How Are Your Driving Skills At 100+
Miles Per Hour?
It’s cold and absurdly early on
this Las Vegas morning, but 30+ people couldn’t be happier. Not just because
it’s Vegas, but because East Coast Truck and Trailer Sales is hosting their Richard
Petty Driving Experience again. If you’ve never been, the Richard Petty Driving
Experience is a thrill ride you control - starting at 100+ mph!
Every year, the folks
at ECTTS ask a number of their friends and customers to come out for the driving
experience of a lifetime. This is a chance to drive a car as fast as you can –
without any fear whatsoever of a ticket. In fact, the faster the better! So
much so, we keep track of the stats.
The day starts with a facility overview of Las Vegas Motor Speedway. There’s
roughly 1,500 acres to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, consisting of over 10
tracks. There’s the 1/2 mile World of
Outlaws dirt track, the quarter mile NHRA drag racing facility known as “The
Strip” and the 3/8 mile “Bullring”, which is the home track of NASCAR
superstars Kurt and Kyle Busch as well as Brendan Gaughan – just to name a few.
But before you’re
allowed to put a 600+ HP car through its paces, you have to go through safety
and instruction and in-car/on-track training. This isn’t just a formality if
you’re driving these beasts, this is absolutely necessary. You need to know how
the brute you’re going to be doing your best to control will handle in a curve,
or “out of the groove.” You’ll hear from the instructors/drivers just what
you’re going to feel, and at what speed. They know these finely-tuned monsters;
they drive them every day.
Now it’s your turn at the wheel;
right? Well, first you’ll be taken on a ride-along to get a feel for the track,
and experience the car “at speed.” You get to see what it feels like to take a
curve as fast as possible without slamming into a wall. Then you get to feel
the acceleration push you into the seat – when you’re already doing over 100
mph! You’ll amusedly remember when you used to get a thrill punching the
accelerator on the family sedan to pass a sluggish truck. And this is just the
instructional phase.
“OK, this should be easy”, you convince
yourself, as you climb into the driver’s seat. What you don’t understand –
until you try it for yourself, is that the instructor made it look easy because
of their experience. For you, getting this race car up to something even close
to 130 mph is taking some work. Not that the car won’t do it, but because
you’re having a tough time getting up the nerve to go much faster. Way too
soon, this thrill ride is over, but you get a chance to see just how much
bravado you had. After it’s all over, you get a packet that includes a time
sheet with a breakdown of every lap you drove on the track.
Finally, at the end of the day,
ECTTS holds a dinner for their customers, friends, and employees. The food’s
good, but the stories and laughter are even better. Let’s face it, half the fun
of this type of outing is comparing how you did with the rest of the guests.
The only problem lies with the inevitable request to see the hard copy of your
exploits, to confirm those “enhanced” tales of the track. Chris Kelly, one of
our customers, posted this year’s top speed at 141 mph! We’ll keep the lowest
speed to ourselves, so as to keep the embarrassment to a minimum. As we said earlier, we do keep track of the
stats.
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