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00:30
Captain's Log Supplemental
00:39
Hey, Jeremy, you know those race cars you're busy building?
00:43
Yeah, I do. I got one that I'm looking at every day.
00:47
You know what I don't see you working on?
00:50
You don't see me working on the amazing Sentinel System yet.
00:55
That's true. It would take all of 10 minutes for you to have one.
00:59
And it's very quick and easy to install.
01:02
It is. It is. And we could watch you when we are not at the race with you and see how you're doing.
01:09
And then we can call you up when you get out of the car and tell you everything you did wrong.
01:13
And I love that because so many years I've been driving and not been able to see what I'm doing.
01:20
I know. You know what I'd like to do with the video?
01:23
My most favorite thing is I take the video and I load it on YouTube.
01:27
And then I send it to my coach and say, look at 26 minutes and 17 seconds.
01:32
Look at this one lap and tell me what I can do better.
01:34
And every single time, you know what they say?
01:38
Exactly. Precisely.
01:42
So with the Sentinel System, you get instantaneous feedback plus useful feedback that unfortunately is accurate for my driving.
01:52
I think it's accurate for all of our driving.
01:55
Pretty much. Yeah, that's probably true.
01:57
Yeah, but you need to get one in your car, sir.
02:01
And with the discount code that you're going to tell everybody, they can save 10% on this awesome system.
02:10
I haven't had an issue getting video every time we've gone out with the Sentinel.
02:14
It's always worked.
02:15
Can't say the same for some of the other systems we've tried.
02:19
It's on the podcast notes down there.
02:22
Don't do it while you're driving though.
02:24
We like to have our listeners live. It's good.
02:54
Share what is right and wrong to get you out of your house and come out racing with them and serve all mankind.
03:02
They are the garage heroes in training team.
03:08
Welcome to the podcast.
03:10
Vicki's going to jump in anytime now.
03:12
She's not waiting for anything.
03:14
I'm one of the hosts, Bill.
03:18
Peter Kraus, welcome back.
03:20
Well, thank you, Bill.
03:22
It's always a pleasure to be here.
03:23
I have to truncate the normal podcast intro because Vicki cannot control herself.
03:34
Because you're awesome.
03:35
I don't know if Peter knows Vicki's earned nickname.
03:38
Peter, do you know what Vicki's nickname is on the podcast?
03:42
Her nickname is a bulldozer.
03:50
I have to write things down so I don't interrupt.
03:56
So, Peter, we've had you on the podcast a couple of times before.
04:01
We just went to an event that we're going to talk about.
04:06
You are a silly man and have agreed to come on every 50 episodes so that at least
04:15
now between the every 50 that Ross comes on and the staggered every 50 that you come on,
04:20
we'll have two good episodes every 50.
04:23
Well, Bill, I tell you, I love being on the podcast because you guys have a great and
04:30
unique take on everything that we talk about.
04:34
And we're not talking about simple things.
04:37
We're talking about hard things.
04:39
And that makes what we're talking about and what we're doing so much more important.
04:45
I mean, it's really fun.
04:47
Well, it was way too kind.
04:49
But we want to remind you that your official title on the podcast is Our Mr.
04:55
Well, you know, I never get tired of that place.
05:01
We don't either because we can't ever get there.
05:04
We keep trying to get there.
05:07
I know this year we tried to get to VIR this year this year and come to find out that our
05:14
co-driver that was going had to have surgery had to have eye surgery.
05:18
So he goes, I can't even drive.
05:20
So we sent him out a shirt and a bunch of googly eyes.
05:22
But yeah, so like we can't even make it because we just came back for a vacation
05:28
and immediately people get surgery.
05:31
So we can't go and he's like, I can't go.
05:35
I can't make it this year either.
05:38
So bulldozer and Peter.
05:44
You two did a thing a couple of weeks back and it's been a little bit of time.
05:49
But I thought we might start off with the Ross Bentley.
05:53
I don't even know the official name.
05:55
Ross and Peter and Ian and Mario at Pine View Run set up what's not an
06:02
HPDE but if it was, if we're going to call it an HPD, I would pick HPDE
06:09
It was much better, I think.
06:10
And I just wanted to get your feedback, Peter.
06:12
You were one of the instructors there.
06:14
And you personally had the highlight of my, I'll call it a weekend
06:20
even though it was during the week, was when you got so excited
06:26
when you heard a certain Orange Miata going around the track.
06:31
And I believe you screamed out in the middle of someone else's sentence.
06:36
And my favorite part of the weekend.
06:40
That was so much fun.
06:41
That was really, really good.
06:42
It was, it was so much fun.
06:44
And, you know, it's interesting because you don't get a chance.
06:49
A lot of times to work with people who are really, really tuned in.
06:55
And I think Ross put together a group of people that I think they put
07:01
together a program called SSA, Speed Secrets Academy.
07:05
So this was under the secrets banner.
07:07
And Speed Secrets Academy was an idea to talk about more than just
07:13
HPDE stuff, but how to teach yourself how to move in a particular
07:18
direction, how to get the most out of what you were doing.
07:22
And it really wasn't even dependent on the circuit.
07:28
That's what was really, really fun about it.
07:31
I think everybody has a sense of familiarity that they really don't
07:35
want to transcend because they're anxious about it.
07:39
And I think that's fair and that's reasonable to say,
07:43
well, you know, I don't think I can learn unless I'm on a track
07:46
that I really know well.
07:48
And in this particular case, this was very different from
07:51
everything that had ever happened before with Ross in the fact
07:56
that we went to a circuit to work with 40 people over the course
08:00
of five days on a track that none of us had ever been on before
08:06
with the exception of Ian and Mario Korff.
08:09
And it was really fun.
08:14
I just can't tell you how much fun it was.
08:18
And we had such a good group too.
08:20
We were in the first group and we had such a good group.
08:24
They were just funny.
08:27
They were a funny group.
08:31
They were great sense of humor.
08:33
They had a sense of humor.
08:34
People had the right perspective about the whole thing.
08:37
That was what I thought was neat.
08:39
They had an attitude.
08:40
Nobody had a chip on their shoulder.
08:42
Nobody was nervously laughing.
08:45
They were laughing genuinely and humanly and fully and openly.
08:50
And that's a big deal.
08:54
I would have to agree.
08:56
I think what made at least in that particular group,
08:59
because I can only speak for that group,
09:01
was just the receptiveness of everybody and the openness.
09:05
And they were just drinking in the knowledge that was coming,
09:09
which is what I really enjoyed about it.
09:11
It wasn't knowledge all the time.
09:12
I'm just going to say that.
09:15
It was pretty, yeah, it was pretty great.
09:19
Well, I don't know why it was great.
09:21
I mean, I think we need to look at a little bit of that.
09:23
And from your guy's perspective,
09:25
because I think both of you are both incredibly experienced
09:29
listeners, which is a hard thing to do.
09:33
What did you say, Pierre?
09:34
I don't know what he's talking about.
09:37
I just think that it's unusual for people that are really good
09:42
at listening to latch on to this and say, hey, this is true wisdom.
09:50
It just seemed like it worked out very, very well.
09:53
I think the hardest part we have is sometimes we're aiming
09:58
to help people either get better or get started.
10:00
And sometimes when we're doing the get started ones,
10:02
we have to ask questions as if we don't know the answer,
10:05
which I guess is part of coaching.
10:09
So it's always interesting.
10:11
Because some people are, you know, I've met a few people on the track
10:14
and they're like, you don't suck.
10:17
And I'm like, no, I'm not.
10:19
I'm not fast, but I'm not slow.
10:22
So everybody's a spectrum.
10:25
I mean, I think, you know, I get mad because there's a current.
10:31
I'm not going to say I get mad.
10:35
One of the biggest online forums that I spent a lot of time
10:42
And it's just Porsche-centric.
10:45
Because a large number of Porsche owners are very, you know,
10:52
really religious followers of driving on a circuit
10:59
and doing all kinds of things with their cars.
11:02
But the thing that was remarkable to me was that the
11:10
you could always learn more.
11:14
Everybody seemed to be able to be open to learning more.
11:19
And that is, that was one of the things that was really special about
11:24
what we're doing over the course of the, I'm getting a little lost here
11:28
because there were so many cool things I wanted to talk about.
11:31
We got plenty of tape in the podcast.
11:34
So we're good to go.
11:36
Well, we can start off, Miss Vicki.
11:38
Do you remember what your biggest learning points were
11:41
and what you were going to try to work on after?
11:43
Maybe you can entertain Peter.
11:46
Yeah, there was, there was something that I had a really
11:56
massive takeaway from.
