fastest track day cars

fastest track day cars

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Discussion

loudpedal

Original Poster:

3,925 posts

270 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
At the risk of going over old ground, a question....

I had always been under the impression that a (powerful) TVR, Porsche, Ferrari, Lambo etc... could hold its own with a 7-type car round a track (given level driver talent).

However, yesterday, a mate of mine told me about a track day (Goodwood) he did with his uncle, in a Caterham. Apparently, the Caterham absolutely DEMOLISHED everything. Not just 1 or 2 seconds per lap, but 12 or 14!!! And this was a fairly standard Caterham...

can anyone shed any light on this?

raceboy

13,120 posts

281 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Well at Cadwell last week the 'Cater-fields' were certainly quick, as was an Exige, but surprise of the day was an E30 BMW 325i,

jeremyc

23,517 posts

285 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Driver skill, driver not wanting to push car too hard, circuit.......

IMO you are never going to get a true comparison until all are in a competitive environment where (presumably) everyone is trying to lap as quickly as possible.

That said, there are circuits that will suit a Caterham better than a more powerful but heavier and slower cornering TVR, Porsche or Ferrari (and I'm not familiar with Goodwood as a track so can't comment in this instance).

I still believe that driver ability has the most impact: a skilled driver in a TVR could probably see off a less experienced Caterham pilot.

>> Edited by jeremyc on Wednesday 18th September 14:02

Podie

46,630 posts

276 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
How about an R500?

adeewuff

567 posts

271 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
quote:

However, yesterday, a mate of mine told me about a track day (Goodwood) he did with his uncle, in a Caterham.



Hmmm... Goodwood certainly suits the more powerful cars what with it's 3 long straights. I think it would depend on how hard your friends Uncle was trying... not every car on a trackday is out to prove something so however fast he was round the track doesn't reflect on how fast or slow the other cars were.

In my experience the more powerful cars had a distinct advantage at Goodwood, simply because they kept accelerating beyond 120mph where as most 7 type cars & Elises simply slow down. The Honda Civic Type-R that overtook my Elise there proved that point.

MikeE

1,833 posts

285 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
I agree with Adeewuff about Goodwood being a power circuit, I did a trackday there last May and it's not really suited to a (low powered) Caterham (unlike Folembray which I thought was very well suited to the CaterFields).

Having said that I'm sure a well driven R500 (top speed 150mph?) would wipe the floor with any standard(ish) road car around Goodwood.

>> Edited by MikeE on Wednesday 18th September 14:32

mattdaniels

7,353 posts

283 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
quote:

In my experience the more powerful cars had a distinct advantage at Goodwood, simply because they kept accelerating beyond 120mph where as most 7 type cars & Elises simply slow down. The Honda Civic Type-R that overtook my Elise there proved that point.



I know Elises aren't the quickest cars in the world but they don't exactly "slow down" at 120mph they just stop accelerating.

Goodwood is a very fast circuit so definitely suits more powerful cars but I have witnessed a Vauxhall Vectra hire car blowing away everything there (Evo's, Scoobeys, Elises et al) on a track day. It's definitely a lot to do with the driver.

PetrolTed

34,428 posts

304 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
That reminds me - what flavour Elise is yours Matt? You were all over me at Folembray, even on the straights. Please tell me you've got a 160 or something

jeremyc

23,517 posts

285 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
quote:
Please tell me you've got a 160 or something
Dream on Ted.....

It'll be something to do with power to pie ratio.

ShinyAndy

217 posts

263 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
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Oh dear Dave... prepare to be shocked

Andy
BookaTrack.com

PetrolTed

34,428 posts

304 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Damn. Back to driving school for me then.

mattdaniels

7,353 posts

283 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Ted - this is your forum so I will give you a choice of answers:

A) It's a Sport 190 super dooper wikkid turbo edition and I am an ex racer with many championship wins under my belt.

B) It's a bottom of the range 118bhp bog standard Elise with 86KG of slightly loose nut behind the wheel.

loudpedal

Original Poster:

3,925 posts

270 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Another question along similar lines, how do Ultimas fair round tracks? They certainly have the stats to put on a good show... anyone seen it/done it care to share?

PetrolTed

34,428 posts

304 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Answer A. Thank god for that

Gaining on me in the corners I could handle, it was the speed you carried past me on the straights that was embarressing for me.

mattdaniels

7,353 posts

283 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Answer A. Thank god for that



LOL! If answer A makes you feel better then I won't tell a soul the truth honest

quote:

Gaining on me in the corners I could handle, it was the speed you carried past me on the straights that was embarressing for me.



Well the more speed you carry through the corners the faster you are on the straights. I've found the secret in the Elise is to maximise your corner exit speed especially with the standard car because it really is gutless above 80mph. The tyres I had on may have helped

ShinyAndy

217 posts

263 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
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I wondered if you were going to mention the tyres or not

Andy
BookaTrack.com

mattdaniels

7,353 posts

283 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Mmmmmmmm A038's. Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

More sticky than a very sticky stick. They cling to the track like an immigrant to a Eurostar.

getcarter

29,404 posts

280 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
Given the same driver there is no question that a fast Seven (remember they have lots of different specs) will lap quicker round any circuit in the UK. Slow Sevens or slow drivers will just drive slowly.

Just to give you an idea of how much faster a Caterfield is... I've done a whole bunch of tracks in an M3 E46 - generally lapping at the same speed as a Tuscan, 160 Elise - perhaps a second or so slower than a 911 twin turbo - a few seconds short of a GT3. Will overtake the lesser powered Caterfields with ease.

I've also done a bunch of (the same) tracks in an R500, which 'destroy' my lap times from the M - sometimes by 20 secs per lap.

Only on REALLY fast circuits will tin tops get close to the quick Caterfields. The Seven R500 does 60 - 0 almost twice as fast as a TVR and 70 - 90 in the same time as a McLaren F1.

Power to weight.

(of course I'm talking road legal here - any amount of race spec / slick tyred monsters will be quicker)




>> Edited by getcarter on Wednesday 18th September 16:57

stig

11,818 posts

285 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Another question along similar lines, how do Ultimas fair round tracks? They certainly have the stats to put on a good show... anyone seen it/done it care to share?



Well, depends on who's behind the wheel, how well it's set up etc.etc.

I've kept up with a 500bhp GTR round Donington in a race Locost (1300cc - 69bhp). It destroyed me on the straights but I could make it all back in the twisty bits.

However, a well driven Ultima with someone who knows what they're doing behind the wheel should absolutely cream most things.

After 2 years of racing, I hope to find out first hand when mine gets out on the track

CarZee

13,382 posts

268 months

Wednesday 18th September 2002
quotequote all
quote:
They cling to the track like an immigrant to a Eurostar.