Absolutely - temp is very important
2012.1 Skoda Octavia VRS DSG Wagon - Carbonio cold air intake and pipe - HPA Motorsports BBK 355mm rotors 6 pot calipers
APR Stage II ECU - APR 3" exhaust down pipe & high flow catalyst
APR/HP Roll bars - Eibach springs and Bilstien shocks
Supaloy lower control arms - Enkei 18*8 Wheels
2018 Ralyee Green RS wagon. Fully optioned.
Previous vehicles:2015 Volvo V60 Polestar (my one detour from VW/Skoda!)
2013 Platin grey RS wagon / 2012 White Polo GTI / 2009 Black 125 Tiguan
Wakefield Park have their Speed off the Street days which run regularly. A group I have visted Wakefield with are Circuit Club who run very good days and there are often some pretty nice cars there too. Largely Japanese car focussed but they will slot you in with drivers/cars of similar ability and it is regulated that overtaking only happens on straights etc. Took both my R32 and my 205 GTi on these days.
2010 Skoda Octavia vRS Wagon
oh that is great!!
Thanks!!!!
I usually only get to drive tracks on the VW drver experience days at eastern creek...but that is in their golf R and Scirroca R...not my own cars...
Thanks for the lead
2018 Ralyee Green RS wagon. Fully optioned.
Previous vehicles:2015 Volvo V60 Polestar (my one detour from VW/Skoda!)
2013 Platin grey RS wagon / 2012 White Polo GTI / 2009 Black 125 Tiguan
you mean so you can drive home in your own car no matter what happens on the track??
my mate has a 206 GTi 180, goes very well! how did yours go on the track?
There are several ways to do it
Eastern Creek (MotorSport Park now) has self drive days $360
Or you go on a CAMS car club sprint day
You learn a lot and it's great fun for sure
Yes and no!
You get to drive equipment you can't afford or are not allowed to purchase
At Eastern Creek I once arrived at the end of the main straight doing 240kmph in a BMW M3
It had started to very lightly rain - the track looked fine to me and the lead driver did not back off
However, when I turned in the stability control kicked in, I could feel the ABS stabbing at the wheels
the car simply tightened it's line, it was a wonderful safety demonstration by the car
Given the car cost $150K I just let the stability control manage the situation
2012.1 Skoda Octavia VRS DSG Wagon - Carbonio cold air intake and pipe - HPA Motorsports BBK 355mm rotors 6 pot calipers
APR Stage II ECU - APR 3" exhaust down pipe & high flow catalyst
APR/HP Roll bars - Eibach springs and Bilstien shocks
Supaloy lower control arms - Enkei 18*8 Wheels
Sounds like an ideal way to spin a bearing. Metals expand at different rates so you need to achieve NOT before getting stuck in. If the crankshaft has expanded quicker than the crank bearings there won't be enough clearance for a boundary layer & threfore damage will result (that is oil related)
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
I've only driven mine in Summer (had it since mid December) but I've noticed my oil temp nearly always between 100-105 deg C just general highway cruising.
My previous car (xr5) only ran over 100 deg C a couple of times that I remember. Octavia seems to run hotter or it's reading temp from a different position. Anyone know where the sensor is and if they have a standard oil cooler (TSI)?
Last edited by rc_vRS; 15-01-2013 at 04:31 PM.
Bookmarks