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Corner Chemistry
- Article By
Jeff Butcher,
JOES Racing Products
Who is right - the driver or the
crew chief? Since I spent my racing
career as a crew chief I would like
to say crew chief yet I know corner
chemistry comes for understanding
when to allow the driver to prevail
as well as knowing when to let the
crew chief earn his reputation.
Teams would be much better off to
focus on communication and leave the
ego and need to be right for
congress.
Our goal is to have fast race car
that can win every time it hits the
track. Racers are competitive and
the desire to win can create
tension. Time is short during
practice and the intensity relies on
good chemistry to avoid
communication strain.
While this article relates to the
driver and crew chief as separate
people, many of the concepts and
thought processes apply if you are a
driver that fills the crew chief
role on your own. Curt Spalding of
AllStar Performance is a successful
dirt driver that is regarded as an
excellent chassis guy. Curt points
out that many short track racers act
as their own crew chief. For those
of you in this category, it pays to
break down the corner as if you were
explaining handling issues to
another person. When considering
adjustments it is beneficial to get
out of driver mode and think through
the corner section by section.
The best driver/crew chief combos
have learned to communicate in a
respectful fashion and have
practiced how to transfer
information to accelerate the
decision process. The word “team”
applies and the set up for the week
begins in the shop. Communication in
the shop has the luxury of time so
it pays to think about alternate
adjustments while in the relaxed
atmosphere of the garage and prepare
some options if the baseline set up
comes up short.
Crew chiefs can help their drivers
by “accepting” driver feedback. One
time I was helping a new driver and
I think I could have listened
better. The track was old, flat, and
bumpy - just plain wore out.
Portland Speedway doubled as a drive
in Movie Theater and it was always
funny to see the movie speaker
stands in the infield. Anyway, at
one time Portland was a track where
I really struggled as a crew chief
and through hard work and plenty of
trial and error I found some corner
magic. My “found” set up was proven
with two different drivers and I
think my teams won about 7 races in
a short span during our tour stops.
We were the car to beat – good
times. Our set up was certainly
different and it was fun to have the
outside the box ideas win
consistently.
When I went to Portland with a new
driver I had my proven set up and
the confidence that we would go
there and with a great chance to
win. We got there and the driver
whined about the car the through the
entire practice and I was so bent on
past success that I didn’t adapt to
his feedback. I “knew” I was right
and the car would be fast. I think
we finished 25th 2 laps down. I
learned a lot that day – so much for
being right. The driver has to be
comfortable in the car and the past
doesn’t turn the steering wheel. I
should have cultivated his feedback
and “fixed” the car so it was
drivable for him and his individual
talent. He was a winning driver and
the car was a winning car.
Communication issues took a winning
effort and made it 25th. Given
another chance, I would have mounted
the wheels on the roof to make the
driver happy. From that day forward
my goal was to hear the driver and
make him comfortable in the car.
So how do you build driver and crew
chief chemistry? Respectfully
listening would be a good place to
start. From there it pays to be
business like in your approach to
driver feedback at the end of each
practice session. A routine that is
followed creates a business like
approach will reduce emotion
allowing for the information
transfer to be complete. Helping the
driver to be relaxed will help him
to provide digestible information.
Aiming for digestible information
transfer is something to think about
– it is hard to fix a car if the
driver says it is loose in, pushes
in the middle and then snaps loose
off. Break down the corner and go in
sequential segment order after every
practice session. Tire temps are
worthless when the driver has every
bad corner condition going on at the
same time.
If a car is loose on entry then
nothing else in the corner makes any
difference. How can the car be good
in the middle if the driver is
afraid to turn the steering wheel?
If the entry is bad the middle will
be a challenge too and the loose in
condition just about always causes a
push in the middle. Focus on the
entry first and manage each section
of the corner in order. I like to
break the corner into 6 categories
and work on making the car feel good
at point 1 first. I then go to point
2 and so on. If I get to point 3 and
make an adjustment that makes point
1 unacceptable then I must start
over. The corner sequence has to be
followed. If point 1 is off the rest
of the turn will be less than
perfect.
My first 5 corner points are the
Braking, Turn In, Middle (Apex),
Acceleration and Exit. Below are my
definitions for these areas but your
team can use their own terminology
if it helps to get everyone one the
same page? My 6th corner section is
overall comfort and drivability. A
focus on a drivable car saves
equipment and makes drivers very
happy.
Point 1 – Braking
The braking area is the corner entry
point were the driver gets off the
gas and is hard on the brakes. The
car begins to turn with a small
degree of steering input. NOTE: The
car must never be loose getting or
it will be a handful for the driver.
Drivers can adjust for cars that are
tight in the middle or loose off.
Loose in means the driver will just
have to go slower.

