How good are f-bodies on a track?
#1
Staging Lane
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How good are f-bodies on a track?
Hey guys
So ive been entertaining the idea of tracking my car once I graduate this spring. I just wanted to findout the general census on whether it can be done in my 1999 SS CAMARO or if I shouldnt bother and just get a C5ZO6 eventually. My underatanding is people like Sam Strano have had sucess. I just wanted to get feed back before i go crazy with this idea. Thanks for any post.
So ive been entertaining the idea of tracking my car once I graduate this spring. I just wanted to findout the general census on whether it can be done in my 1999 SS CAMARO or if I shouldnt bother and just get a C5ZO6 eventually. My underatanding is people like Sam Strano have had sucess. I just wanted to get feed back before i go crazy with this idea. Thanks for any post.
#2
Kleeborp the Moderator™
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Set up properly, they can do very well. The platform will always be somewhat limited due to the size and weight distribution, but they really are better than most people will give them credit for.
A C5ZO6 certainly has way more potential than an f-body, so if you plan on getting serious, it might be best to keep any mods to your Camaro to a minimum while you save/wait for the right Vette to come along. C5ZO6 is a lot of bang for the buck, and there are many out there to choose from.
A C5ZO6 certainly has way more potential than an f-body, so if you plan on getting serious, it might be best to keep any mods to your Camaro to a minimum while you save/wait for the right Vette to come along. C5ZO6 is a lot of bang for the buck, and there are many out there to choose from.
#4
Your car is plenty capable so just go out and have a good time. I've had a great time playing with some off the Corvette guys so it's about the driver more than anything.
#5
I was in the same situation you are and decided to dip my feet in with what I had. I now track my full weight '02 Z28 a couple times a year. It started stock with only bolt-on engine mods. Now the suspension has been modified quite a bit but I'm still only bolt-ons in the power department. No regrets and loving it!
Btw... half the fun is surprising some people with how well a camaro gets around the track
http://www.youtube.com/user/2002Mark2002/videos
Mark.
Btw... half the fun is surprising some people with how well a camaro gets around the track
http://www.youtube.com/user/2002Mark2002/videos
Mark.
#7
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If you've got the dough to track a C5Z06, I say go for it, but don't underestimate your current ride though. They do pretty damn well on the track, parts are relatively cheap and common. Consider this: I put a new carb (untuned) and TDP-prepped T56 in my 2nd gen TA two days before tracking it at Road America. The car ran on 245s, with a global west suspension, a stock internal 2001 LS1 (LTH, carb intake), and a race weight around 3000 pounds. Even with horribly "off" brake biasing, the car was way more capable on the track than I was (I'm a noob). It turned a 3:01 best lap with my buddy driving (experienced racer) and kept pace with some impressive cars. It would easily drop 20 seconds on a better tune and with a new brake prop valve.
The best part, "consumable" and breakable parts are cheap. They're probably even cheaper with a 4th gen. If you maintain a certain level of roadworthiness, I would think running the camaro would cost less than a vette. Less cost = more track time. I'd advocate trading up to a vette once your driving skills outgrow the camaro.
If you're just graduating (and not a doctor or similar high-earner) do you think your pocketbook could sustain the loss of a Z06? You own the Camaro already. There's reason I track a 1981 TA, instead of my G8. I'd rather be 4000 dollar POed than 20000 dollar suicidal.
Just my $0.02
The best part, "consumable" and breakable parts are cheap. They're probably even cheaper with a 4th gen. If you maintain a certain level of roadworthiness, I would think running the camaro would cost less than a vette. Less cost = more track time. I'd advocate trading up to a vette once your driving skills outgrow the camaro.
If you're just graduating (and not a doctor or similar high-earner) do you think your pocketbook could sustain the loss of a Z06? You own the Camaro already. There's reason I track a 1981 TA, instead of my G8. I'd rather be 4000 dollar POed than 20000 dollar suicidal.
Just my $0.02
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#8
Kleeborp the Moderator™
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Race first, mod later.
#9
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Yeah, I like to surprise the Vette owners too. The track makes a big difference in how these cars perform in comparison to others. These cars are better suited to big tracks with sweeping corners. At the smaller track I go to I am fighting with the light weight cars like S2000s. At the bigger track I leave them behind. Many people have been impressed at how well it does. I have not been out with the LS3 yet. Good brake pads and a performance alignment help a lot. I need to change to dedicated tires and brake pads.
#10
Staging Lane
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Ive noticed that my car does pretty well in canyons and what not. Even surprised a friend in a new sti. I will upgrading my sway bars here soon. Mainly cause all the urethane bushings are old so new sway bars come with new hardware. Also i know i have warped front rotor. Any recommendation on a replacement?
