WSBK

WorldSBK Track Guide: A Lap Around Laguna Seca

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The US Round of the World Superbike Championship sees the paddock decamp to the West Coast, and for the Superbike riders this is certainly a favorite round of the campaign.

The challenging Laguna Seca circuit is unique and rightfully regarded as one of the most action-packed and thrilling on the calendar. The laps might be short, but there’s no rest for the wicked in the Northern California hills.

In WorldSBK, gear ratios are fixed for the season, and with the deduction in revs for 2018, this will be even more crucial. We see a lot of variety at Laguna Seca with regards to gear patterns, and this will be even more exaggerated this season.

In the past, some riders were forced to use six gears whereas others were using only five around the 2.2-mile track, but ahead of the action you could expect to see all riders using six gears this weekend.

Laguna Seca snakes its way through the Monterey hills, around a lake, and offers as much of an engineering challenge as a riding challenge.

Two-time WorldSBK champion, Colin Edwards, once said that “Laguna has a bit of everything. There’s everything from first gear corners to fifth gear corners. There’s slow and fast corners. Cambered corners and off-camber corners.”

“It runs uphill and downhill and has absolutely everything. There’s also no time to relax on it because the straights are short. It’s a battle out there every lap.”

That battle takes place over 21 laps, and with only the round at Misano remaining before the summer break, you can be sure that the field will be keen to go into it with some momentum.

Momentum is also key at Laguna Seca, with one corner leading into the next, it means that any mistake is compounded by being off-line or out of sync in the following turn.

It is all about avoiding mistakes at Laguna Seca because running wide at one corner has an impact at the next. This means that at the start of the lap it’s crucial to get turns four through six linked up.

At the end of the lap, it’s about maintaining speed from the Corkscrew to the final corner. One mistake will ruin your lap, and that’s why it’s so important to be able to maximize track time over the course of the weekend.

Getting your eye in and being prepared for that one fast lap in qualifying is a huge challenge for riders around this twisting, technical race track.

While The Corkscrew gets the attention of the fans and photographers, it is the first corner that scares the riders. With the pit wall to their left, and a hill to their right, the circuit tunnels towards the first corner of the lap.

It’s blind, uphill, and taken flat-out in fifth or sixth gear depending on the setting. The riders will see only blue sky and the tips of a trio of telegraph poles in the distance. You aim for the middle pole and hope that everything is clear across the brow of the hill.

It’s a heart in your mouth corner, but you need to be aggressive through here. Some riders will dab the rear brake to settle the bike across the crest, but most will be concentrating on ensuring the right line and letting the bike run towards the outside of the track on the entry into Turn 2.

The wider you can be on the entry to Turn 2 the better. This is a double-apex left-hander where it’s incredibly easy to be sucked into the corner when following another rider, and this mistake can see you drift past the apex and run wide on the exit. Turn 2 rewards precision and patience.

As you exit this left-hander, riders will try and hold second gear on the way into the next corner. Turn 3 is flatter than it appears and can easily see riders try to carry too much speed.

Compounding this is that the corner is wide on the entry, but tightens towards the exit. Having confidence in the front-end is crucial through this corner and the feedback from the bike is critical.

With a variety of lines through turns 5 and 6, the rider’s approach dictates much of how they find their lap time.

During the race you can see riders get aggressive through here and try to force a move on the entry, but it sacrifices their speed on the exit of the corner.

Turn 5 is a key corner because you can brake early, and while you sacrifice your entry speed that comes back to you in spades on the corner exit, and allows riders to get alongside each other on the entry to Turn 6.

The only problem is that Turn 6 has some natural defense mechanisms against a pass in the form of undulations.

A dip on the entry loads up the bike’s suspension under braking, but once the rider is exiting the corner and starting to open the gas, the front will be unloaded as it exits this dip.

The gradient is incredibly steep on the exit, so it’s important to have good drive on the exit along the Rahal Straight.

A blind kink at 150 mph greets the riders on the back straight before they come to the fabled Corkscrew. Threading the eye of a needle through Turn 7 leads directly into The Corkscrew, and picking the right moment to brake is crucial.

It’s possible to overtake on the entry, as we’ve seen on numerous occasions, but it is also incredibly easy to carry too much corner speed and run wide on the exit.

Coming into The Corkscrew, all a rider can see is the blue of the Californian sky. It is blind on the entry and leads into a steep downhill corner where a huge amount of force is put through the bike.

Likened to a roller coaster by all the riders, you need a lot of confidence to flick the bike back to the right, but patience is needed as the rider waits for the suspension to load up before opening the throttle.

Through Rainey Curve the g-force starts to build for the riders after the compression at The Corkscrew. This allows the riders to be more aggressive as they throw the bike from side-to-side, through the heavily banked left-hander.

For many this is their favorite section of the track because of it is highly technical nature where one corner feeds into another.

From the Corkscrew to the final corner it is all about momentum and avoiding a mistake. The final corner is just about picking the right braking marker and then picking up the throttle smoothly without pulling too big a wheelie.

If you’ve done that, you’re on your way to a fast lap at Laguna Seca. but putting together a string of 21 laps is a real test of mettle.

Graphic: WorldSBK

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