cdrptrks is an amateur racing driver with 40 recorded laps in a single vehicle on LapMeta—extraordinary concentration representing absolute commitment to mastering one platform. This exceptional focus demonstrates purist specialist philosophy prioritizing profound depth over any variety, choosing complete expertise with select machinery rather than sampling. Forty laps in one car develops intimate knowledge exceeding what most drivers achieve with entire fleets, revealing every nuance through relentless dedicated repetition.
His LapMeta data shows systematic exploration: 5 laps at CW configuration, 5 laps at North Track-CW, and 4 laps at Full Course. This balanced distribution demonstrates how one platform responds to varied track demands—from technical CW layouts to North Track configurations to Full Course challenges. The methodology builds comprehensive vehicle expertise transcending single venue familiarity, understanding platform behavior across complete capability spectrum. Single-vehicle specialists often develop mastery enabling lap times rivaling professional drivers through intimate knowledge of every characteristic, optimal technique for every condition, and absolute confidence extracting maximum performance. With 40 laps concentrated in single vehicle across three different configurations, cdrptrks exemplifies the ultimate specialist philosophy: achieving profound platform mastery through systematic repetition enabling expertise impossible through casual variety.
This is the same lap as my 2:27.53 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdiqLhnWRYE) except this one uses the normal start/finish and includes the oversteer in turn 17 from trying to add steering angle while the car already had a heavy lateral load and was going over the bumps. I suspect I would have avoided the oversteer if I just kept the steering wheel steady and let it run on a wider line than I usually took.
Reference video of another driver doing a 2:22.44 Sebring lap in a stock SS 1LE in about the same ambient temperature I had - the fastest I've seen (automatic transmission; I guess a manual would probably be at least a second slower). Unfortunately this lap was set after my trip so I didn't have it to reference beforehand: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkTn1gJkHQw
Sebring with PBOC driving solo in the instructed student group on Sunday 5/8/2022, second session that started at 11am. Not bad for being only my 3rd ever dry session at Sebring (thanks to a big thunderstorm on Saturday), but there is still more in it and I badly missed the apex of turn 7. This remains the most intense session I've ever driven at any track! I think that was probably because I was pushing hard before I had done enough laps to develop consistency at this track plus this was my 4th day driving on track in a row (with 2 days at Daytona immediately before this...not recommended but I'm thankful I got to drive both tracks on the same trip).
Going flat through turn 14 (Bishop's Bend) at 120+mph is exhilarating! That is the main reason I used PTM Race instead of turning everything fully off. The track was less bumpy than I expected based on what I'd read/heard (except for turn 17), maybe because my home track MSR Houston is quite bumpy.
Unfortunately PBOC ceased operations in 2024, but they were a good group when I drove with them here and at Road America.
For the 3rd session after lunch it was getting hotter and I bailed out of my attempt to carry more speed into turn 1 on my first hot lap to avoid possibly going 2 wheels off on exit under full throttle (video: ). I think my improvements during the session were outweighed by the extra heat reducing tire grip and horsepower. I had a mechanical problem with my car right before the 4th/final session so I didn't get to drive in it but I suspect the heat would have prevented me from going faster anyways.
2017 Camaro SS 1LE with unmodified engine using PTM Race, nearly new set of takeoff OEM Goodyear Supercar 3 tires, BMR Suspension BK063 rear cradle bushing lockout kit, track alignment with strut mod for some extra front camber (camber: -2.8° front, -1.4° rear, toe: 0° front, +0.05° rear per side [+0.10° total rear toe]), Castrol React SRF DOT 4 brake fluid, stock Brembo (Ferodo HP1000/1) brake pads, GM plastic track brake cooling deflectors, smaller GM metal brake dust / splash shields. The car is in track mode with touring steering mode. Ambient temperature was about 82°F and sunny.