So in late March 2018 I just happened to find myself in Belgium for a weekend at Spa-Francorchamps, in the Ardennes, about 1.5 hours east of Brussels. I was last there in July 2013 and had promised I would return but as usual work, life, other cars, family, blah blah, get in the way. It is simply one of the best 3 tracks in the world to drive and a seven is just so well suited around there given the momentum style of driving.
Ignoring that, I signed up for the March 25th and 26th (Sunday and Monday) with Bookatrack and again rented a Caterham with them. I believe they run the best track days of any operator anywhere and they are such a fun group of people to be around.
March is an uneasy time for a track day at Spa as you never know what could happen as I learned in March 2013 and got the distinct pleasure….err….experience of driving on track in snow. Not recommended, even at Spa. As it turned out I need not have bothered – sunny, clear, some clouds and in the 50s both days – just perfect.
To remove any chance of jet lag, I flew in early to Brussels and meandered my way over to Spa town, an easy 12 minutes drive from the track.
This was a change from staying at a hotel next to the track as it allowed for enjoying the town’s various nice restaurants in the evening and a nice walk around what is a pretty little town nestled in the valley.
Given I arrived on the Friday and was not driving until Sunday, I decided to take a few scenic drives around the old circuit and visit Stavelot where the Spa-Francorchamps museum is located.
The Museum is located in the undercroft of the restored Abbey. Its not big but the displays rotate regularly and everything is very interesting and well done from original race cars, memorabilia and old photos.
A diorama of the circuit – old and current – in the context of the surrounding area
Following this I drove the old circuit. Originally the circuit was laid out on the local public roads. Eventually this became too dangerous and the modern day circuit, still based on local roads, was carved out and enclosed. Up to 1970 Formula 1 and GT races were being held on public roads, running through villages, alongside houses, fields, with no safety barriers or run off. Speeds averaged 180mph along these roads.
For example, this is the old Malmedy straight.
And here is part of the Masta kink.
If you know where you are looking there are some gravestones along these roads, in drainage ditches by the side of the road, or next to old trees, memorials to the racing drivers who died in high speed crashes.
Quite sobering.
The Saturday was a test day at Spa, so I drove into the pits, dropped the car and proceeded to walk the circuit in its entirety
Despite having been there before, I had never walked the circuit. This helps you understand the geometry and layout of a corner, whether there is elevation change, camber change or other little nuggets of information that can help you drive the circuit quicker. This is a fast circuit – I average 85mph – that’s an average! Astounding when you think about how a Caterham does not have a particularly high top speed. So the game is to carry as much speed as you can through every corner.
The following photo is looking uphill at the old pits and back towards La Source (corner 1).
Then standing in the same spot but swiveling left is Eau Rouge (at the base of the hill – corner 2) looking towards the top of the hill where Raidillon corner is located.
Moving up the hill to the top where Raidillon is located but looking left a little, you get the classic Spa-Francorchamps view back down the hill to Eau Rouge, the old pits and La Source in the background.
Raidillon is the top of the hill. When you come through Eau Rouge (no lifting…), you cannot see the next corner so you aim the car using the tops of the pine trees and if all goes well you pop across the top of the crest, two left wheels on the Raidillon curb as you then track out right.
Then you are on the long Kemmel straight. Its essential to get a high speed run through Eau Rouge and Raidillon to max your speed on the straight. You are still gaining elevation here, heading towards the highest part of the circuit at Les Combes.
This is the exit of Les Combes (corner 7 on the map) and the highest elevation of the circuit
Some mention has to be made of the elevation change on this circuit – its massive.
The lowest point on the circuit, just after Campus corner is at 1110 feet of elevation (from sea level). The highest point on the circuit is just exiting Les Combes at 1410 feet of elevation. So in 1.5 miles the circuit drops 300 feet.
Alternatively, consider that at La Source corner the elevation from sea level is 1272 feet. At Eau Rouge you are at around 1140 feet and at Raidillon you are at 1242 feet of elevation. So in track distance of about an 6/10ths of a mile you have descended 132 feet and then in the next 300-400 feet you ascend 113 feet in elevation.
Pretty radical elevation changes that are only equaled in circuits like Mt Panorama in Australia or Portimao in Portugal or the Nürburgring.
So after Les Combes it is downhill into the right handed sweeper Bruxelles (corner 8 on the map). This is off camber initially although it starts to ease off as you get through to the last third or quarter of the corner.
Looking back uphill to the exit from Bruxelles
Then its to the downhill lefthander (corner 9 on the map). This is tricky to judge. It’s tighter than it looks. It has two green plastic posts on the apex so don’t cut this corner. There is not much run off and if you do get it wrong on exit there is artificial grass just after the curb, not very nice for grip as the car goes all squirrely there. And just to ensure there is a high level of pucker factor, as you track out from the apex there is a dimple in the circuit, right where your right rear wheel tracks out. So you have to watch for the rear end snapping away from you at just the wrong moment.
Then onwards, faster, downhill….
