Ron L
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Ron
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2024
- Threads
- 9
- Messages
- 208
- Reaction score
- 323
- Location
- SW Florida
- Car(s)
- 2025 Toyota Supra & 2024 Toyota Rav4
- Thread starter
- #1
I just did my first autoX with the Supra last weekend. I haven't run an autoX over the last 2 or 3 years. Before that I ran 5 to 9 events a year over 6 years in a 2021 Miata and a 2019 Toyota 86 and a 2012 Miata. I don't claim to be a very good driver at autoX. And I did this event as a kind of prep for doing a track day at Barber Motorsports Park in July.
Before I started doing autoX, I raced SCCA for over 15 years in various small, 4 cylinder mid-engine cars (Fiat X1/9, Sports Renault Spec Racer, Toyota MR2). Most were showroom stock or Improved Touring classes. The MR2 did go from SSC to ITA and ended up as an E Prod race car that made the SCCA Runoffs. I raced most of the tracks in the midwest like Road America, Mid-Ohio, Indianapolis Raceway Park, Blackhawk Farms and Nelson Ledges.
I find wheel to wheel racing vs track days vs autoX to all be quite different despite the fact that they all involve driving a car as fast as you can. Wheel to wheel involves going fast on big sweeping courses and developing/having race craft. Track Days involve going fast on big sweeping circuits that are fairly easy to learn given the amount of track time you get. AutoX is also going as fast as you can, but usually on a VERY twisty course that you don't get to see before race day and you only get a limited number of runs at. Here in SW Florida we have an airport location so runs are mile long and take 60 to 70 seconds on average. But due to high competitor turn out, we usually only get 4 runs. That makes learning the course very quickly a huge priority. And that's one ability that I'm not nearly as good at as I need to be!
At 76 years old, I'm kind of torn between AutoX and track days. The idea of buying wheels & tires for either slows me down as I find changing them before an event and then changing back after the event gets old after a few times. Especially here in SW Florida in the sun and heat of summer. AutoX would be a regular once a month event but track days would be less frequent, maybe more in the cooler winter months, but involve driving to events much further from home and involving a night or two in motels.
Before I started doing autoX, I raced SCCA for over 15 years in various small, 4 cylinder mid-engine cars (Fiat X1/9, Sports Renault Spec Racer, Toyota MR2). Most were showroom stock or Improved Touring classes. The MR2 did go from SSC to ITA and ended up as an E Prod race car that made the SCCA Runoffs. I raced most of the tracks in the midwest like Road America, Mid-Ohio, Indianapolis Raceway Park, Blackhawk Farms and Nelson Ledges.
I find wheel to wheel racing vs track days vs autoX to all be quite different despite the fact that they all involve driving a car as fast as you can. Wheel to wheel involves going fast on big sweeping courses and developing/having race craft. Track Days involve going fast on big sweeping circuits that are fairly easy to learn given the amount of track time you get. AutoX is also going as fast as you can, but usually on a VERY twisty course that you don't get to see before race day and you only get a limited number of runs at. Here in SW Florida we have an airport location so runs are mile long and take 60 to 70 seconds on average. But due to high competitor turn out, we usually only get 4 runs. That makes learning the course very quickly a huge priority. And that's one ability that I'm not nearly as good at as I need to be!
At 76 years old, I'm kind of torn between AutoX and track days. The idea of buying wheels & tires for either slows me down as I find changing them before an event and then changing back after the event gets old after a few times. Especially here in SW Florida in the sun and heat of summer. AutoX would be a regular once a month event but track days would be less frequent, maybe more in the cooler winter months, but involve driving to events much further from home and involving a night or two in motels.
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