11:58
And it wasn't until I was talking with Mario and Ian,
12:06
Dr. Ian, sorry, that early on, part of the reason in why I do
12:15
what I do on the track, okay, was, was that I have always been
12:24
working on waiting for the car to settle, which is why I do
12:28
and perform the way I do after looking at what the car can do
12:33
with the reference lab that she put down.
12:38
And some, and they just said, why do you do that?
12:41
Why do you wait for the car to settle?
12:43
And I said, well, that's how I was taught.
12:46
That's how I was taught because I remember going to NJMP
12:50
and NJMP has this off camber turn that when you go around it,
12:56
I had not waited for, I had gone off because I felt the car float
13:01
and then it would have to settle.
13:03
And then you could take off when you need to feel all the grip.
13:06
This is turn five at lightning.
13:08
Turn five at lightning, okay.
13:10
And they're like, well, why do you do that?
13:13
And I'm like, because I had gone off and that's what they
13:16
had told me and that's what I had learned.
13:18
They said, make it settle.
13:21
Make the car do it.
13:23
Instead of waiting for the car to do it, make the car do it.
13:27
And I'm like, oh, I can do that.
13:31
So now that's what I'm working on is now is to really work
13:36
on throwing that car around instead of waiting.
13:39
Because all of a sudden you're ahead of the game.
13:42
You're ahead of the horse.
13:44
That's been five years of a bad, of a bad, not bad.
13:52
It is what was done through HPDEs and training
13:56
and coaching, you know?
13:59
So I'm like, what else stuck that I'm doing?
14:02
So, well, yeah, I got Bill.
14:10
The saddest question you asked during the entire weekend
14:12
was what does full throttle mean?
14:17
It's so elementary.
14:19
It's an elementary question.
14:20
But what does that mean?
14:21
Seems like it's an elementary question,
14:23
but it's an elementary question
14:28
only because people haven't thought about it more.
14:33
And I think it was very interesting
14:35
because we talked about that.
14:37
We talked about the number one difference
14:39
between what you were doing
14:40
and what Alyssa was doing.
14:42
And you went up later further down the road
14:46
doing substantially more full throttle.
14:50
I was throwing myself into that thing
14:52
that they referred to as the catcher's mitt.
14:54
You guys said this is like a cat.
14:56
By the end of that weekend,
14:58
which I did not want to take that last run
15:00
because, well, I did, but I was really cautious.
15:03
I'm always cautious on the last run of the day.
15:05
I think that's why.
15:08
But I think towards the end of our weekend
15:13
or days that we were doing that,
15:15
I was really trying to throw myself into that.
15:17
I was like, let's see how hard
15:19
I can slam into that before I go up the hill.
15:22
But yeah, so there was some...
15:26
I would like to do it again.
15:28
I would like to do the Academy again
15:30
because it's like, what else am I doing?
15:35
Because I'm not saying that what I learned was wrong,
15:38
but I think that I've outgrown it.
15:43
Now it's time to like the data.
15:46
We had that conversation about the data
15:48
that I had to go into, which is like,
15:50
I think that there's a certain time
15:54
in your learning for that.
15:56
It's not something that you just say,
15:57
oh, we're going to do data.
15:58
So I'm going to teach you now.
15:59
You have to be receptive for it.
16:01
You have to get to that point.
16:04
Now I got all this other stuff.
16:05
Now I can focus on it.
16:07
But yeah, so that was massive.
16:11
That was the biggest takeaway that I got from that.
16:14
And then especially I was looking at a thing
16:17
that popped up on my feed.
16:20
And it was just, it was for high planes.
16:23
And there was like, this Corvette goes around
16:26
and he's going around the corner.
16:28
And then another car goes around the corner.
16:30
And then there's this frickin' Miata that comes around
16:32
and he is drifting into the corner, grabs it
16:35
and then goes, I'm like, that's what I need to be doing.
16:38
Like you said, and that was drilled in my head,
16:43
Because you yelled at that in the class
16:46
I love that, you know what I mean?
16:48
But you're just like, full commitment.
16:54
And he came and said, my car doesn't sound like that
16:56
because it was in your car.
16:58
It's fun when you pull it off.
17:02
But it's hard to do.
17:04
You can't just turn a switch on and have that happen.
17:07
I mean, you had a journey.
17:12
And then the light bulb came on.
17:14
And that I think is what is so much fun about this sport
17:18
is we really get multiple opportunities to get better
17:24
and to recognize what it takes to get better.
17:28
But the thing is, is that elementary question
17:30
that we had, full throttle, what does that mean?
17:33
What does that translate out to?
17:35
Because to me, it's just punching it.
17:37
But then you can't really punch it
17:39
unless you're in the proper gear
17:41
and then what does that look like?
17:43
It's such an elementary question, but you're right.
17:46
It's something that you didn't really think about.
17:48
And all of a sudden, like a bunch of other people are like,
17:50
yeah, what does that mean?
17:52
What does that mean?
17:54
It's not that people are afraid to ask the question.
17:56
That was one of the things that I thought was really,
17:59
really cool about Speed Secrets Academy
18:02
is everybody was there
18:04
and nobody was worried about the judgment
18:07
of anyone else there.
18:09
It freed everybody from
18:13
afraid of sounding not up to speed
18:17
or asking silly questions or anything like that.
18:20
And obviously, Ross is the best about it.
18:27
He disarms people's anxiety
18:30
about asking these questions so easily
18:34
and so with such wonderful slate of hand
18:38
that people want to ask questions
18:41
for the sake of asking questions.
18:43
And that's what he got.
18:45
And my problem is I'm a kid too
18:47
because I started bouncing off the wall going,
18:51
And he's nice enough to throw me a bone every now and then
18:55
and say, okay, talk it, talk it through.
18:59
And we, you know, Ross and I have so much fun
19:03
because we do believe in the same thing.
19:06
We almost can finish each other's sentences,
19:09
but we don't necessarily agree with each other
19:12
as to the priority of things.
19:14
And that to me is helpful
19:16
because it gives people an additional perspective
19:19
like you saying, man, I was,
19:22
it was pounded into my head to do this, this way,
19:25
this way, this way.
19:27
And now you people are telling me this is all wrong.
19:30
Or at least they didn't give me enough detail
19:35
to get, help me get to where I want to be.
19:39
And that was really cool about showroom,
19:41
about Speed Secrets Academy.
19:43
I keep thinking showroom stock A.
19:47
Not obsessed at all.
19:48
Our main classroom from SCCA racing years and years ago,
19:52
I raced a Z28 Camaro about 30 years ago
19:55
in showroom stock A.
20:01
Yeah, but one LE it was all.
20:04
It was a, that was 179.
20:07
I think it was a little later than that, 82, 83.
20:10
Well, it still had the plastic bumper, so that's good.
20:13
Those things were really fun.
20:14
Anyway, I think it is your revelation, Vicki,
20:21
is the reason why I did this,
20:23
is the reason why Ross,
20:26
after five years of pestering by Ian and Mario,
20:31
got, said, okay, if we're going to do this, let's do it.
20:36
But we're going to do it this way.
20:38
And Ross is really, really good because he knows a structure
20:43
that works because he's done it a thousand times.
20:47
I also thought that the group that he put together,
20:51
particularly Ian and Mario,
20:53
but also Sam, who has the most wonderful way with words
21:00
and, I mean, talk about a guy who can think on his feet.
21:08
And I've discovered since then that he's actually a very gifted racer.
21:12
He won't, he will deny, deny, deny.
21:14
If you want to see him get uncomfortable,
21:16
the only time he will be uncomfortable speaking is if you ask him,
21:18
it's like, alright, how good a racer are you?
21:20
Or, alright, here you're a really good racer.
21:22
Then he's like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
21:25
Well, it's so funny because he got a deal to drive
21:29
the McLaren F1 car that Montoya,
21:33
or no, it wasn't Montoya.
21:35
It was, I think, Lewis.
21:37
Well, no, it was Alonzo's, McLaren F1.
21:41
So this would have been 2008, 2009.
21:44
And he drove it for a magazine article at Indianapolis.
21:50
And I can count on two hands how many people I know
21:56
who have driven in anger a modern F1 car.
22:01
And by modern, I mean something younger
22:04
than the last F1 car I drove,
22:06
which was about 40 years old, which was an Alfa Romeo B12.
22:10
And this car had modern electronics
22:14
and really cool stuff.
22:16
And I mean, it was a spaceship.
22:18
And it required the ministrations of two dozen people
22:23
just to start the car.
22:25
And Sam wrote a wonderful article about it.
22:28
And if you do a little bit of a search
22:30
on some work that he's done for Road and Track Magazine,
22:34
I think it's Road and Track.
22:36
It's got a wonderful article of him driving this MP4-12,
22:42
I think it was, at Indianapolis.
22:44
And it was just remarkable.
