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Day 3 – 30 Days of Racing in a Row Challenge

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Progress!

What a day!  So yesterday, I had found, thanks to the Virtual Racing School service, that the biggest place for me to make up ground was sector 6, which includes turns 6 and 7, leading to the longest straight away on the track.  As was once covered in Speed Secrets weekly (also, highly suggest signing up for this – incredibly cheap), there are generally two ways to prioritize which corners or sectors to attack first:

  1. The corner that leads to the longest straight away.  Why?  Because any speed lost coming out of that corner, is magnified by the length and amount of time you spend accelerating or at top speed.
  2. The scariest corner or section of the track.  Why? It’s scary.  🙂 If it is scary, than there is a higher probability that most sane people will want to check up and give themselves some room and time to correct for mistakes (and not crash).  If you can be less scared or ignore your bodies natural urges to be physically safe and/or alive, you can have an edge!  Easy, right?

Sector 6 is not particularly scary and has plenty of run-off AND we’re in the virtual world, so there is less of a fear for life.  This is a plain, #1 scenario – it is a long straight away, so don’t screw it up or you’ll pay.

A track map of Road Atlanta, in Braselton, GA

The approach I took

Most of my preparations for this change were mental as I didn’t drive much on Sunday.  In fact, we lost track of time in the AM and missed church.  🙁  So I just realized that in my braking for Turn 6, according to the Virtual Racing School data trace, I was using near 100% of the braking force, when I actually needed to brake more like 50% and trail the braking in longer and a similar situation on Turn 7.

Look at the differences in the brake pressure used. I am the red dotted line. Good-ness!

So I visualized applying the brake more gently, and holding it longer, anticipating the rear end to come around and being able to get on the throttle.  I visualized the same for Turn 7 and long behold – literally, on the very first flying lap, made it work!  ON THE VERY FIRST LAP!  Unfortunately it was a dirty lap because I dropped a tire elsewhere.  iRacing is pretty strict in terms of clean versus dirty laps.  Even dropping one tire can have a lap not count or worse, count against you in a race.  I’m glad that officials in real world racing aren’t as strict.

A little too excited.  Change the setup and carry on.

I’ll admit – I got a little excited and screwed some laps because of how I excited I was at the progress and then realized I hadn’t even changed the setup on the car to the same setup from the reference lap on VRS.  So I took a break to collect myself and load the setup.  In doing this, I realized I didn’t know how to do this.  I was able to easily download the setup file (.sto) but I had no idea how to load it.

Here is a great and simple video I found on how to create, save and load setup files on iRacing.  Old but it still works!

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Back to progress!

After taking a few breaths to chill out, I got back out on track and proceeded to hammer out a string of 1:21.xxx laps and one point even having a 1:20.8xx lap going. I screwed it up by over-slowing for the chicane but I felt like ‘I got it’ and there’s still room for improvement.  My new fastest lap time is 1:21.382, almost one whole second faster than the day prior.

New fastest lap time! 1:21.382 and room to grow!

Tomorrow – more of the same.

My goal tomorrow and possibly the next day is to be able to make this new way of driving the norm.  I am going to try to do 30 minutes or more of 1:21.xxx lap times.  If I can be within .5 seconds of that fastest lap time, consistently – I will feel confident that I’ve adopted these learnings and then can transition to another segment of the track.  I love data (and video)!

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Day 2 – 30 Days of Racing in a Row

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My goal today?

Well a pre-goal, was to actually drive.  The changes I made (stopping OneDrive from syncing, installing the latest updates so they weren’t downloading in the background and not having a video uploading on another device) all resulted in no performance issues at all.  Yay!

The real goal: Drive like I do in real life – putting down a string of consecutive and consistent laps.  I’ve found in the past in iRacing that I go off A LOT more than I do in real-life, usually having multiple incidents with walls in a given practice session.  That’s not what happens in real life and while I am not driving anywhere near the same car, I believe I should be able to drive in the virtual world as I do in the real world; safe, consistent and somewhat fast.  🙂

After a day more focused on setup and updates on the machine, my goal was just to put down a true initial baseline of what I can do in the Mercedes AMG GT3 and Road Atlanta.  Ideally, I wanted to drive the entire 60 minutes without an issue but I was only able to make it just past 30 minutes with no crashes. The good news was that I improved my personal best AND I put down several laps within .5 of my personal best, clicking off a consistent string of 1:22.xxx lap times and while trying different things.

