Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Email from a friend of mine -

_______________________

Hey everyone,

I am making a group booking for Wakefield Park raceway - currently an open day, but if we get enough people interested, we can secure use of the track for our group.

If you're interested, please let me know by emailing [email protected]

It'll cost the usual $75 or so plus $25 or so licence ($99/day for 1st timers). Plus petrol :(

It'll be an early start (meeting before 6AM and leaving at 6:15AM sharp, near the M5 on King Georges Rd)

More details will be provided to those that are keen.

Rich.

________________________

Should be a good day - i have put my name down.

Christian.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/1277-track-day-17th-of-august/
Share on other sites

ONARUN - Wakefield is a great track for first timers. Very forgiving and plenty of run-off space.

I'd go but I'm attending the drivers course on the 6 and 7 Aug, then on the 8th at EC. Need to rest my car before I blow something.

I really recommend this track for first timers.

Originally posted by Silver-Arrowz

ONARUN - Wakefield is a great track for first timers. Very forgiving and plenty of run-off space.

I really recommend this track for first timers.

everyone i've talked to has said the same so i'm definately giving it a go. gonna test out all those sand traps to see if they work

Wakefield is about 10 mins south of Goulburn on Braidwqood road - so about 2.5hrs from Sydney. An easy morning's drive there - long tow back:p

Best of all - nothing to hit there - even if you try REALY hard.

if its on the weekend, i am considering.... 17th is saturday??...

i've never been on the track before nor i have had a defensive driving course or anything like that.. would i be too much of a sh1t driver to go on wakefield then???

i am worried that myself and my r could get hurt...

and can someone please please teach me how to do this??? :burnout: (if i end up going)

thank you

Originally posted by meggala

Dont put me down yet but I'm considering it for a weekend away?

meggala

go on steve. i'd be good to meet up.

-------

nissaner, never been myself so we can meet in the sandtrap and discuss the finer points of racing if you want. let's say corner number two on lap one;)

Originally posted by ONARUN

go on steve. i'd be good to meet up.

-------

nissaner, never been myself so we can meet in the sandtrap and discuss the finer points of racing if you want. let's say corner number two on lap one;)

porg's.. i will teach u how to drive :) muhhahahahhaqhha

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • You know how your car rolled through a fence in your last jacking escapade? Scissor jacks increase the likely hood of that sort of thing happening immensely!
    • http://calfinn.com.au/product/1500kg-standard-trolley-jack-cj-2t-c/1500kg-standard-trolley-jack-cj-2t-c   I have this and fits under a S3 33 GTR with no issues. Purchased in 2009 and not one issue. It was $950 back then. Not cheap but something so important isn’t worth cheaping out on.
    • Just trying to get my head around this. At 5psi of boost, you turn on your wmi pump, and then you're using a 3000cc injector, to allow flow upto the actual engine, where you have your 6x200cc injectors and a 500cc injector. If the above is correct, what advantage are you obtaining by having the 3000cc injector blocking flow, is this just incase a line breaks between that injector and the motor you can stop flow immediately? Or are the 6x200cc and 500cc less injectors and just spray nozzle?
    • Welcome! New member myself, but I had an R33 back in 2002. Best advice I could give, based on my experience: if you're running the factory turbo, be very conservative with boost. I made the mistake of just fiddling around with the boost controller and cranking the boost for fun, and the end result was my intake pipes popping off frequently from the constant deluge of oil that was being blown into the recirc by the stressed-out turbo, which itself was siphoning oil from the engine and farting it out both sides of its centre bearing (or something to that effect). If I could do it all again, I would have gotten a new turbo and had a tune dialled in professionally and then just left it alone! Funny you mention the metal shavings in the gearbox, as I had the same thing - the probe plug (magnetic drain plug, essentially) would come out caked with shavings. At least it was doing its job. Not sure if that's just sacrificial wear and part of the deal, or if my gearbox was shagged, but I wasn't abusing it. Enjoy the R33 - they're a dying breed, and if they weren't $35k+ on CarSales in Queensland, I might have picked up one of those again, instead of the 370GT I own now (though I'm loving the 370GT, that big 3.7L V6 just hits different).
    • Howdy folks. I owned an R33 back in 2002, which was thoroughly beyond my capacity (financially speaking) to maintain/insure, so we parted ways in 2004. Fast forward 21 years (to literally yesterday, in fact) and I'm now the proud owner of a 2007 V36 370GT. I'm happily surprised by how much power the VQ37VHR makes, compared to the RB25DET, considering the latter is turbocharged. I had planned to add a turbo at some point but I'm on the fence about whether I'll even need it (though I do love the sudden onset of extra torque). Any other 370GT owners around the traps, I'd love to hear about your experiences with this car (good and bad).
×
×
  • Create New...