Chris Peterson wrote:
Chuck,
I'm sure others can give you a much more technical description, but I'll give you my take on the courses. They were not like any I've ever seen at a Pro. There was basically NO transition and lots of sweepers. The gearing was darn near perfect for cars like the STi, MR2, and Solstice and absolutely HORRIBLE for cars like the S2000, ES Miata, and, I think, the Type R, among others.
Every time I wanted to get the power down, it was time to break. The corners were painfully slow, rewarded patience and KILLED you for the next 2 to 3 corners if you tried to dive bomb them. <voice of experience>
Most were not very happy with the courses, saying that the site is much more fun (re: transitions!!) when they lay out the course going in the opposite direction. In other words, the site is a huge rectangle. The course was laid out using the short top/bottom and long on the sides (landscape). The fun way is apparently long top/bottom and short on the sides (portrait).
Thanks Chris, and congrats again. Hey, I saw you were on Hoosiers for the event!

I've been worried since the Extreme School that my biases I told you about that day might adversely affect you (i.e. the V710/A6 stuff we were talking about), but I can see that worry was for nothing now!

Good job. That part about rewarding patience reminds me so much of those various slow corners we all worked on at the Extreme School, especially when they pinched them tight -- that repeated practice was instrumental for me to improve my driving and help extinguish some baggage I've carried for a couple of decades too long.