This is what I do, everyone has their own flavor.
- Set NT05R pressures to 19psi cold. (Will be around 20-21psi after small burnout)
- Sit your seat straight up so you are not thrown off of the wheel/shifter/etc at launch.
- Turn off your AC to eliminate chance of the condenser dripping on the track. Roll up the windows, helmet on.
- While stopped hold the ESC button on your wheel for 5 sec to fully disable trac/stability control. Do NOT use launch control, this is not a burnout contest.
- If GT/GTS or so equipped with bi-mode shocks, set shocks to "RACE". Firmer rear suspension will shock the tires more but lessen the chances of wheel hop. Wheel spin > Wheel hop.
- Do not drive through the waterbox if you're not on skinnies up front. You will drag water up to the staging area and piss everyone off.
- Drive around the water box and back in (use your backup camera to gauge when your rear tires are in the wet).
- Slowly move a few ft out of the water box. Do not be that guy to do the burnout in the box.
- Stop. Rev to 4500rpm, abruptly dump the clutch while flooring the gas and jump on the brake with your left foot. The car will momentarily lurch forward and then should be stopped by the front brake pressure. Modulate the pressure between your feet to keep the rpm up, while keeping the car from moving. Too much brake and you will stall. Not enough brake, and you will drag the car forward doing a rolling burnout.
- Do a burnout only until you see smoke. Always remember you are not John Force.
- Doing a lengthy burnout will do nothing but waste tire; and in some cases, if the compound is overheated and becomes greasy, impair traction. You are also cooking the clutch fluid as you sit motionless at high rpm. Your header primaries pass directly next to your clutch line. They will not tolerate extensive burnouts without impacting clutch engagement in your subsequent pass.
- When you see smoke roll off of the brake while still on the gas and you should feel the car really dig in and launch forward toward the staging area.
- Try not to hit the poor bastard sweeping the track at the staging light as you roll out of the burnout.
- As you roll towards the staging lights, pump the clutch a few times to try to circulate the fluid.
- Trip the first yellow staging light (pre-stage).
- Stage as shallow as you possibly can. ie. army crawl the car up as slowly as you can to trip the second staging light (fully staged). This will allow you the maximum amount of roll-out (around 3 inches) before the 2nd beam is "untripped" and the clock begins. If you stage "deep", ie. roll any distance past whats required to light the 2nd staging light, it will mean you have less roll-out and it will negatively affect your ET.
- Once you and the adjacent party is staged the man with the "button" will drop the tree. If you are here to turn times, ignore the guy to the left, ignore the tree, and ignore the crowd. Let him go, focus on your driving.
- Launch rpm will vary with track prep, atmospheric conditions, tire temp, tire compound, tire pressure, on and on. I usually start at 4k rpm on my first shakedown pass and work my way up to see what the track will hold.
- Bring the rpm up to the desired point.
- I usually "pre-load" the clutch. As I'm staged at launch rpm I will back off the clutch right up to the engagement point, and hold there. This allows me to the smoothest possible exchange between clutch and throttle when its go time. Since the engagement point likes to move around in the clutch travel as the fluid heats up this keeps things consistent and ensures you are starting to grab the flywheel the instant you start to feed additional throttle. If you hold the clutch to the floor chances are you will feed more rpm than desired by the time your left foot actually backs off to get to the engagement point. Again, this is just my experience. Do what works for you.
- Smoothly exchange throttle and clutch. The stock clutch will slip before the drag radials do at 1st gear torque levels if you're hooked up. So as she starts to get moving you can come off of the clutch completely and go WOT.
- Shift like you want to go home on a trailer.
- Profit.
Practice, practice, practice. The dragstrip is usually quite humbling for those who either expect a magazine number on their first pass, or those who like to tell people drag racing is "easy". "Just hit the throttle and go man, nothing to it!". The people on this board who turn the times have hundreds of passes under their belt and probably a decade+ of experience. You will learn with every pass you make.
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