I wanted to use this baseline of data to be confident in what I could do when analyzing the data with Virtual Racing School data packs.

22 laps without crashing! Not bad for not driving as much as I wanted to the past 6 months.

Lessons Learned

    • Pareto lives!  I am down 2.197 seconds from my reference lap and one segment alone accounts 0.809 seconds, almost half of the lap time.  Two segments (4 and 7) account for almost half of the delta.

  • By default, in testing, a car starts with a full fuel load – in the Mercedes AMG GT3, it was 30 gallons.  The car in the reference lap was running with about 10 gallons and 9 gallons in the lap I am using for reference.  That is a ~15 gallon and 90 lbs. difference.  THAT IS HUGE – though, I still have much more work to do aside from losing car weight.
  • The data exposes all – the major theme of comparing the two laps is clear.  I am braking too hard for the most of the significant turns where I am losing time and then getting on throttle sooner and harder than my rabbit.
    • I need brake slightly sooner, lighter and carry more speed through the corner and this will require coming on throttle softer.
    • This is consistent with what I’ve seen in real-life, comparing my data with a super fast driver like Olivier.

One thing I am going to work until I can get it

Segment 6, which includes turns 6 and 7.  Brake sooner, lighter, carry more speed in, know that mid-corner will be not as planted and I will have to be more gentle with throttle application on corner exit, because I’ll be carrying more speed.  The goal is still to get to throttle as fast as I can but I’ll be more at the limit.

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Day 0 – 30 Days of Racing in a Row Challenge

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I’ve seen several articles on taking on a new thing by doing that thing for 30 days in a row, such as running a marathon (30 marathons in 30 days), stretching 10 minutes a day for thirty days, meditating, doing 15 burpees per day for thirty days and so on.

Why?

Usually it’s help start a new habit, kick a habit or accelerate development in something.  No difference here, I’m doing this to get faster and have fun!

The goal: 1 hour of racing per day, everyday, for 30 days.

While I wish I could race a real, physical race car  each day, I don’t have that kind of scratch or logistics setup but I do have a pretty sweet sim racing setup and iRacing.

So everyday, usually in the early AM’s, I’m going to practice and/or race on iRacing.  Through the next 30 days, I’ll also have at least 2 full race weekends where I’ll be racing in the real world.  So for those days, I won’t be on the simulator but instead on a race track, in my race car!  Yeah!

What do I expect to happen?

I’m not exactly sure but I am at least hoping to get noticeably faster in the virtual world, hammer out details on my sim setup and be better at learning to get fast.

To stay focused and reduce variables, I am going to focus on just one car and one track.  The Mercedes AMG GT3 and Road Atlanta.  Why?  Having a rabbit to chase.  I’m a huge believer and advocate in the power of data + video.

Literally thousands of virtual laps of this track but have yet to actually drive it.

Here is a good review of the car, right before it was released by the crew at Inside Sim Racing.

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There is a new service that recently launched, Virtual Racing School, and while I’m new to it also, I am in love with the premise and potential of what they are doing.  With a simple download and activation, VRS logs all of your iRacing data and video and saves it to your profile.  No downloading, uploading or anything to deal with. Just install, activate, drive and you’re all set.

As part of the service, they also have data packs for certain cars and track combinations and even setups, that you can automatically use as a reference point to work towards.  This is massive!  Having someone else who is much faster than you, in the same car, same track and similar conditions is one of the best ways to learn and learn fast.

Getting ready

So I decided to start the journey, one day ahead and get my day 1 as smooth as possible.  I booted up my computer, installed updates to Windows, iRacing and NVIDIA.  My goal was to be able to simply wake up the next morning, do my morning routine and be up and running, in a race car within 15 minutes of getting out of bed.

I’ll create a post later on with the details on my current sim setup, so you all can get the full details then but at a high level, here is the setup:

So, while I technically have a motion simulator and I have an Oculus and have used them for iRacing, I will most likely not use them very often over these 30 days.  Main reason: we live in a tiny apartment and I’ll be doing most of my daily racing in the early AM, while my wife and 2 year are asleep, 15 and 40 feet away, respectively.  The motion simulator isn’t super loud but it makes noise and my wife has complained about it before.

The Oculus is AWESOME but I sweat easily and have found that when I’ve worn it for 20 minutes plus of intense driving, I sweat pretty bad and the lenses start fogging up.  So I’ll be using the triple monitors and headphones, without motion.