Brands Hatch Racing School





I was a pupil of Brands Hatch Racing School in the 1980s, where I drove over 100 laps in Formula First and Formula Ford single seater cars

The video below from the Top Gear TV series of the period, shows the Formula Ford car used by the school and the driver briefing before the initial trial










The details of the training schedule and costs are shown on the left - Yes, it was a lot cheaper then!

The Initial Trial was taken up by many people, like track day experiences nowdays but few progressed to further training days at the circuit

The Novice Class had 10 timed laps, followed by Intermediate Class, Advanced Class and Graduation Class, each with a training session, follwed by further days with 3 sessions of 10 timed laps, each with a faster target time needed to progress







The sessions I booked and attended are shown on my card on the right


Notably my trial session was on the 3rd Jan 1987, right after New Year and it snowed strongly, making things quite difficult!

I returned to Brands in February and April and by July I had progressed to the Intermediate Class, then Advanced Class by August and Graduation Class by the following July (perferring better weather for the faster times!)








On the left, the Top Gear presenter goes out for initial laps only using up to 4000 rpm, which is allowed to increase as the pupil progresses through the classes

He doesn't really even use this rev range much though and, as one discovers with more experience, it is the conservation of speed and smooth driving that really lowers lap times






The Racing School laps are conducted on the short 1.2 mile Brands Hatch Indy Circuit, as shown below, which allows observation almost at all times from the tower in the pits straight









As is very clear from my session note on the right, my progression through the classes was not without drama and I had a big crash at Clearways during my first Intermediate Class laps!

Unusually a racing driver testing his own car was allowed out during the session and he cut in front of me, just as I was about to brake for the first right hander into Clearways

I had to turn quickly to avoid him and then had no track or time left to brake at all - carrying way too much speed, I tried to usher the car round...

I didn't spin, which was a bonus, but with almost a 4 wheel drift both front and rear left side wheels went up and over the rumble strip but alas, it was a damp day and with no grip from these tyres on wet grass, I hurtled sideways into the tyre wall, breaking front and rear left suspension











The normal braking point, where I tried to wrestle the car round Clearways is shown on the left, as is the point I hit the tyre wall


I treated the impending collision as all part of the deal, taking hands off the wheel and bracing for impact and, once stationary, using the opportunity to see how fast I get could the harness off an extricate myself from the car..








Here are some clips from an excellent track guide by Scott Mansell of
Driver 61, showing what should have happened...

Quote: "Clearways is quite technical, it's quite difficult, but it's important here because it's tricky. You can see the circuit comes around to the right. Well, it actually comes around to the right, continues around tighten up a little bit and then we're back on to start/finish straight around here.

Now what we're doing here is we're allowing the car to push towards the outside; we will have the minimum speed here before we then come to Clearways and get back on the accelerator.

It's difficult because when you're braking, we might have a little bit of steering angle. You can see I'm trying to keep the car as straight as possible with little steering angle, in it so we can decelerate, get on the brakes as much as possible"





This is about the point were a driver testing his own Formula Ford flashed in front of me, causing me to have to avoid him and ruining any chance I had of braking in this difficult section







Quote: "We let in the car push towards the outside, but not all the way around the outside. You can see there's a bit of a gap and I'm actually quite wide on this lap.

If you do go too far over to the left, it's tough to get the car to come back and into Clearways. You just can't make the car turn enough. So we're not using all of the road on the left-hand side.

You can see now that my head is turned and we're looking towards the inside of Clearways.

We can just catch the first glimpse of the kerb at clear ways. We're still decelerating slightly. We have just come off the brakes, and we'll let the car roll into Clearways, we're somewhere in the middle of the road at this point."





Yes, it was extremely difficult to get my car turned enough with the huge amount of excess speed I was now carrying - I counter steered the ensuing oversteer and manged to prevent a spin, coaxing the car into right hand rotation but the 4 tyre contact patches were not enough grip to prevent the car pushing out towards the rumble strip and the wet grass - once only 2 tyres were in contact with the tarmac there certainly wasn't enough grip and I careered sideways, hitting the tyre barrier with both front and rear left wheels simultaneously










From that crash though, with the target lap time of 70 secs, I continued development and, as the session note on the right shows, my fastest lap times were down in the 56 sec range by the time I was in the Graduation Class



Unfortunately driver instruction for every session was suddenly mandated at this time, doubling fees, even for Graduation Class drivers going for their final times - with this, I decided my useful time with the school had come to an end













Although a good lap always invloves combining what you've learned at every bend, at Brands the largest improvement comes from mastering the awesome Paddock Hill Bend, which my MSA Circuit Guide describes as "Perhaps the most epic corner in British racing, it is unforgettable to the driver"

I'd have to agree, as it is approached at very high speed after the long Brabham Pits Straight and with a slight hill on the entry and steep dive after the crest, it is like hurtling at a blind hill with no sight of the rapidly descending turn to the right it hides, as former Stig Ben Collins descibes below










As shown in the MSA Guide on the left, there are two choices of racing line for Paddock Hill Bend - the A line almost hugs the slightly curved track perimeter and the B line points straight from further to the centre the track
 
Scott Mansell takes more of the B line in the video clip on the right, showing the entry and Braking Point (BP in the guide) - the second clip below shows the Turning in Point (TP) and exit down the hill  


























The B line allows more stable straight line braking but requires a sharper turn in, whereas the A line reduces the turn in but means the car is less stable, braking at high speed with some degree of steering angle

As Scott Mansell says, with practice you can push yourself deeper and deeper into the entry of the bend - what he doesn't say is that it takes quite a bit of "bottle" to convince yourself that this is possible

I won't give away the secret but a very experienced driver gave me a tip on how to use line A but to minimise the unstability of the car - again this took a while to achieve but it works well








Brands Hatch will always be my "home track"and for quite some time I held a desire to test myself of the longer 2.4 mile Grand Prix Circuit










This came to fruition in 2019 when I took my Lotus Exige Cup to a tesing day on the full GP Circuit


The car had livery from a company that an old friend and I were setting up for car sales/tuning, so it looked the part next to cars testing for the weekend's Blancpain Endurance race
















Happily my driving kept the pace well too and I managed to catch Lotus Sevens/Caterhams equipped with racing slicks and all but match their cornering speed

After several sessions on track and a second tank of fuel, the rain fell and quite a few drivers decided not to go out..

 The Exige would've made Colin Chapman proud though, as she faired better than Porsches and Ferraris - but then my experiences at Paddock Hill Bend helped, as I could chase the fast cars into the braking area and feel that they would brake first  











Click the photostrip below for all the shots from the test, including very high definition photographs of the car on track









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