Sonoma Raceway Full
Sonoma Raceway Full Notes:
When people think of NASCAR racing, tight packs of colorful stock cars circling counter-clockwise through an oval racetrack come to mind. High banking turns, lots of passing, even some light bumping here and there. And that perception would be correct if there were no complex, clockwise oriented road courses like Sonoma Raceway, 30 miles north of the San Francisco Bay Area, in California. The road course in Sonoma is a 12-turn, 2.39-mile circuit, with an average speed of 77 mph and an average lap time of 1:51.426, enclaved in a region known for its high-quality wineries and its mild weather year-round.
The main attention-grabber in this track is The Carousel, a set of high-speed turns starting from turn four, a tight right-hand corner going into a light, high-speed sweeping turn five, only for turning heavily to the left in six and ending right into a hairpin in the opposite direction at turn seven. That segment is so difficult to maneuver with regular stock cards that NASCAR bypassed it from 1998 until 2019 and only brought it back to life for the circuit's 50th-anniversary celebrations. The new (or old) configuration was so exciting to see that it stayed ever since, and nowadays is the signature feature of Sonoma Raceway.
See our Sonoma Raceway Track Guide for more information on getting the most performance out of this track.
Full Notes:
The Full circuit configuration at Sonoma Raceway delivers the complete 2.520-mile (4.056-kilometer) 12-turn experience across California's wine country hills featuring 160 feet (49 meters) of total elevation change through Sonoma's challenging natural terrain. This historic layout includes every signature section that has defined the facility since opening—the off-camber Carousel (Turns 5-6), the hairpin Turn 7, the technical Esses (Turns 8-10), and the various Turn 11 options before the final Turn 12 leading onto the front straight. The Full configuration represents Sonoma's original character before NASCAR-specific modifications introduced The Chute bypass in 1998, with the 12-turn layout restored for the 2019 Toyota/Save Mart 350 as part of the circuit's 50th anniversary celebration, reaffirming the complete circuit as Sonoma's definitive identity.
What distinguishes the Full circuit from NASCAR's shortened variants is the inclusion of the legendary Carousel—a long, banked, off-camber turn complex that ranks among North American road racing's most demanding corner sequences, requiring absolute commitment while punishing hesitation with off-track excursions or lost positions. The 12-turn layout serves as the primary configuration for sports car racing, GT championships, and motorcycle events including MotoAmerica, with series preferring the technical challenge and rhythm of the complete circuit over the abbreviated layouts. Northern California's Mediterranean climate creates ideal racing conditions across much of the season, though summer track temperatures can exceed 55°C on exposed hillside sections while morning fog occasionally delays session starts. The circuit's location in Sonoma wine country, approximately 40 miles north of San Francisco, positions it as both a competitive motorsport venue and destination facility where enthusiasts combine track days with regional tourism. The Full configuration's elevation changes create blind entries and compression zones where local knowledge provides significant advantages, explaining why Sonoma regularly produces unexpected results when professional series compete on the complete 12-turn layout that defines California road racing.
| Name | Organization | Date |
|---|