22:46
But he would never come out and say that stuff.
22:50
And we would leave the Speed Secrets Academy
22:58
daily activities and then we would go back to the farmhouse.
23:03
And Ross and I and Sam beat to death
23:08
would just sit around talking about racing in cars
23:12
and vehicle dynamics for the next three hours.
23:18
And about wonderful cars that we have known and loved
23:21
and traded the fact that all three of us
23:25
have been with the same partner or ladies
23:28
for three decades more, more decades.
23:33
And so that's always a good thing.
23:35
But anyway, that's a little far afield.
23:39
But I just thought the chemistry between everybody
23:43
at that event was really, really good.
23:46
And everyone who came in, the first group and the second group,
23:51
and it was a very different group, I think, Bill.
23:55
Maybe you had a better insight.
23:59
But it worked out great.
24:01
It was very fluid, I'd have to say,
24:06
the way everything was set up.
24:09
It just, it went seamless.
24:11
Like, if there was hiccups, which I knew there were hiccups,
24:16
we didn't know about them.
24:19
Well, that's a successful program.
24:23
I mean, we were sweating bullets, actually, all of us.
24:27
But once everybody gets into it
24:30
and the questions start rolling and people get into it
24:33
and we know we have the room,
24:37
and all of a sudden I was looking at my watch going,
24:41
holy Moses, we're two thirds of the way through
24:44
or we're three quarters of the way through.
24:46
And it felt like it took 15 minutes.
24:48
And it had been four hours.
24:50
I was just shocked.
24:52
And that's how you know it's really, really good
24:54
because we covered so many different things.
24:58
And Ross is a master at rejiggering the program
25:06
to address a particular group or an audience
25:14
that is hungry for a segment or sector
25:18
or piece of the pie of information.
25:21
And that was another part of the magic,
25:24
was the program was defined by the people that went to it.
25:29
And that's another reason why the feedback was phenomenal.
25:34
I'm always worried because I think Ross is his own worst critic.
25:40
I think Sam is his own worst critic.
25:43
I tend to blow it off now.
25:45
I'm my worst critic.
25:48
I mean, I always think I've hit the wall
25:51
and people sit there and say,
25:53
man, that's something I've never heard before
25:56
or that really made a difference
25:58
or people come up 10 years later and say,
26:00
what, when you gave that discussion about end of breaking,
26:06
which has been a thing for as long as all of us have been studying.
26:12
Self-preservation kicks in.
26:14
So it's tough to get over it.
26:16
Self-preservation kicks in.
26:18
And the problem is self-preservation is such a limiter.
26:25
You know, we sit there and we say,
26:30
I'm doing something different.
26:32
And then they look at the stopwatch and it's the same time.
26:43
I mean, that can be the most,
26:48
that can suck all the oxygen out of the room
26:51
for the people that I work with at the track.
26:54
Is they're sitting there saying, but I tried this and I did that.
26:57
And I said, okay, we have to break it into smaller bits.
27:01
We have to make, we have to focus on a smaller,
27:05
best execution of fundamental skills.
27:08
And then you need to do more of that.
27:10
And then it will get better.
27:12
And sometimes it doesn't get better that day
27:14
that we work together.
27:16
Sometimes it takes a little bit of time,
27:23
but almost always the light bulb comes on
27:26
definitely like it did for Vicki.
27:28
And bang, people are up to speak.
27:33
You can become comfortable being slightly uncomfortable.
27:37
It's a great program to figure out what,
27:47
like you've doing it, like you said, like if you're stuck
27:50
or if you're feel like the HPD ease
27:54
or wherever you're at is just not enough.
27:56
And in your racing and you're doing, like you said,
27:59
you're doing things, but you just can't seem to improve.
28:02
This is what your program is really great for.
28:05
You know, I'm not saying that's the only thing is great for,
28:08
but it does help you sort things out.
28:10
It helps you think differently.
28:12
And I think that's what I really appreciated
28:14
when I talked to Ross about it.
28:16
And just the way you guys discuss things,
28:19
it was like, it just made me think
28:24
about a lot of things differently.
28:27
Not, and it was like a takeaway of like, oh,
28:32
and he spent, first of all, first of all,
28:38
the walk around on the track.
28:40
Now I've walked tracks before and I'm like, yeah, this,
28:42
yeah, that, yeah, this, yeah, that.
28:44
And they kind of point out the basics,
28:46
but yours was more in depth when you guys did it.
28:50
It was, it was more of, yes, we look at, you know,
28:56
pitches and yes, we looked at edges and yes,
28:59
we look at transitions and, you know, the apex,
29:02
but you guys had us really looking at the track
29:06
and skids and where the traction is
29:09
and where the where marks are.
29:11
And it was more of an in-depth thing
29:13
that I had this massive takeaway,
29:15
like I'm going to walk every track now
29:17
because now I know what I'm looking for.
29:19
And the second thing was, was that he thought,
29:25
part of it was, is that you are what you tell yourself.
29:30
And that was my biggest takeaway
29:32
and it wasn't just about racing.
29:34
So now I walk around and I'm like,
29:38
that's not a great thought
29:40
or if I'm having a really bad day
29:42
or if I'm really, things aren't really going to go,
29:45
like going well, like we keep hitting walls or whatever.
29:48
But if you keep focusing on those things,
29:50
you're going to hit all those things.
29:52
So now it's just like, I'm even looking at other people
29:55
in my life and what they're telling themselves.
29:57
I'm like, you're giving yourself a self-fulfilling prophecy.
30:01
You are what you tell yourself.
30:05
So, I mean, it just blew my mind
30:09
some of the stuff that I walked away with.
30:11
And I'm like, this is, it was incredible
30:14
just changing the thought process
30:16
of even being behind the wheel
30:19
and getting behind the wheel again.
30:21
That was crazy fun.
30:24
So that was, that was the cool thing was
30:27
we could talk about it all we wanted in class,
30:30
but then everybody got in their cars.
30:33
And that cycle allowed people,
30:37
much quicker uptake
30:39
of everything we talked about in the class.
30:42
And I mean, I still,
30:47
I love the track walks because
30:51
everything that we talked about in class
30:54
and on the track walk is universal.
30:57
It doesn't matter what car it is.
30:59
It doesn't matter what track it is.
31:01
It doesn't matter what tire you're on.
31:03
I mean, I love Ian and Mario and those guys
31:06
and they have spent a lifetime, it seems,
31:09
charting the characteristics of a 200 treadwear tire.
31:14
But the laws of physics don't know the difference
31:17
between a 200 treadwear tire
31:19
and a 40 treadwear Hoosier.
31:22
It's just that the limits are higher.
31:24
That's it, you know.
31:26
And so, so the thing about it was,
31:29
was how can we talk and speak
31:33
and address universal truths
31:35
rather than this specific stuff
31:37
everybody seems to get involved in?
31:39
You talk about HPDE,
31:41
and I'm not going to get off on this
31:43
because I get off a cliff if I do.
31:46
My next question is getting there.
31:47
So don't you worry.
31:49
You know, you talk about HPDE
31:51
and HPDE, I think, is a wonderful introduction.
31:55
I think it serves a very useful purpose
31:58
and I think the right seat instructor
32:00
serves as a tremendous resource.
32:04
But I also think that a lot of HPDE programs
32:10
are stultifyingly stuck in the mud.
32:16
I mean, they really are.
32:19
This is the way we've always done it.
32:21
This is the secret sauce line.
32:24
This is the school line.
32:26
It's never any discussion about driving the car
32:29
to its limit to the point where it pushes back.
32:32
Never any discussion about that.
32:34
And they can't and they don't
32:37
to keep everybody safe.
32:41
And that, like I get that.
32:44
There are ways that people can probe the limit
32:49
with such fine increments
32:51
that they don't endanger themselves or others.
32:54
But it's like a nanny holding
32:58
and toddler and saying,
33:01
don't step off the sidewalk.
33:04
When just putting one foot off to see
33:06
what the grass feels like is a good idea sometimes.
33:13
And I just, you know, I feel like, you know,
33:16
HPDE has gotten into a little bit of a rut.
33:20
Sure, there are some programs
33:22
that are better than others.
33:24
But unfortunately, or fortunately,
33:26
that's a lot of the reason why people go racing
33:29
is because they experiment
33:31
without the sort of Damocles over their head.
33:34
HPD is very widely, I think,
33:37
is the easiest way to put it.
33:39
We've been to some very good ones
33:46
There's some that we just use as a track day.
33:48
We don't really even pay attention
33:50
because there's no coaching available.
33:54
It's just a point buys.
33:56
You know, I'm out there, you know, raising my hand
33:59
saying, listen, if you're in three or four
34:01
and you're still talking about point buys,
34:03
you shouldn't be in three and four.