Chris Stephenson is shown
entering the braking point at Sun
Valley Speedway. Chris is able to
take the car in hard setting him
good position for the rest of the
corner.
Point 2 – Turn In
The Turn in is the point in the
corner where the driver turns the
wheel and pulls the car towards the
bottom. Maximum brake pressure is
transitioning to minimum brake
pressure and by the end of the area
brake pressure is at zero. Keep in
mind that at every track these areas
change and the end of the turn in
area is where zero braking is found
regardless of the actual
geographical place in the corner.

Brad Dahmer is shown pulling the
car aggresively to the inside line.
A stable entry allows Brad to pull
on the wheel with confidence setting
him up for a good run to the middle.
Point 3 – Middle (Apex)
The middle is the point in the
corner where the steering wheel is
turned to the maximum amount. The
car will roll through the center
point. Brake pressure is at zero and
the driver picks up the throttle to
some degree which will vary from
track to track.

Jason Knaus nails fast time
at Lacrosse Oktoberfest. Notice how
the LF tire is lower than the LR
tire in comparison to the white line
– driver’s should aim for feeling
the LF lower than the LR. Jason’s
car is really cutting through the
middle just about guaranteeing a
hooked up exit. The middle is the
point in the corner where the
steering wheel is turned to the
maximum amount. The car will roll
through the center point. Brake
pressure is at zero and the driver
picks up the throttle to some degree
which will vary from track to track.
Point 4 – Acceleration
The Acceleration area is the part of
the corner after the point where the
car has taken a “set” and is pointed
for maximum exit speed. The driver
gets on the throttle in can see the
exit.

Michael Hasitngs is shown
getting on the throttle. The car is
pointed after rolling through the
middle creating a fast exit. The
Acceleration area is the part of the
corner after the point where the car
has taken a “set” and is pointed for
maximum exit speed. The driver gets
on the throttle in can see the exit.
Point 5 – Exit
The exit area is where the car
transitions from partial to maximum
throttle. Some tracks have a second
apex where the car can become loose
under full throttle. The car is
still turning and the straight is
clearly in view.