…..to the Double Gauche (corners 10 and 11 on the map). Some people call this double apex left sweeper, Pouhan corner.
The entry (corner 10)
The middle (corner 10 exit and corner 11 entry). The skid marks tell the story of what not to do with the corner...
The exit (corner 11 exit)
Double Gauche is seriously quick and incredibly satisfying if you get it right. Somewhat early looking entry, mild brake tap in 4th gear, hold the wheel and let the car arc out to the right before arcing back to the second apex. If you get it right then you just hold the wheel constant through the corner and feed the power in. Just after the first apex I am foot to the floor through the rest of the corner. You are carrying some serious speed by the second apex and for me getting up towards the redline in 4th gear.
Get it wrong and it is one hell of a wild ride. Plenty of tarmac run off once you get beyond the artificial grass.
Then on to Fagnes (corners 12 and 13). This is corner 13 below. It is slightly uphill and favorably cambered. So you can carry good speed right through corner 12 and then flick the car back left for corner 13 all while feeding the power in and generating just a slight drift from the tail – epic fun.
Then it’s on through Campus and onto the straight than leads into Blanchimont. An open left double sweeper – no lifting – before you arrive at the Bus Stop
And here
So it is a hard braking down from around 120-125mph (in a 420R) to like 30mph, flicking right then left.
And at this point you are back at the modern pit straight accelerating up towards La Source.
For this Spa treatment, I rented a Caterham 420R SV. 220hp Duratec. 5 speed gearbox, and LSD. Nice goodies of leather road seats, aero screen and regular track day roll bar.
What I did not expect is that it was brand new. 5 miles on the odometer.
Naturally it required a little fettling on the brakes, some more bleeding to make the pedal firmer to my liking but I was sensible about doing a thorough check myself before racing out there and being silly. As it turned out it was perfect. Not one issue during the two hard days on track.
The only part of the spec I struggled with was the 5 speed gearbox. The ratios were all wrong. A similar engine car with the 6 speed gearbox gets away from you pretty smartly by just having 2 extra ratios – 6 speeds to your 4 speeds – as the 5th gear is overdrive and the 4th gear is direct, matching the 6th gear in the 6 speed box. So along the Kemmel straight I felt like I was doing a high speed economy run in 5th gear as it just would not pull any further, even after changing at the redline in 4th.
There is good reason the 5 speed box was specified. Apparently there have been quality issues with the 6 speed box. Given the life these track cars get then you want them reliable.
So I needed to get out there and do my public service by running in that Duratec nice and carefully….errr.... right….
I can just see the for sale ad later – Company demonstrator model, run in carefully by little old lady on Sunday drives in scenic Belgian mountains….
Bookatrack track days are extremely well organized. High quality of driving. Strict enforcement of some basic rules that ensure predictability and safety on track. Plenty of interesting cars to check out. Very friendly crowd. If you want to drive the circuits of the UK or Europe, these are the guys to go with.
Some pit scenes
Yes folks, if it is cold and you sneeze inside your helmet you do fog up your glasses – here I am waiting to de-fog so I can see.
There are many people of alternative persuasions – even Westfield owners enjoy track days. They are quite patient at letting others overtake them…
Naturally, a circuit as quick as Spa ensures that this is not an economy run. But I could use up 2/3rds to 3/4s of a tank every 45 minutes on track. I would simply head to the pits once the fuel gauge hit the red (and below the red on one oops occasion) and the trusty BAT mechanics would spring into action and fill me up. One trusty pit chappie even polished up my car after every session to make sure I looked good on track.
So we head out on track
Eau Rouge
Passing another BAT renter spun out who entertainingly was called Shane!
La Source
Exiting Fagnes corner
With the strict noise restrictions in place in UK and European circuits, Caterham have devised this two muffler set up - a side one and then passing the tube under the wheel arch, over the axle and then to the rear muffler. This allows you to comply with 92db limits on those tracks where it was needed. For Spa the noise limit was 102db for the days I was there. This would be helpful to those running Lime Rock or Laguna Seca.
Keep off the artificial grass people
At the end of Kemmel straight in the braking zone for Les Combes
Like my past experiences with Spa the GPS logger hates the Spa mountains and the data just did not work again. So just video of two sessions from Sunday with no overlay of data.
Somewhere on one of those videos is what happens at Raidillon if you miss the second apex at Eau Rouge and you do not lift….
Sunday session 2
Sunday session 3
I finished the two days with 475 miles on the clock after starting with 5. I think that’s respectable.
Sadly, I cannot make their July track date which is Spa and Zaandvoort. So no chance of going back until this time next year.
Instead I have days at Donington and Silverstone planned for early May and Brands Hatch booked for October. Still chewing on whether I want to do Anglesey for a weekend in August.
One day I may get someone off this forum to join me.
For those people light in their loafers and need a car with a roof to protect their delicate hair, then RSR Spa also rents cars. Renault Clios, Meganes and Porkers. But I will warn you – the Sevens are quicker!
Recommended Comments
There are no comments to display.