34:05
And I love the fact that you're raising that
34:07
because that's important.
34:09
The organizers hear that.
34:11
The people that are running a meeting to hear that.
34:15
If this is what your major concern is
34:17
and all your people, and that's all you're talking about,
34:19
you shouldn't be here.
34:21
You need to be, you know, I'm just saying.
34:23
But then there's other ones who are really great,
34:25
you know, and they really focus on drills
34:27
and things like that.
34:29
But I think that some of them work
34:35
that it's now, now it's,
34:37
it's like you got what you can out of that
34:39
and now it's like you got to focus on nuances
34:41
and then you got to break old habits.
34:43
You got to break bad habits you picked up
34:45
because you don't have that side-by-side seat
34:53
And I think that the nice thing about the program
34:55
is that they didn't
35:09
You know, because we're all expected
35:13
We're all expected to know how to handle a car,
35:15
how to recover a car,
35:21
already should be there.
35:27
We're tweaking things. We're solving problems
35:29
that we've picked up along the way,
35:31
which is what I really
35:33
appreciated about that so much.
35:37
You walk away thinking.
35:39
You walk away thinking
35:41
and not just saying, oh, that was a great day.
35:49
the whole thing especially,
35:51
over the course of those five days is
35:53
how many tools can we give these people
35:55
to help themselves?
35:57
How many tools can we
36:01
Can we give them to allow them
36:03
to know how much is too much
36:05
and how much is not enough?
36:09
when the questionnaire went out
36:11
to all of the attendees,
36:15
answer that came back out of the question,
36:19
hope to achieve by attending this program
36:23
I would like to know how to approach
36:29
That was the one answer.
36:31
And we were saying, oh my God,
36:33
they don't talk much about that
36:37
They don't want to talk about that in DE.
36:41
to do it in such a way through
36:43
calibrated exercises,
36:45
through highly targeted drills
36:55
That was the thing that I really liked.
36:59
it took me back to this one drill.
37:03
Oh my gosh, it was the no brakes
37:09
I woke up a lot of people.
37:15
it was Mario saying, that's been
37:17
around for decades, that drill.
37:21
But when I pulled in
37:25
and he goes, how was it?
37:27
And I'm like, it was great.
37:29
It was scary, but it was great.
37:31
He goes, okay, great. Now do it one gear higher.
37:33
And I'm like, oh jeez.
37:39
let you lie. He has to push.
37:41
And I'm like, that was hard, but oh jeez.
37:49
You know, that was another thing like, oh, I don't
37:53
in certain spots. Like, what am I
37:59
That was what I remember the most.
38:01
You know, the beauty
38:03
of that whole thing was that it showed everybody
38:05
how much the car slowed just by turning the
38:09
That you could actually overcook it
38:11
a little bit going in
38:13
and still rely on the
38:17
the car down to the point where by
38:19
the apex or shortly after
38:23
tightening up and the car would stay on track
38:27
And that was the first exercise
38:29
Ross and I did Tuesday
38:31
afternoon when he brought me back from the
38:39
in that C7 Corvette
38:41
and Ross says, oh, let's do a no brakes
38:49
And I got to say, that's a lot of car for
38:53
Because they're arriving at a relatively
38:55
high rate of speed and
38:57
all credit to him, he did not
38:59
touch the brake pedal one time.
39:01
I've never done that before.
39:05
That's the one of all the drills.
39:07
That's the one drill I remember the most
39:09
and I'm like, oh my God.
39:11
That was something.
39:13
We looked at some of the data
39:15
from some of the people who had been
39:17
running conventionally
39:19
before the no brakes drill
39:23
their data from the no brakes drill
39:25
and a lot of the slowest
39:31
in the no brakes drill.
39:37
a full blown advocate
39:41
that a no brakes drill
39:45
yields a faster lap
39:47
than a conventional lap.
39:51
there's no question that it helps people understand
39:55
a lot more speed in and through the
40:03
from other people who are a lot smarter
40:05
than me, a lot older
40:07
than I am, 20 years ago
40:11
the concept of rolling speed
40:17
tends to stop short.
40:19
It's the self preservation.
40:21
So they over break, they over slow
40:23
which means they come
40:27
speed that is slower than they
40:29
need to negotiate the entry
40:33
And then they sort of trundle around
40:35
to the apex and then they go,
40:37
ah, now I'm pointed in the right direction
40:43
if you look at any of
40:45
good professional drivers
40:47
you hear the engine
40:55
but it continues to drop
40:59
to the apex and then it rises again.
41:01
So they're either slowing
41:03
down and speeding up
41:07
speed into the corner and using that
41:09
steering scrub to get rid of the rest
41:11
of the speed to get the car as the car
41:13
slows down it can tighten the
41:17
and we are always taught to be smooth
41:21
A lot of people are taught that
41:23
it's one arc of the wheel.
41:25
You turn one arc of the wheel when you turn
41:27
in and you hold it all the way through.
41:33
the radius that the car
41:35
will accept changes
41:37
according to the speed that you're
41:41
If you are going faster you can't turn
41:43
the wheel as much. If you're going slower
41:45
you can turn the wheel more.
41:49
correctly choreographed
41:51
past the end of braking
41:55
you could conceivably
41:57
add a little bit more steering
42:07
something that was really important for all of us
42:11
something that the no brakes
42:15
home for a lot of people.
42:19
sticks a lot better than I thought. It rolls
42:21
a little more speed than I thought.
42:25
You wouldn't have known that
42:27
if you hadn't done the exercise. No.
42:29
That's what was really fun about it.
42:35
a friend of mine for the second
42:39
who is racing a Formula 1 car
42:43
Formula 1 car with a
42:55
I don't know, the morning of the second day
42:59
is this course really going to
43:01
give me a lot to work on
43:03
and I said yeah, it will.
43:07
morning of the second day he's like
43:09
I haven't heard the epiphany yet
43:17
and he had been used to screaming
43:19
around at high revs
43:21
and get the acceleration out of the corner
43:27
going around the track in one
43:29
maybe two gears higher in his
43:31
purpose built race car
43:33
and he went quicker and he was like
43:37
I would not have tried that
43:39
on my own but you guys
43:41
asked me to ask the question
43:47
learned something and I'm like
43:51
this is what we want
43:59
I have to defend my beautiful bride just a moment
44:01
and she won't listen because it's a compliment
44:03
so she never hears that
44:05
the one thing she'll do
44:07
is she will do the same thing
44:09
over and over and over again
44:11
until she's told not to do it
44:13
like Ross said hey why don't you go try driving
44:17
so my beautiful bride
44:19
goes to the next HPD and she drives one gear higher
44:21
then she goes to the next race and she does
44:25
and she goes to the next race and she goes one gear higher
44:27
and she's at the next race and she goes one gear higher
44:29
and she's like I won't get into fifth gear
44:31
I'm like why are you in fifth gear
44:33
you don't need to be this is Thompson
44:35
you don't need fifth gear what are you doing
44:39
I'm drinking it up I'm drinking up the knowledge
44:43
HPD providers please
44:49
breaking a straight line
44:51
and then turn in my beautiful bride
44:53
is going to break in a straight line
44:57
for the rest of her life until you give her the
44:59
get out of jail free card this is hey trail breaking is okay
45:01
that was a big epiphany
45:03
you know what you learn
45:05
she does what they say
45:07
she just doesn't stop
45:11
so Peter I think the
45:13
one of the things I wanted to get from you
45:17
I'm always interested in what
45:19
the instructors and the coaches
45:21
learn so what did you learn
45:23
from the event at Pineview
45:27
I mean where do I start
45:29
I mean the best part about it is
45:31
I think that the best coaches and the best
45:33
instructors learn from every student
45:35
that they work with
45:37
and every client they work with
45:39
and every car they work with
45:41
and every group of instructors
45:43
and coaches that they are in contact with
45:45
because there's always a better way
45:47
to communicate something
45:49
there's always another complex
45:57
to learn it is invested
46:01
learn more out of Pineview
46:07
people are open people are more open
46:11
they're more malleable than we think
46:13
their minds are more
46:15
flexible than we think
46:19
we need to give I mean I didn't
46:21
learn this from this program per se
46:23
but it reinforced it
46:25
is that people who are open
46:27
to learning can make great strides
46:31
and you know Vicki you
46:33
hit the nail on the head and Bill you just
46:37
I believe that people look to
46:39
instructors and coaches as authority
46:41
figures and I am one of those
46:43
people who doesn't believe
46:47
I do not put pro drivers on a
46:49
pedestal I think some of the worst drivers
46:51
I've ever worked with
46:53
are quote unquote professional drivers
46:57
a professional driver is a driver who makes
46:59
a majority of the share of
47:03
cars and that's a very
47:05
small number of people in North
47:09
slightly bigger worldwide
47:13