#11
Ive noticed that my car does pretty well in canyons and what not. Even surprised a friend in a new sti. I will upgrading my sway bars here soon. Mainly cause all the urethane bushings are old so new sway bars come with new hardware. Also i know i have warped front rotor. Any recommendation on a replacement?
#12
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Good shocks (Koni SAs for example) will make the biggest difference, and totally transform the car. Id suggest those with some decent brake pads, quality blank rotors and decent tires + regular maintenance stuff.
#13
Staging Lane
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I just upgraded the stock French POS shocks with Bilisteins and took the eibach lowering springs off and put the spring kit from slp on. Tires have about 6k on them. Yokohama S-Drives, they seem better then my old KDW's.
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You should give Sam Strano a call...he talked me through and is pretty much the man when it comes to auto-x or tracking F-bodies.
I'm a noob too, but start with shocks, sway bars, and springs for your car. Tires will be important too.
If you DD your car, you might want to look into a setup of rims/tires for track purposes because you will go through tires pretty quickly. Slicks aren't a must, there are some really good street/track tires that you can drive to the track on and race with.
I have an LT1, so I'm upgrading the brakes currently. The LS1 brakes are better and you can get by with swapping the pads for an event. If you get serious, then maybe upgrade the brakes later...If you are doing longer events, like HPDE, you'll definitely want to swap the brake fluid so you don't boil the fluid. Like mentioned above...make sure you put in fresh fluids before any 'serious' event.
I saw in sig that you were looking at the UMI sway bars...again, might want to call Sam Strano, he makes an awesome set of sways for F-bodies...probably better than UMI. He referred me with my setup and goals and I'm very happy.
I'm a noob too, but start with shocks, sway bars, and springs for your car. Tires will be important too.
If you DD your car, you might want to look into a setup of rims/tires for track purposes because you will go through tires pretty quickly. Slicks aren't a must, there are some really good street/track tires that you can drive to the track on and race with.
I have an LT1, so I'm upgrading the brakes currently. The LS1 brakes are better and you can get by with swapping the pads for an event. If you get serious, then maybe upgrade the brakes later...If you are doing longer events, like HPDE, you'll definitely want to swap the brake fluid so you don't boil the fluid. Like mentioned above...make sure you put in fresh fluids before any 'serious' event.
I saw in sig that you were looking at the UMI sway bars...again, might want to call Sam Strano, he makes an awesome set of sways for F-bodies...probably better than UMI. He referred me with my setup and goals and I'm very happy.
#15
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I actually met Sam today at an SCCA event at Fedex Field. Guy is a genius with his cars. He built an 05-09 Mustang for a guy to race with and was pretty wicked, the only problem is that Sam set the car up for how he drives not for the guy who actually drove the car today, so keep that in mind, everyone has their own driving styles and setups will vary.
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I autoX and track my WS6 quite a bit. I must say the z06 guys are quite surprized when they get a mirror full of the aggressive Ram air nose! My car is not stock, It's preppared to Strano's Specs, Konis made the most difference in the car of all the mods I've done. I have Sam's springs and bars, prothane front bushings, Sams offset upper bushings, an auborn Road Race Diff and headers and bolt ons for the motor. For more in depth info I would check out FRRAX.com It's all fbodies, all the time...
At my last trip to VIR I turned a 2:23 lap on street tires, that's only a few seconds slower than the american Iron guys run.
At my last trip to VIR I turned a 2:23 lap on street tires, that's only a few seconds slower than the american Iron guys run.
#17
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Like I said, Sam is a guru when it comes to this stuff, he knows what he is talking about that is for sure.
I was considering going to a track day or some kind of WDCR SCCA solo event just to see how I could handle my car on a cone course. But I wouldn't know what class I'd be running in with my mods or even if the car would even be autox course worthy after the torque converter I'm planning to install by the end of summer. I've searched and searched and can't find much about a stalled a4 in autocross. My current mods are in sig, right now I have the stock 10 bolt with 2.73 gears and street tires. I am planning on doing a couple suspension upgrades before the converter but I'm looking at a 3300-3600 stall speed.
I was considering going to a track day or some kind of WDCR SCCA solo event just to see how I could handle my car on a cone course. But I wouldn't know what class I'd be running in with my mods or even if the car would even be autox course worthy after the torque converter I'm planning to install by the end of summer. I've searched and searched and can't find much about a stalled a4 in autocross. My current mods are in sig, right now I have the stock 10 bolt with 2.73 gears and street tires. I am planning on doing a couple suspension upgrades before the converter but I'm looking at a 3300-3600 stall speed.
#18
Staging Lane
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If I did keep my car, i could make it what I want. And I would get a kick out of surprising vette owners lol. Granted it wont handle as well as IRS supported cars.
How do Bilistein shocks handle in comparison to koni's?
How do Bilistein shocks handle in comparison to koni's?
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