SquiddyB6S4 is an amateur racing driver with 23 recorded laps across 5 different vehicles on LapMeta, averaging 4.6 laps per car. The username references Audi B6 S4—the 2004-2008 generation featuring 4.2-liter V8 producing 340 horsepower. The B6 S4 combines quattro all-wheel-drive traction with V8 power in sport sedan package, offering compelling track day platform blending daily usability with performance capability.
His data shows 5 laps at 1.7 CCW, 3 laps at 2.7 miles CCW, demonstrating focused testing at specific circuits. Nearly five laps per vehicle enables meaningful development revealing how different platforms compare to the S4 baseline. Audi enthusiasts often appreciate the brand's technical sophistication and all-weather capability. With 23 laps across 5 vehicles, SquiddyB6S4 represents the platform-specific enthusiast who builds comparative knowledge while maintaining dedication to particular automotive philosophy.
Same E46 M3, a little lighter than stock, stock power/driveline, coilovers, missing a little camber in the rear due to a bent trailing arm, but balanced; Hankook RS4s.
First session after lunch; I just finished chasing a quick guy in an E36 racecar, then I slowed down to relax myself and the car and waited for my friend in his 911S. When I found him, I let him by and then figured I'd follow for a bit and see how he was doing since he was running about 7 seconds slower than I. I caught up to him, but before long I found I couldn't quite keep up! I was thinking, "WHAT did he have for lunch!?" After a lap or two I just couldn't keep up and started falling back, and after five or six laps I saw him pit in, so I took a cool down and came in just to get my head back. When I pulled in I saw my friend's car still out there on track, and the car I saw pull in was sitting in the paddock - a GT3 with a different dude getting out of it. Figured out what happened! Yeesh.
Lots of craziness, and somehow my predictive best was a 1:22.64 - this certainly wasn't my cleanest lap, and I was trying things all day long, but 4 seconds is a lifetime on track.