mostly pro drivers are people who
47:17
a sponsorship proposal
47:19
which provides them with the money that
47:21
allows them to retain a professional
47:25
a car enter the car
47:27
campaign the car and win
47:29
some poultry winnings
47:31
unless it's the Indianapolis
47:35
because it certainly ain't
47:39
and the point is you can't live
47:43
but what I'm trying to say
47:45
is I don't believe in hero worship
47:55
pro drivers and very
47:57
very well practiced AMS
48:01
put their pants on the same way every morning
48:03
bleed red when they get cut
48:05
on a jagged edge of the car
48:13
Tommy Milner is an exceptional
48:15
Corvette driver probably one of the
48:17
finest there's ever been
48:19
but the point is he's a man
48:23
in a racing family since he was born
48:27
the BMW factory racing program
48:29
in this country in 1995
48:33
and worked before that with
48:37
and a whole bunch of other organizations
48:41
is a factory driver and has kids himself
48:47
these people dedicated
48:49
the time and effort to learn
48:51
and they are learning every day
48:53
I am learning every day
48:55
Ross is learning every day
48:57
Sam is learning every day
48:59
everybody in that room was learning every day
49:05
Ben, mind blown, you
49:07
I walked away with all this cool stuff
49:09
and I'm sitting there saying
49:11
yes, yes, that's what I learned
49:13
is that there's so much more
49:17
and there's always gonna be
49:21
and we can afford to learn
49:23
as long as we keep our minds open
49:25
that's what I came away with
49:29
so I'm gonna give you two things
49:33
for coming on the podcast
49:37
this is your own personal soapbox
49:41
so I'm giving you the power
49:47
maybe six, maybe 20
49:51
what are the five pet peeves you have
49:53
with the current HPDE
49:59
I don't know if I can stop at five
50:05
that I am a distiller
50:07
I'm not really a coach
50:09
I'm a driver performance analyst
50:13
he works on the head
50:15
he works on the heart
50:17
he works on the physiological response
50:19
I don't really give a damn about that
50:21
what I care about is
50:23
are you doing what you think you're doing
50:25
that's why I love data
50:27
data is not a tabletail
50:31
and we remember things the way we wish they were
50:37
that's the way the human mind works
50:39
it's a very powerful thing
50:43
about the conventional DE program
50:45
and I agree with you 100%
50:57
chapters of the PCA
50:59
and BMW CCA in particular
51:01
as well as the Audi Club
51:09
I'm talking primarily east coast
51:11
you know I could talk about
51:15
I'm talking about mostly mid-Atlantic
51:17
northeast east coast
51:21
really really good programs
51:23
I wish every DE program could look
51:25
at the instructor training
51:31
because I think that is
51:33
something that has begun
51:35
was begun a long time ago
51:39
through under the auspices
51:41
of a number of really really good people
51:43
including Scott Hughes
51:45
and Dan Unkefer who is a guy that I
51:47
taught classroom with for
51:49
20 times a year for 8 years
51:51
very dear friend of mine
51:57
has touched so many lives
51:59
that it made a big difference
52:01
but the instructor training
52:03
seminar program that
52:07
people should go look at that
52:09
they should look at that
52:11
training their instructors
52:13
the second thing is that
52:23
drivers education programs seek to
52:25
differentiate their own program
52:27
from other programs
52:31
thought of in a punitive way
52:33
as a mind expanding way
52:40
vesting people with the power to
52:42
come down on other people
52:45
decide other people's fates
52:47
people ought to be able
52:49
to demonstrate competence
52:51
and move through the system that way
52:57
like Niagara region
52:59
in upstate New York
53:03
Potomac region in Maryland
53:11
does a great job in Florida
53:15
Northern New England region
53:19
Northern New Jersey region
53:21
PCA does a very good job
53:23
New England region PCA
53:25
does a really good job
53:31
and open their mind
53:33
to visit other programs
53:35
people who operate the DE programs
53:37
I tend to feel like
53:39
my second thing about
53:41
the thing that I would like to change
53:43
is I would like to see more
53:45
cross-pollination between programs
53:47
I'd like people to be able to say
53:49
maybe we don't know all the answers
54:03
some of these regions
54:05
that are doing a pretty good job
54:09
or leave a space or two
54:11
for visiting region
54:13
officials and volunteers
54:21
you know as well as I do
54:23
racing is extremely
54:29
NASA people race with NASA people
54:31
champ car people race with
54:35
Porsche Club America club racing
54:37
thinks they run the most safest
54:39
club racing program in the country
54:41
and I can tell you that's just not
54:43
true with the number of incidents
54:51
significant historic racing
54:53
organizations in North America
54:59
or most of the people only know what
55:03
they don't know what other people do so
55:05
again the distillation
55:09
to one thing on the soapbox and that is
55:11
I wish there was more cross-pollination
55:13
I wish people would go out and visit
55:15
other people to see how it's done
55:19
to back that up we've been to a couple
55:21
of D.E.s that were regionals
55:27
that same question like why is
55:31
based on learning and drills and you go
55:33
to another one and they do none
55:37
I think what the gentleman had said
55:39
was that we tried that
55:45
don't want that they want track time
55:47
but I don't think you should
55:51
I think that if you're there you want to
55:53
make sure of safety you want to make sure
55:55
that people are learning and how to
55:57
properly handle their cars now
55:59
when those two regions get on track
56:01
it's usually the one that doesn't have all
56:03
the strict learning is the one that ends up
56:05
in the most accidents
56:09
and that's how we've divided up our time
56:11
we would go one to get all the education
56:13
and we'd go for the one not even paying
56:15
attention to them just do the track time
56:17
because you didn't have anything to pay
56:19
attention to really right there really
56:21
wasn't any learning involved I mean it was
56:23
just some grievances that people
56:25
have when they come in off the track
56:27
and you know how to do things maybe
56:29
a little bit better but there was zero education
56:31
in it and it was just you know
56:33
which I think is highly dangerous
56:35
I really do and that's why
56:37
my soapbox position will always be
56:41
always be pie in the sky it's not possible
56:45
we were lucky enough to stumble
56:49
we went to a few HPD
56:51
once we knew what an HPD stood for
56:55
of racing and I saw
56:57
that there was a very big difference so we spent that year
56:59
in the following year going to I think
57:05
hours to get to an HPD
57:07
which is kind of silly but we did
57:11
but you guys now know more than
57:17
you know who cares zero for that
57:19
Ross I have tried to get somebody
57:21
closer to me to listen and say
57:23
listen I've tried them all I know
57:25
I'm actually a teacher
57:29
but they don't care
57:31
at least I haven't told anybody who cares
57:33
but that's okay someday
57:35
I mean you just have to accept that
57:37
and that's part of the deal
57:41
you know that and what
57:43
snow, snow cones and icicles
57:45
and July would be nice
57:49
you got me off track now you're thinking snow cones
57:51
I'm thinking shave ice okay
57:55
you know you're one of the few
57:57
guests that we have on Peter
57:59
you're one of the few guests where I
58:01
come in with like 15 questions
58:05
with 13 of them I never asked
58:09
you're stuck with us buddy we know your number now
58:13
I just thought you know you'd like to know
58:17
I think that's a compliment
58:21
and one of the things that I did was
58:23
I went back and I listened to
58:27
four different podcasts that you'd been on
58:29
and I pretended to be
58:31
a somewhat educated listener
58:33
and I pretended to be not that the
58:35
podcast host wasn't doing their guest it's very difficult
58:37
to host and talk and think
58:39
and listen at the same time
58:41
sometimes there were some follow
58:43
up questions where I was like
58:45
but but but because
58:47
you kind of talked around it but you didn't really
58:49
give me you didn't really give me something
58:59
there's this guy and you're right
59:01
has a cheeseburger in his hand
59:03
there's this guy there's this guy
59:05
cheeseburger so it's not me
59:09
he does this speed secrets
59:11
thing you know and he
59:13
he used to he used to podcast with it but now
59:15
he has all kinds of fun with
59:19
I just blanked on him
59:23
yeah but but way back
59:27
in the old speed secrets podcast
59:29
you and Ross got into a discussion
59:31
about how there is no magic bullet
59:33
there's no magic you know
59:35
the fast guys know this or the fast
59:37
girls know this and then none of you
59:39
people are allowed into the club because you don't know
59:41
the secret handshake
59:43
and he said that the thing was
59:45
they were just better at the
59:47
basics they had they had been
59:49
proficient they they knew what the basics
59:51
were and how to get better out and how
59:55
manufacture the best
59:57
lap very quickly very safely
00:01
backseat quarterback bill wants to say
00:17
that they should be focused on
00:19
oh my god where do I
00:21
start okay that's why
