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Flying Lizard returns to Road America and begins the second half of the 2013 season

Nelson Canache Jr. and Spencer Pumpelly share the driver championship points lead.

Seth Neiman, Dion von Moltke

Photo by: Jackie Buys

Next up for Flying Lizard Motorsports and its No 44 and No 45 Porsche 911 GT3 Cup race cars is the 2 hour and 45 minute Orion Energy Systems 245 at Road America. The PR Newswire / eSilicon No 44 will be piloted by Seth Neiman (USA) and Dion von Moltke (South Africa), with the Venezuela / eSilicon No 45 shared by Nelson Canache Jr. (Venezuela) and Spencer Pumpelly (USA). Nelson and Spencer share the driver championship points lead with Jeroen Bleekemolen and Cooper MacNeil with half of the season remaining.

Seth Neiman, Dion von Moltke
Seth Neiman, Dion von Moltke

Photo by: Jackie Buys

Chief Engineer Steve Conover described the specific issues which the team faces on the longest racetrack (4.048 miles) of the ALMS circuit, saying "Road America is a challenging track. The three long straightaways are unforgiving of excess drag, but there is a large percentage of the lap spent in long turns that demand all of the grip you can muster.

The braking zones are complicated by cornering forces and rumble strips that create knockback and tend to result in a low brake pedal for the drivers. The heavy braking after long high speed sections tends to also thermally shock the brake discs and cause additional brake issues.

The Carousel turn is almost like a banked oval track turn and merits special attention in that it determines your speed down the back straight. The setup must tolerate nimble change of direction and yet be pliable enough to ride over the rather rough rumble strips."

Spencer Pumpelly, Nelson Canache
Spencer Pumpelly, