Reply to  Sam Morse

Sounds like you NEED to get to get back into it again.Yes I’m a enabler urging you to spend money lol.

Sam Morse
Sam Morse
3 days ago
Reply to  Dogpatch

If I ever can!

Phuzz
Phuzz
2 days ago
Reply to  Dogpatch

My mate is a helicopter pilot, and while he was working as instructor he took me up for a joyride. I’ve done a few hours in fixed wing aircraft over the years, and I found I could hold a heading reasonably well.
Then he took me down over the airfield to try some hovering, and that was when I really realised how far out of my depth I was. I’d compare trying to hover a helicopter to like trying to balance a long stick on your hand. Easy enough for the first second or two, but quickly you end up over-correcting and the stick falls down.I kept trying, and at one point ended up pointing about 45 degrees down towards the ground, heading towards it, and probably less than a second from going face first into the ground. My mate just grabbed control, caught the copter, and put us back in a hover with no fuss. Obviously he wouldn’t have let me try if he wasn’t confident he could recover it, but if he’d not been there, I’d have definitely pranged it hard..

Dogpatch
Dogpatch
2 days ago
Reply to  Phuzz

I only got to ride in a helicopter once and there’s a lot going on all at once. It’s Outta my league for sure.

Brad the Slacker
Brad the Slacker
4 days ago

Sometime in the mid 2000’s (2006?), my wife and I participated in a Mazda event in St. Louis, one of 16 locations they did that year. The event was an autocross using the Mazda 6. There was a practice course, and a separate official course (but they had different layouts). You could run the practice course and many times as you wanted, but only had 2 shots on the official course. Mazda had a pro driver who would run both courses several times during the day to set a target time. On my second run on the practice course, as I was pulling off the track, several people were yelling and pointing at the timer. I beat the pro time!

This just fed my ego, and I thought “I’m going to win this thing!”. Of course, I blew it on the official run, but I did finish in the top 20 for the weekend (out of nearly 2000 people)

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
4 days ago

The video was a blast too watch. Not sure how taking a non race car and do non race car tests actually is a contest against a professional driver. I would have gone 5 laps fastest lap is the time and each nonprofessional gets another professional driver to teach them. Frankly the brother got 2 out of 3 so yes.
Frankly I would like the experience more than the money

Last edited 4 days ago by 1978fiatspyderfan
755_SoCalRally
755_SoCalRally
3 days ago

Not sure if this would work but could you have multiple sets of tires with different wear levels and change them throughout the day? Clearly you wouldn’t get the gradual decline seen with a race car but it would be a way to show how much difference tire wear makes when running on tarmac.

Maymar
Maymar
4 days ago

Years ago, I got to do a ride-along at a Mini test drive event with one of the staff, who was also a local racer. I’m decently quick for a civilian, but that ride immediately cemented just how much difference there is between a civilian and a proper racer. I’d still love to see how I did more quantifiably, but I’m under no illusion I’d be competitive.

No More Crossovers
No More Crossovers
4 days ago

I’ve heard the “all they’re doing is driving in circles” from people who can barely keep regular cars on the road. And even IF that was true that’s already discounting the hellish conditions inside the car

Matt Hardigree
Admin
Matt Hardigree
4 days ago

Hahah, a hat one would be fun.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
4 days ago

Many years ago I read an account about the making of the 1973 Jeff Bridges film The Last American Hero which was based on a 1965 magazine article about Junior Johnson (a NASCAR racer who retired in 1966.) I always remembered the account mentioning how Junior Johnson would maintain his heat conditioning by driving his street car around at night in the summertime in the sweltering Southeast with the windows rolled up and the car’s heat turned on at full blast.
Summer’s coming up now so you all could just hold some of the events somewhere in the Southeast, like, say, in Jason Torchinsky’s hometown in NC, with cars with the windows up and the heat turned all the way up, ha.

Inthemikelane
Inthemikelane
4 days ago

This is the content we look forward too.

755_SoCalRally
755_SoCalRally
3 days ago

In my experience with rally it’s a bit different, in that physical strength is less of an issue whereas endurance is paramount. Imagine racing while in a spinning, hot dryer loaded with shoes and out of balance. I totally agree that making a hot car test would be incredible. Professional drivers (like yourself) are in an entirely different league and it’s not close.

Another thought: Load up the next set of drivers in full racing gear and see how they do…and then turn up the heat in the car.

Last edited 3 days ago by 755_SoCalRally
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
4 days ago

Every racing simulator and high performance driving event I’ve ever done has shown me that what little talent I do have isn’t enough to be a pro. Maybe if I had started when I was 9 or something but I can confidently say that you’re a better driver than me!

Sam Morse
Sam Morse
4 days ago

This is absolutely fascinating, but I question the idea that everyone thinks it’s easy to reach the limits of a car, some more than others.
But I have no idea what other people’s experience is?
It doesn’t look easy to me.
I was studying books on racing theory before I was a teenager.
I don’t know what most people were thinking about them.
I know many people that ended up on a track eventually.

Parsko
Parsko
4 days ago

I’m better than you, and I’m willing to place 5,000 pennies on the table to prove it.

If you ever need anyone to hold your water, tie your shoes, or provide constant high-fives and dad jokes, I’m right around the corner from Limerock!

I’ll be at every race at Limerock this season if you wanna meet someone super cool who’s faster than you. 🙂

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
3 days ago
Reply to  Parsko

Driving a normal car at it’s limits like this is way harder than driving a properly set up race car.”

And the joke there is that you’re in Canada where the penny has been discontinued… and thus, you’re offering nothing. LOL

Parsko
Parsko
3 days ago

I am not in Canada, but the US recently announced the discontinue of the penny as well.

My mom likes to hand out $50 bills at holidays, which for some reason, I find difficult to spend. I’ll just save one for when I crush Parker’s ego on the track.

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