00:23
I only get through three questions Peter
00:25
get that so we're gonna say
00:27
three things whatever you want
00:29
as many as you want
00:33
a fantastic question Bill and I thank you
00:35
for asking it because honestly
00:37
this defines my whole
00:39
professional occupational
00:47
18 and 20 terabytes
00:49
of video and data of some of the finest drivers
00:53
including a world driving champion
00:59
class winners at Le Mans
01:01
outright winners at Daytona
01:11
of information that I have
01:13
there is not a needle
01:15
in a haystack there is not
01:19
in that 20 terabytes of data that
01:21
if I gave it to you
01:23
you could just do it
01:25
that's all I need Peter just give me that one bullet
01:29
but I will tell you that the three things
01:31
that the best drivers
01:33
do more than any other single thing
01:39
absolute and stunning
01:43
to throttle and brakes
01:53
that doesn't mean that they're
01:55
either on the gas or on the brake
01:59
sliding around at the limits of adhesion
02:01
sometimes and if you gave it a tiny bit
02:03
a break or a tiny bit of throttle
02:05
it would go off into the next county
02:09
that they are totally committed
02:15
to pulling from the car
02:17
and the tire grip contact patch
02:19
the maximum that can be pulled
02:21
from that over the largest percentage
02:25
and they can do that
02:31
the second thing they do and the reason why they can do this
02:33
over and over and over again
02:35
is because they place
02:43
that will allow them
02:47
relatively on the pavement
02:51
totally and completely
02:53
in control of the trajectory
02:55
of the car once it is set
02:57
entering the corner
03:01
slightly over driving
03:07
of braking all the way through
03:17
that are placed besides the track
03:21
foreign entity to them
03:23
that is superfluous to them
03:29
of the beginning of the radius
03:31
where the meat of the tightest radius
03:35
where the area of the apex is
03:37
and where the car is carried
03:43
so the first thing is commitment
03:45
they are in a conversation with the car
03:47
and they set the car
03:51
to sail through the corner
03:55
they are really really really good at
03:57
and this is something that
03:59
I was really happy to hear
04:01
Ross pound on everybody
04:03
so much in this speed secrets academy
04:05
is they are really good at end of braking
04:09
freaking good at end of braking
04:11
they are so good at blending
04:13
the end of the braking
04:15
into maximum cornering
04:21
to use all the grip
04:23
that is in the tire
04:25
and in the car at that point
04:27
so those are the three big things
04:29
and what is remarkable to me
04:33
at and I have done this
04:41
in IMSA from a couple of years ago
04:51
in particular closely
04:55
due to BOP and other
04:57
performance adjustments made to the cars
04:59
to equalize their performance as much as they can
05:03
it is almost indistinguishable
05:05
there is really not as much
05:07
of a difference between some of these
05:09
drivers as you might think
05:11
but they are maximizing
05:13
everything they got
05:19
to watch and it is something that we can
05:23
first in little tiny pieces
05:27
of the track with less
05:29
risk and then as we
05:31
get more comfortable and we get to the
05:33
point where we know what is going to happen
05:45
a lot of these top level drivers are doing
05:49
I have worked with amateur drivers
05:51
drivers in no recognized
05:55
exhibiting some of the best
06:01
that I would put them
06:07
I mean you know it is not magic
06:09
that is the issue and that is where that
06:13
is the fact that Ross and I have looked at so much
06:15
information from so many
06:19
that we realize it is all about
06:21
hard work and it is all about seat time
06:27
doing the same old thing
06:33
do something different nothing ventured
06:37
these people have gotten to the point where
06:39
they are consciously
06:41
slightly over driving the car
06:45
you could sit right next to them and not
06:51
so I've got two follow up questions before Vicki
06:53
explodes on me and we have the
06:55
she will not let this podcast go
06:57
and I don't want to respect your time
07:05
I believe when you look at the data for
07:07
Miss Vicki versus Alyssa
07:09
their min speeds were
07:11
the same or very close
07:17
Alyssa was quite a bit faster
07:23
and this is funny Vicki
07:25
that you open this podcast
07:29
and down next to that window
07:31
when I heard your car going
07:33
around the track and you were sitting at the desk
07:35
and I didn't know this was going down
07:41
I didn't know it was going down until it was
07:47
I mean all I had to do
07:51
this comes from a lot of things
07:53
but it comes from the fact that my
08:01
half a mile from the racetrack
08:03
I can't see the racetrack
08:05
but I can hear everything on it
08:09
and when somebody leaves the pit lane
08:11
in a particular way
08:13
I know that that person knows
08:15
what the hell they're doing
08:19
I can tell right away
08:21
I can hear the first three gear shifts and I go
08:23
I think I'm going to stop what I'm doing
08:27
because I can tell exactly where they are on the track
08:29
I can tell exactly what they're doing on the track
08:31
I can tell exactly what's next on the track
08:33
and if they do it right
08:35
I know exactly what it's supposed to
08:39
so I was sitting next to that
08:41
window we had the window open because it was
08:43
hot in the classroom
08:47
leaves the pit lane
08:49
and I'm like hmm okay
08:51
and just for reference it's a 99
08:59
and what was remarkable about it
09:01
was I could hear the driver
09:05
so I could hear a recce lap
09:07
which was an out lap
09:11
6 tenths or 7 tenths
09:13
but more like 8 tenths or 8 and a half tenths
09:17
meaning that the driver had some
09:19
level of confidence in their own
09:23
if the car decided it didn't want to do what
09:25
they were asking it to do
09:27
then about the fourth lap
09:29
in well third lap in
09:35
such crisp transitions
09:37
between wide open throttle and braking
09:39
between the end of braking and throttle pickup
09:41
between the throttle pickup
09:43
and wide open throttle
09:45
and just sustain periods
09:51
and I was like okay
09:53
first off this person knows this track
09:55
second off this person
09:57
doesn't just know this car
09:59
they know the physics and dynamics
10:01
that are going to affect this car
10:03
before they get to where they're going
10:09
that was really really fun
10:11
that you picked on that
10:13
opening podcast and said you
10:15
jumped up and down you yelled commitment
10:17
commitment that's what it was
10:19
it's just like right in the middle of this
10:21
seminar that we were
10:23
happening he goes no that's commitment
10:27
lost a sitting there talking about
10:29
mental imagery and I'm like no this is
10:35
dying it was so freaking funny
10:37
and I was jumping up and down and I was like you know
10:39
there is something so satisfying as a
10:41
professional as a person that
10:45
24-7 365 about how to
10:47
help people go quicker and help them
10:49
help them help themselves
10:51
go quicker that what
10:53
happens when you hear
10:57
reinforcement of the
10:59
best execution of fundamental skills
11:03
that is a really important thing and that's
11:05
why that was so much fun Bill
11:13
it was part of the follow-up of the prior question
11:15
because I have to do it so
11:21
concept of a driver
11:23
style is overstated
11:31
that's one of the best questions I've ever been asked on any podcast
11:35
that's how we roll Peter you know we always ask the best
11:37
stuff you know I gotta tell you Bill that
11:39
that is awesome you know
11:45
more than I do now that
11:53
English hitting a tennis ball
11:55
you know trying to figure out how to make it arc
11:57
in a different trajectory than just
11:59
a straight on trajectory
12:05
had an opportunity to look at
12:11
drivers driving GT4
12:13
factory built race cars
12:15
last couple of years
12:19
because it's a two hour and 45 minute
12:21
race you always have
12:23
a co-driver so I've done
12:25
a lot more comparisons between
12:27
two drivers in the same car
12:29
on the same track in the same day which is awesome
12:37
and based on the fact that
12:39
a lot of the best driver pairings
12:43
tents and hundreds of a second
12:49
I would have to say that style
12:53
now when you get to something
12:59
you have quote unquote the smooth
13:01
style of Jensen button
13:05
Max Verstappen who is
13:09
but you never see it
13:11
because he's already
13:17
that there is style is
13:21
at that ultimate level
13:23
but in terms of production
13:27
I think style is overblown I think that
13:39
bent on slightly over driving
13:49
they move the wheel
13:51
or steering amplitude
13:53
which is how much they move the wheel
13:57
when you look at the output
13:59
at what their speeds are
14:01
at any given point on the circuit
14:03
and what their time is
14:05
over the lap and the cumulative
14:07
amount of wide open throttle time
14:09
over the lap and percentage
14:11
and all of these real
14:13
numbers we can put to what we thought
14:15
were subjective measures
14:17
no I don't think that style
14:19
I don't think one person's
14:21
style is automatically better
14:23
than another person's style I do not
14:25
I think that people do
14:27
what they're comfortable with
14:31
when people say I have a particular style
14:33
