logo
Radford Racing School Is the Real Deal

Radford Racing School Is the Real Deal

Motor 121-05-2025
Hardcore track and amateur racing people often scoff at racing school. "
Why would I need racing school?" T
hey wonder. "
I do so many track days."
Or, it could be that you've done dozens of LeMons, Lucky Dog, or Champ Car races—it's all the same. The general attitude in amateur paddocks across the country is that racing school is a waste of money. Just spend it on more track time.
I was one of those people, then I got invited to do Radford Racing School's four-day GT Road Racing SCCA licensing course.
Photo by: Chris Rosales / Motor1
I won't lie, my pride got the best of me. I saw an opportunity to get an SCCA Full Competition license without having to do all of the club's minimum race start and probationary requirements. All I had to do was simply complete four days of driving Radford's Dodge Challenger Scat Pack school cars, do some basic stuff, and head home with a shiny new certificate saying that I was somehow better than before.
Experience, I thought, was better than instruction. I've already spent thousands going racing, how is a $7,000 course really going to improve me over spending that money on a couple of race weekends? I've done hundreds of days at the track, one of my best friends is a pro IMSA driver, yadda yadda, typical track day guy hubris.
Photo by: Chris Rosales / Motor1
That tone changed once I landed at Radford's facility in Chandler, Arizona, and realized the caliber of my instructor. For our group of students, there was a small team of two head instructors and two assistant instructors handling us. The head instructors were proper racers: BJ Zacharias, a multiple SCCA championship winner and longtime ALMS, Grand Am, and IMSA Continental challenge driver, and Spencer Bucknum, the 2023 SRO TC America champ and current McLaren Trophy driver. True professionals were teaching these courses, not your local HPDE instructor or autocross guy.
The first two days of the course were largely warmup and evaluation exercises to teach us the bare bones basics, things that most of us think we know but actually don't. Some of the exercises, like choosing a lane based on last-minute traffic light illumination, were focused on road safety. Others, like the specially designed skid car that could unweigh the front or rear tires using a specially designed frame, were designed to test gentle car control and the delicate loading that the front and rear tires see with throttle and brake.
Then the real deal exercises, like stopping at a specific cone at a specific brake pressure, were thoroughly designed to teach a core tenet of driving: Braking. All of it was to prepare us for days three and four, which were all done on Radford's main track, east track, and autocross course.
Photo by: Chris Rosales / Motor1
True professionals were teaching these courses, not your local HPDE instructor or autocross guy.
While those early exercises were a surprising revelation, the real meat of the school was on those last two days. This is where the instructors could properly review data and technique, and offer advanced instruction. The biggest thing Zacharias and Bucknum drilled into everyone was the importance of braking, and everything that follows it. And not just braking hard, or braking points, but the actual granularity of good braking. Trail braking is a buzzword tossed around a lot, but I feel that the popular understanding of trail braking is limited. The way both instructors taught it was extremely high-level.
I've always understood trail braking in concept, and I practice it plenty in simulators like
iRacing
to decent effect. But Radford truly drilled what I needed to know into my head, and this is where the unusual choice of Dodge Challenger for the school car really made sense.
A Challenger doesn't
really
want to turn, and using brake pressure to make the front axle work is critical to cornering the heavy, lumbering thing. But on the crappy (and specifically chosen because of this, according to Zacharias) Cooper Zeon RS3 rubber, you can't use too much brake pressure, or it will overwhelm the tires. With these restrictions, I found a revelation: I was abusing the brakes and never actually trail braking.
Photo by: Michael Teo Van Runkle
It's extremely subtle, but true trail braking depends on the car. Some cars might take 40 percent brake pressure to the apex, others take zero, and some will take 5 percent. The Challenger accepted almost any brake pressure, but it would show you the physics at play. A 5-10 percent trail neatly tucked the Challenger's nose to apex, utilizing the tire's full grip and rotating the car plenty without removing too much load from the rear axle.
Zero percent meant that the Challenger simply didn't turn, while 40 percent pressure turned the Challenger into a drift machine, or an understeer machine, depending on how I worked the wheel. A quicker initial steering input overwhelmed the front tires and sent the car into understeer, but a slow, gradual build into steering unloaded the rear tires as the front was building grip, transitioning into a graceful slide.
Zacharias worked closely with us to nail this down, doing multiple drills and showing just how responsive the cars were to braking. He'd break the pressure down into numbers from 1-10, 10 being the most intense and 1 being the least. Without saying complicated racing driver words like "brake shape," he effectively taught that lesson. He even tossed an AiM Solo 2 in each of our cars to see how we were driving, and effectively decoded what each student was doing in the car.
Photo by: Chris Rosales / Motor1
Photo by: Chris Rosales / Motor1
Over two days, two tracks, and more than ten total hours of track time, I honed these new skills. Not only were the instructors top-notch—I got more track time than I knew what to do with. I drove for lap time, tried a lot of drifting, and everything in between. It allowed me to have quality time with the car and helped me work on my method, all under the watchful eye of two skilled instructors. To say I was proven wrong about racing school is an understatement. I actively got quicker after my time at Radford, even with my fairly deep racing and driving experience.
Visiting Radford was like getting a new pair of glasses and being able to see more clearly–I learned a method rather than an easy trick. It's something I can continually build on and practice. So yes, even for a hardcore track day and racing guy like me, racing school turned out to be an invaluable experience. And I have a shiny new SCCA Full Competition license to go do some more serious racing with.
More Racing Schools
How BMW's Racing School Makes You A Better Driver
Skip Barber: The First Step On Your Racing Journey
Get the best news, reviews, columns, and more delivered straight to your inbox, daily.
back
Sign up
For more information, read our
Privacy Policy
and
Terms of Use
.
Share this Story
Facebook
X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Reddit
WhatsApp
E-Mail
Got a tip for us? Email:
tips@motor1.com
Join the conversation
(
)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ESPN to acquire NFL RedZone, NFL Media assets in billion-dollar agreement: Report
ESPN to acquire NFL RedZone, NFL Media assets in billion-dollar agreement: Report

