RE: In Car Active
RE: In Car Active
Wednesday 14th May 2003

In Car Active

DVD tuition - the best way to gem up on track technique


If like me you enjoy your track driving then part of the attraction - aside from just having a good hoon - is to feel like you're learning something. To that end, many of us have bought the Circuit Guides that explain how to drive the various UK circuits.

Trouble is, mine is still sitting on the shelf. I invariably forget to take the guide to a circuit and if I do remember, it sits with my luggage whilst I'm off chewing the cud with other drivers.

Lazy Bones

At this rate I'm not going to improve my lines as quickly as perhaps I should. That's probably because I'm a techno-junky as much as anything. With an attention span measured in nano-seconds I don't seem to find the time to sit down and study a book of line diagrams and try to imagine myself driving.

The answer is at hand however. Since Circuit Driver and Circuit News merged, they've been working on a circuit guide for people like us - petrolheads who simply interchange their steering wheels with keyboards when they get home.

The DVD they've produced gives a blow by blow account of how to drive a track. The first in the series is Silverstone with Brands Hatch being worked on shortly. It's likely to take them some time to cover all the UK's circuits but I certainly hope they do as it's the best way I've encountered to study technique. Getting instruction at a circuit is always helpful, but often with everything happening so quickly you don't always take home as much information as perhaps you'd like to.

All Angles Covered

With the DVD system, Mark Hales drives the track complete with multiple cameras strapped to his Caterham, allowing you to see what's going on from all angles. You can view the output from all the cameras at once or select one to watch full screen. There's even a helicopter buzzing Hales as he laps the track, giving you a good view of the line he takes from the air.

You can see what his hands are up to, the angle of the wheels and the landmarks that he uses to select his line. No crude diagrams here - you can see it with your own eyes and play it over and over again until it sinks in.

If you really want to gem up on his technique, there's a full Pi data logging system giving you plenty of technical data to match to the imagery. All the while, Mark is talking through his technique and explaining what he's up to and why. It's in car instruction repeatable on demand, in the comfort of your own home. Various modes are offered including one where you click on the map of the circuit and Hales gives a blow by blow account of the corner you've selected.

Other Bits

There's a bit of gimmickery on the DVD too with a Ferrari GTO lapping Silverstone thrown in together with some other guidance on track day technique that will be of particular interest to novices although it's also peppered with a few tips that may interest more experienced drivers too.

Forget the playstation as practice, set up this DVD for continual play on your PC and you'll be taking the right line around Silverstone in your sleep.

We were impressed and we think you will be too, so we're stocking them in the PH Shop.

Author
Discussion

Don

Original Poster:

28,378 posts

308 months

Monday 14th April 2003
quotequote all
If you are going to do a Track Day at Silverstione and have access to the necessary computer you should definitely buy this DVD and spend some time with it prior.

I bought one - and will be looking forward to using the knowledge gained in July.

Recommended.

actech

693 posts

291 months

Monday 14th April 2003
quotequote all
Do you think it would be a bad thing if you put the DVD in your in-car DVD player and watched it as you went round the circuit?

Mark Benson

8,264 posts

293 months

Monday 14th April 2003
quotequote all
Circuit Driver magazine is a bloody good read too.

A refreshing alternative to 'Ego' and the like (ie. written by people more concerned with driving the cars than impressing the reader with their tales of on-road bravado....)

Don

Original Poster:

28,378 posts

308 months

Monday 14th April 2003
quotequote all

Mark Benson said: Circuit Driver magazine is a bloody good read too.

A refreshing alternative to 'Ego' and the like (ie. written by people more concerned with driving the cars than impressing the reader with their tales of on-road bravado....)


Yes I like Circuit Driver too.

Oh - a point I forgot to mention. Mark Hales is the Alan Titchmash of motor racing. There he is absolutely pounding around the circuit whilst commenting in a very calm, friendly voice about waiting until the grip comes back and "don't forget to accelerate.

Cool.

>> Edited by Don on Monday 14th April 16:11

Graham

16,378 posts

308 months

Monday 14th April 2003
quotequote all
ipicked a copy up at the autosport show and its very good.

I had a long chat with Hales and he is a great bloke too.

RobM77

35,349 posts

258 months

Tuesday 25th November 2008
quotequote all
Sorry to drag up such an old thread, but does anyone know if these DVD-ROMs are still available?

S Bennett

4 posts

218 months

Thursday 27th November 2008
quotequote all
If you go directly to Mark Hales website (www.markhales.com), you should be able to buy one through that. He also has How to drive DVDs for Brands Hatch, Snett, Oulton Park and Cadwell Park. The technology has moved on a bit since the Silverstone DVD.

RobM77

35,349 posts

258 months

Thursday 27th November 2008
quotequote all
S Bennett said:
If you go directly to Mark Hales website (www.markhales.com), you should be able to buy one through that. He also has How to drive DVDs for Brands Hatch, Snett, Oulton Park and Cadwell Park. The technology has moved on a bit since the Silverstone DVD.
Thanks. I'll have all of those hehe

I'm off there now. smile