where I need a particular setup
14:37
they are most comfortable with
14:39
what the car is going to do
14:41
when they give it their
14:45
of what the car needs
14:49
I have plenty of drivers
14:51
who drive at a very high level who get in a car
14:53
that is not set up at all
14:55
and they're right on pace
14:59
and then they come back in
15:01
and the crew chief says okay what do we need to do
15:03
and the crew chief says
15:07
it's fine I'll drive around it
15:13
higher and higher in the food chain
15:15
in the pyramid it does
15:17
those changes make more of a difference
15:21
operating margins between the competitors
15:27
then it becomes more of a collaborative
15:29
experience but I think in terms of
15:33
I think it's still the best execution of
15:35
fundamental skills rules
15:41
so Vicki will not leave
15:43
I have been I want to tell you
15:45
the success that you've had so we've been
15:47
racing for you know this is our 8th season
15:51
I have been an engineer
15:55
and I have tried to get Miss Vicki to be
15:57
entertained with either
16:01
or squiggly line or a chart
16:03
or anything and I am
16:07
now she goes to one event
16:09
with you and now she says
16:11
we cannot get off of this podcast
16:13
without talking about
16:17
for someone just starting out in data
16:19
what should somebody
16:21
let's go with code name Vicki
16:29
try to pay attention to because I have tried the whole
16:33
path and U path and I have tried the
16:35
I have tried the ball Peter
16:37
she doesn't like it
16:41
eloquence and your tone
16:45
finally become at one
16:47
with the data because she actually wants
16:51
she is taking notes
16:53
she may become as one with the
16:55
data and we may actually use
16:57
any of the systems we have
16:59
just tell her which one or what
17:01
data point she should look at her
17:07
you know pre calc instead of calc
17:11
well I think you know
17:13
I you guys both know
17:21
evaluation of driver
17:27
one-on-one professional coaching full-time
17:33
I didn't want it to be my
17:37
to look at the accumulated
17:41
and in consultation with the driver
17:43
together look at it
17:45
as two people trying to
17:47
solve a common problem which is how do you go faster
17:49
based on what you're doing
17:55
think that there are
18:03
simple speed and track
18:05
position and segment
18:15
which I don't particularly care for because
18:17
they're not updated quickly
18:19
enough or accurate enough for
18:23
reliable consistent information
18:27
devices like the AIMSOLO
18:33
have any connection physically to the car
18:37
driver input information there's just
18:43
lap time we decided a long time ago
18:45
lap time is too big a
18:49
to figure out whether or not
18:55
lap time is the combination
18:59
decisions and skill executions
19:01
made every lap now if we
19:09
and you do that a dozen times
19:11
or dozens of times a lap
19:13
you will go quicker
19:15
so chasing a lap time
19:17
is chasing your tail
19:19
whereas working on the best execution
19:21
of fundamental skills
19:23
that is a building block
19:25
and a foundation for further
19:29
so if you have a device
19:31
that is like a Garmin Catalyst
19:41
I probably already said
19:45
which I think is a wonderful tool
19:51
their best individual corners
19:59
I think everybody does
20:03
if you were able to
20:09
segment time analysis or split
20:13
or opportunities in the Garmin
20:15
or the theoretical best lap
20:19
or a theoretical best lap
20:27
or the eclectic lap
20:31
a collection of your best
20:41
that is a very powerful tool
20:43
because that is a set of goal posts
20:47
a set of goal posts
20:49
that always moves forward
20:51
so if you are doing 127.5
20:53
and your theoretical best is a 126.8
20:57
get closer to a 126.8
20:59
that theoretical best is going to go to
21:03
then if you get to a 126.4
21:07
theoretical might get to a 125.9
21:09
and so all of a sudden
21:17
my theoretical best
21:21
I have a lot of drivers who tell me
21:23
I really want to break
21:31
what are you doing now
21:33
and they say well I have done a 210
21:35
and they send me the data file
21:37
and I look at the data file
21:39
and there is a couple of 212
21:43
oh by the way there is a 210.8
21:45
and I say well the first thing you
21:47
got to do is you got to do
21:49
210s every time out
21:51
to call yourself a 210 driver
21:55
you need to be able to do
21:59
so don't think you are going to
22:01
sit there and go from 212
22:03
which is your average lap
22:05
which is what the Garmin
22:07
actually calculates
22:11
which I think is actually
22:13
more representative of a driver's
22:15
performance then people always
22:17
look at their best lap and they go
22:19
that's my performance, no it's not
22:25
quit kidding yourself
22:27
so let's get to the point
22:29
where we are able to do
22:31
quick laps consistently first
22:33
you don't need throttle position
22:35
or brake pressure or engine revs
22:37
or gear or anything
22:39
to get to the point where you can drive
22:41
consistent quick laps
22:43
you need to shoot tight groups
22:45
that is the number one
22:47
thing I ask people to do first
22:49
because if they aren't running
22:51
if they aren't shooting tight groups
22:53
if they cannot do 3 or 4
22:59
track within a couple of
23:01
tenths I'm talking 2 tenths
23:03
3 tenths 4 tenths max
23:05
then that means that
23:07
they are doing different things
23:09
at the same spot on the track
23:11
each lap they are not doing
23:13
the same things at the same
23:17
circuit lap after lap
23:19
and that is the other difference
23:23
drivers and top level drivers over
23:27
is they are like metronomes
23:31
business and whether
23:33
you do it squiggly lines
23:35
or whether you do it a split time analysis
23:37
or whether you look
23:41
the optimal lap in a
23:43
Garmin, ideal lap in
23:49
if you look at that
23:51
and there is too much of a
23:55
between the eclectic lap
23:57
you know what your best corners
23:59
strung together are
24:03
or your fast average lap is not
24:11
then that is where you work on first
24:13
you know you got to be able to do that
24:15
over and over and over again
24:21
I mean I have had a discussion
24:31
a really good educator
24:35
but he is married to one particular brand
24:37
and for years and years
24:41
they were the last to the table
24:43
offering squiggly lines with
24:49
and I got to tell you
24:51
the power of video is
24:55
and the point is that
24:59
can assimilate more information
25:03
than they can trying to
25:09
rows and rows of an excel spreadsheet
25:19
if you look at the video
25:21
and especially intelligent video
25:23
intelligent video being the video
25:25
with throttle and brake
25:27
and gear and other stuff
25:29
that the driver is doing
25:33
on the background of the video in real time
25:37
at everything that is going on
25:43
every driver can watch their own video
25:51
is exactly as I remember it
25:57
that is not how I remember it
25:59
I don't remember blowing that apex
26:01
I don't remember missing that gear
26:03
I don't remember being offline
26:11
at that point on the circuit
26:19
video especially video with
26:21
throttle on the back of it
26:25
the watch word, the throttle is the daddy
26:27
throttle is the commitment
26:29
throttle is the window into the mind
26:37
if you watch that video
26:41
identify the 10-15%
26:49
that's where you should work on next
26:55
all the stuff you are doing reasonably
26:59
and you find and you focus
27:03
can really make a difference
27:07
so many people go out
27:09
we've discussed this
27:11
on this podcast multiple times tonight
27:13
about how people do the same
27:15
thing over and over again and expect
27:17
a different result and we know all know
27:21
what the definition of that is
27:25
what we really need to do
27:27
is we need to find and focus
27:29
on the 10-15% that will make a difference
27:37
that we are already doing that well
27:39
drive as well as you can
27:43
but find and focus on the areas that are not
27:47
because that means that there are gaps in your knowledge
27:49
gaps in your confidence
27:51
gaps in your precision
27:53
gaps in your commitment
27:55
gaps in your commitment
27:57
and all of these things
28:01
to rob you of the lap time
28:03
you justifiably deserve
28:07
he loves what he does
28:13
it's you know I thought I would get
28:17
and I do get tired of it sometimes
28:19
I mean people come up to me all the time
28:21
Ross will call me up and he say
28:25
different ways can you say more gas less break
28:31
there's always the bar
28:35
hotel bar at Watkins Glen
28:37
where all the pro coaches
28:39
gather after the first day
28:43
and sit around and say
28:47
how's your day going
28:49
and the other person will say
28:51
you know how it goes
28:53
sell your company buy a cup car
28:55
or something like that
29:01
when the light bulb comes
29:03
on and when Vicki says
29:05
man I walked away from this thing
29:07
with so much more to think about
29:09
but with some really bright
29:11
light bulbs going off flash bulbs
29:13
going off they're really going to
29:15
affect me going forward and you guys
29:17
have already both said that
29:19
it just makes me want
29:21
to do it more you know
29:23
hang out with other people that do it more
29:25
you know I that's what
29:27
was so fun about I mean I haven't been
29:31
I guess two or three years last time
29:33