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

ESPN to acquire NFL RedZone, NFL Media assets in billion-dollar agreement: Report

ESPN is set to acquire NFL RedZone and other top NFL Media holdings, according to The Athletic's Andrew Marchand, who also reported Friday that, in return, the league will receive equity in ESPN that's potentially worth billions of dollars. An official announcement about the deal is expected next week, per The Athletic, which pointed out that Disney, ESPN's parent company, has its earnings call this coming Wednesday. In addition to RedZone, ESPN is expected to bring aboard seven more regular-season games, NFL Network and the NFL's fantasy football business, among other assets, according to The Athletic. This story is being updated.

Notre Dame quarterback Kenny Minchey makes a bold proclamation following Friday's practice
Notre Dame quarterback Kenny Minchey makes a bold proclamation following Friday's practice

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Notre Dame quarterback Kenny Minchey makes a bold proclamation following Friday's practice

You love to see when your quarterback has extreme confidence, and Notre Dame's Kenny Minchey did exactly that on Friday following the second fall practice. When speaking with the media, the second-year player proclaimed that he believes that he's 'the best quarterback in the country,' as On3's Jack Soble posted on social media. It's a strong claim, but one that ultimately could come true. Minchey will have to beat out CJ Carr first, but having that kind of confidence will go a long way. Everything that we have seen from his during his limited playing time and in practices seem to suggest that he's got the skill set to lead the Notre Dame offense. He's got the running ability to make defenses account for his legs, and the throwing ability to pop the top off of a defense. It will be a very interesting battle between the two, as the competition continues this fall leading up to the season opener on the road against Miami. Head coach Marcus Freeman will have a very difficult decision to make, but Minchey is very confident in his abilities. Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on X (Formerly Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions. Follow Mike on X: @MikeFChen This article originally appeared on Fighting Irish Wire: Notre Dame QB Kenny Minchey believes he's one of the best nationally

Candace Parker calls effort in WNBA All-Star Game 'awful'
Candace Parker calls effort in WNBA All-Star Game 'awful'

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Candace Parker calls effort in WNBA All-Star Game 'awful'

Seven-time WNBA All-Star Candace Parker was unimpressed by the effort in the All-Star Game. Parker criticized the game on a podcast that aired Wednesday, calling it 'awful.' 'Y'all cannot come out there with those shirts of 'Pay Us What You Owe Us' and then do that,' Parker told All-Star Aliyah Boston on their new podcast 'Post Moves.' Parker was referencing the warmup shirts both teams wore at the July 19 game in response to failed collective-bargaining negotiations with the league earlier that week. Players are fighting for higher pay and better benefits, among other improvements. The game set a WNBA All-Star record for points scored and Napheesa Collier set the individual scoring mark with 36 points. Team Collier beat Team Clark 151-131. Defense was at a minimum as the league's stars allowed each other to get shots up without contest. It wasn't unlike the all-star games across other pro leagues, but Parker was looking for more from WNBA players at a time when they're in the spotlight. 'I think on one of the biggest stages, in an All-Star setting that was invested in more than any other All-Star game previously. … I think it would've really maximized the moment.' Fever forward Boston, who played on Team Clark, defended the performance of her and her peers. 'An All-Star Game, where we have another game in two days, I think that it's OK to just go out there and hoop and have some fun,' she said. 'Because on Tuesday, we were back at it, and we were playing and we were showing once again why we deserve to get paid.' ___ AP WNBA: Alyce Brown, The Associated Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store