Apex Motor Club I w/Bus Stop
Apex Motor Club I w/Bus Stop Note:
Apex Motor Club is a private racetrack constructed in 2019 in Maricopa, Arizona, 30 minutes away from Phoenix, as a place for motorsports fans to race their vehicles and develop their driving skills. It works on a membership-based basis, granting club members full access to the track 275 days a year, although racing at the summer peak with ambient temperatures over 100 °F is a tough challenge both for cars and pilots. The desert climate of the Grand Canyon State means a dry track surface year-round, with plenty of sunny days and a landscape of stunning open spaces from the driver's perspective.
There are two road courses in Apex Motor Club called Phase I and Phase II. Phase I is a 2.27-mile circuit with 12 turns of varying angles featuring a 40-feet wide track in all its trajectory. The Phase II circuit is 2.15-mile long and sits in the northern part of the club. The southernmost stretch of the raceway is a 3,400-feet long straightaway ideal for passing and getting to top speeds. The average velocity in Apex Motor Club is 76 mph. Club members are welcome to participate in the Apex Race Series, an amateur competition featuring streetcars and race cars organized in several categories.
w/Bus Stop Note:
The Bus Stop chicane configuration at Apex Motor Club I adds a technical interruption to Arizona's exclusive private racing facility's 2.27-mile Phase I circuit, inserting a sharp directional change that transforms the track's character from flowing momentum-based driving to precision brake-and-acceleration sequences. Located in Maricopa, 30 minutes south of Phoenix, Apex opened in 2019 as a members-only facility featuring a 40-foot-wide track with 12 turns of varying angles designed to challenge both hairpin-mastering and chicane-navigating skills. The bus stop chicane specifically breaks up one of the circuit's rhythm sections, forcing drivers to manage rapid left-right transitions that reward chassis balance and throttle modulation over sustained speed through the increasing and decreasing radius corners that define the standard layout.
Implementing the bus stop configuration proves particularly valuable for driving schools and novice track day groups where event organizers seek to reduce straightaway speeds while adding technical complexity that separates skilled drivers from those relying purely on horsepower. The chicane creates an additional heavy braking zone and tests vehicle stability under rapid directional changes, making it ideal for advanced driver development rather than pure lap time chasing. Apex's location in Arizona's high desert creates extreme temperature variations—summer track temperatures routinely exceed 65°C during afternoon sessions, causing tire degradation that becomes more pronounced when navigating the bus stop's repetitive loading cycles, while winter mornings can see near-freezing starts. The facility's signature 3,400-foot straightaway and dramatic elevation changes remain unchanged by the bus stop addition, but the chicane fundamentally alters the circuit's rhythm and creates a different mental challenge for the private club's affluent membership base of exotic car collectors and serious motorsport enthusiasts.
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