we were together was at Thunderbolt
29:35
when we were working with grid life
29:39
sort of the coaches for that and I love
29:41
grid life I think that is
29:43
a fantastic culture
29:45
and a really welcoming
29:47
warm environment and
29:49
some amazing driving going on
29:51
some really killer cars
29:53
but it had been a couple years since
29:55
I'd been in the same room with Ross
29:59
and so it was always fun to do
30:01
that and then with the addition of Sam
30:11
and all the people that were there
30:13
I mean everybody cared everybody gave
30:15
a damn it's just like you said you know
30:17
he loves what he does well
30:21
anytime you can turn your passion into
30:23
your living that is a total
30:27
so Peter I have to keep my marriage
30:29
nice and solid so Miss Vicki
30:31
Miss Vicki Peter don't listen
30:33
Miss Vicki do you now know what to do
30:35
for data 101 part 1
30:41
I'm excited to start
30:43
that journey because you're right
30:47
the whole thing has been a journey
30:51
hey you know there's a car for $500
30:59
I'm ready to start hopping into lots
31:01
of other things and other trainings but
31:03
I have one more question for you though Vicki
31:11
the most about data
31:27
my lap to the reference lap
31:29
but it was also it wasn't
31:31
just that it was the fact that
31:33
the particular data unit that I had
31:35
which linked everything together
31:37
it wasn't just lines
31:39
it was video that was in there and then
31:41
there was speed that was going at the same
31:43
time and of course my
31:45
the way that my like I am very
31:47
in tune with the way my brain is structured
31:49
to receive information
31:55
that kind of knitted everything
31:59
for me the way that was
32:01
because you're right it wasn't just squiggly lines
32:03
when I'm looking at squiggly lines
32:05
and I'm coming out of a race car
32:07
my brain's already popping
32:11
on just the lines because
32:13
the lines aren't resonating with me
32:15
but when it got linked with the data
32:21
and then of course with the reference lap
32:31
and for the other fact too was that
32:35
a point of my learning
32:39
receive that information
32:45
HPDE-ing or I'm just kind of slapping
32:47
a car around with reference laps
32:53
most of my endurance racing
32:55
in the particular sometimes the circuit
32:57
that I'm in is a lot of traffic management
32:59
until like you're on the second day
33:01
so it's really hard
33:07
but I haven't been in that particular
33:09
kind of racing but now
33:11
I'm at that point when I'm ready to receive that information
33:13
and do something with it
33:19
thing has been a journey
33:21
everything's been a journey
33:29
academy which is a great word for it
33:31
it did feel like an academy
33:41
what I was already doing
33:43
I didn't feel like I was slamming laps
33:45
I didn't feel like I've heard all of this before
33:47
and I'm just kind of
33:51
well it's fun because as Bill pointed out
33:53
you were fully as quick
33:55
as the reference lap
34:01
the V-man's in the slower corners
34:05
you were slower is because you were slowing
34:13
sooner than you needed to
34:15
and that you were waiting until it was fully safe
34:17
and until you could see
34:23
so what happened was
34:27
under the curve for you
34:35
throttle trace and that speed trace
34:37
together with the video side by side
34:41
amazing because we looked at the video
34:43
and we said there's nothing wrong with
34:47
it's now working on
34:49
for aft it's now working on
34:57
absolutely primed to receive that
35:03
the difference that it can make
35:05
and I thought that was good
35:11
if only there was a trick to getting the
35:15
pointed in the right direction
35:23
oh I'm looking directly where I need to be
35:25
oh I'm looking at the back of her head
35:27
especially when you're trying to peek into a race car
35:31
that would be lovely the only thing I like better
35:33
about a GoPro is they have a little screen and I'm like
35:35
oh I'm looking at what I want to look at and the smarty cam just says
35:39
we're just going to have to do a test lap bring it in take a look at it
35:41
and then say okay that's good
35:45
about those cameras is
35:47
that you can actually press one of the buttons on the face
35:49
of the camera and it will record manually
35:53
moment and you can push the button again
35:55
to turn it off and pull the card and take a look at
35:57
I knew there was a guy
35:59
who knew something about these things
36:01
I should talk to that guy
36:03
some more I think I will
36:05
the best part about it was
36:09
you know I mean we talked about
36:15
the basics speed sector
36:21
but what you've done is you've gone to the next step
36:25
data 201 because now you
36:27
have all your inputs
36:29
what are you actually doing with that brake
36:31
pedal what are you doing
36:35
how fast are you applying
36:37
the brakes are you breaking
36:43
but in fact sometimes we find
36:45
the opposite which is not as good
36:49
the throttle which is
36:51
your big breakthrough
36:55
I'm looking at you going
36:57
I think yeah I like that sort of
36:59
yeah well no it's about time to slow down
37:09
that's right I gotta get air
37:15
you have everything you need
37:19
really supercharge your effort
37:23
spend the time to do that
37:29
year up to this point off
37:35
we had a lot of stuff that were going on
37:39
getting in the car for me
37:43
what about it was like seven months
37:47
of not even driving
37:51
we were in two races
37:53
but because of everything we were dealing with
37:55
I think we were all just kind of going through the motions
37:57
you know they were fun
37:59
but when I went to the clinic
38:01
or the academy that you guys were doing it was like
38:03
this is like I missed this
38:05
I missed the adrenaline part of it
38:11
and trying to find like these things
38:13
and everything is calm
38:15
but that's what we needed at the time
38:17
but then I got back in the car
38:19
and I'm just like I missed this
38:21
I missed this a lot
38:23
and I got real excited so when I got back
38:25
I got back in the garage to start putting
38:27
all of our stuff back together and getting ready for
38:31
so we have a couple races that are coming up
38:33
and I'm just so excited to get behind the wheel again
38:35
and now we're already
38:39
going out and officially getting my comp
38:41
license and then officially going to get my
38:43
instructor license and
38:45
you know of the likes
38:47
but you know just kind of getting
38:53
having fun so it was a lot
38:55
it was pretty great
38:59
that's really good to hear
39:01
Peter thank you for coming back on
39:03
thank you for putting up with us again
39:05
thank you for not putting us on the auto
39:07
junk filter that's greatly appreciated
39:09
we will bother you again don't worry
39:11
well I appreciate it Bill I really do
39:13
and I always enjoy talking to you and Vicky
39:17
there's a reason why you'll be coming
39:21
we love talking to you too sir
39:23
that sounds great thank you
39:25
alright podcast over
39:27
Miss Vicky you got a finger
39:29
I do I have a finger
39:31
I was just waiting so we just didn't you know
39:35
so thank you so much
39:37
for coming on I just like
39:39
Bill when I had saw him I was like
39:43
Peter Krause's name
39:45
and then when I saw him and I heard his
39:47
freaking voice I was like
39:49
I know him he was the first
39:51
he was the first guy
39:53
that registered in my brain because he taught
39:55
me the line when I first got behind the wheel
39:57
you don't remember that
39:59
I don't know I don't think
40:01
you know because I think it was a video
40:03
or something that okay
40:05
did we have a discussion with him
40:13
it was our fourth race ever
40:15
and we were going to Road Atlanta
40:17
and I bought yours and Ross's
40:23
Vicky can't stand to listen to me for a few minutes
40:25
but two and a half hours later
40:27
she's still listening to you guys talking
40:31
we haven't quite finished it
40:33
everybody else is tagged out
40:35
and Miss Vicky's just sitting there enthralled
40:37
like gotta do this and then we get there
40:39
I'm like oh there's a line he taught me the
40:41
line he taught me offline and a rain line
40:43
he taught me all this and then when I heard
40:45
your voice I'm like I know
40:47
and I was so excited when I heard his voice
40:49
and I told him I'm like you taught me
40:57
Ross and I have so much fun
41:01
there's a few tracks I can make requests for
41:05
there's a couple more tracks out there sir
41:07
there's a lot more tracks out there
41:09
I appreciate all you do
41:15
that you guys have all come up with
41:19
I really think it has something
41:21
unless work precludes
41:23
we will both be at the next one
41:25
whether I'm instructing or
41:29
we're empty nesters now
41:35
just went off to college
41:37
congratulations were she gone
41:39
University of Vermont
41:43
that's a wonderful school
41:45
it is a great school she's
41:47
she went up there she's like this place feels like home
41:51
she's having the time of her life
41:53
we just moved her in just a couple days ago
41:55
yesterday that's great
41:57
congratulations good deal
41:59
alright sir well thank you
42:03
go hopefully again soon
42:05
it doesn't take long we'll get you
42:07
it's great to hear from you Peter
42:11
good luck on your race good night
42:27
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