Lee
Smith Action Photos
Jay Smith is killing the exit
and his car is launching down the
straight. Stock Car guys would enjoy
this much grip! The exit area is
where the car transitions from
partial to maximum throttle. Some
tracks have a second apex where the
car can become loose under full
throttle. The car is still turning
and the straight is clearly in view.
Point 6 - Driver
Comfort
Driver comfort is a paramount goal.
Many times you can have a car with
knife edge speed. These cars are
hard to drive and often the added
speed disappears when the tires get
hot or in traffic. Often I have
dialed out knife edge speed in favor
of a car that is more drivable.
Sometimes the knife edge can be used
for qualifying but for late models a
set up that allows the driver to
drive aggressively will result in
more speed over the long haul. If
you have to compromise and an
earlier corner segment is off a bit
it is ok to tackle the corner
condition that makes the car
uncomfortable for the driver.
Keeping the car comfortable is
your paramount goal. Michael Hardin
is using all his skill to save the
car from knocking down the fence.
Steering clear of knife edge set ups
saves equipment and makes racing in
traffic much more fun for the
driver.
Here is an example of walking the
driver through the corner breakdown
process - if you act as your own
crew chief the breakdown is
basically the same:
Entry:
Crew Chief: Can you drive into the
corner and feel the car is stable?
Driver: The car gets in good.
Crew Chief: How about when you hit
the brakes hard? Still ok – no loose
in feeling?
Driver: Yes – it’s getting in good
even if I over drive it in.
NOTE: I train my drivers to make
sure the car gets in the turn so
they can drive aggressively. My
teams know loose in is just not
allowed and we will go to any length
to make sure the car gets in deep
and with a stable attitude every
time. I am happy to make the driver
nuts asking repeated questions about
corner entry as we must be sure any
possibility of loose in is
eliminated. Yes – this is worth
repeating several times!
Crew Chief:
Ok – we are getting in good. How
about the Turn In to the corner. Can
you turn the wheel with out fear and
pull the car to the bottom
aggressively? Does the car take a
set and cut well?
Driver: Yes – I can turn it hard on
the Turn In – all good.
NOTE: I teach drivers to feel like
the LF is always slightly closer to
the white line than the left rear in
the middle. If drivers turn the
wheel and get the car on the white
line with the LF lower on the track
then the LR you know the car is
cutting well and the angle to the
exit will allow the driver to hammer
the throttle.
Crew Chief: Ok how does the car turn
in the middle?
Driver – The car picks up a push in
the middle. It just doesn’t cut.
When I pick up the throttle it gets
tighter and then when I get to the
exit it snaps loose.
Crew Chief – Ok, let’s work on the
middle. How do you feel about a
quarter inch of additional stagger
and raising the J-bar an inch?
Driver – It’s already snapping loose
off – won’t that make it worse?
Crew Chief – let’s get it rolling
through the middle. If we get it to
cut through the center it will be
pointed down straight. The wheel
won’t be turned as much so it will
hook up when we approach the exit at
the right angle. Let’s focus on the
middle first and see if the exit
gets better when the car turns
through the middle better.
NOTE: A car that is just a little
tight after rolling though the
center is easy to drive and fast. A
car with a push in the middle is no
fun. A little snug can help with a
solid and stable exit. A car that
pushes will make for a loose exit
that gets looser lap after lap.
There are a million scenarios and
your team can work the corner
conversation focusing on each
segment in sequence. Move back to
the start if an adjustment upsets a
prior segment.
Teams should also keep in mind the
big picture when it comes to chassis
adjustments. Sometimes you have gone
too far and the so called adjustment
rules no longer apply. During these
times you end up doing the opposite
of what the book says. If the car
has a push it is common to use less
RF spring. But what if you have gone
down to a 5 pound spring in the
front and the push is still there?
In some cases more RF spring would
help the car turn better. If you
have gone to an extreme or then the
opposite approach should be
considered. Your choice to use a
softer RF spring to cure a push is
based on going softer than a
predetermined baseline. Maybe the
baseline was off? Be aware of those
times when adjustments are not
making sense. Perhaps you have gone
through the adjustment center and
you may need to go the other way
with your thinking.
If your team spends the time to find
common terminology while taking a
systematic approach in communication
cornier chemistry will automatically
improve. Breaking down the corner
into segments will make it much
easier for the drivers to
communicate what they are feeling.
Be completely aware at all times
that the car must get through each
section in order. A car that is
loose in will just about always push
in the middle. A car that pushes in
the middle is often loose off.
Drivers can explain a push then be
worried about the car being loose
sending their chassis adjustments
off in the wrong direction. The cure
is to break the corner down and only
move on to the next section when the
preceding section is spot on. If a
change sets back a prior corner
section then start the process from
the beginning. Corner chemistry will
be built due to your systematic
approach resulting in more chances
to spray Champagne.
Go Forward – Move Ahead
Jeff Butcher
JOES Racing Products
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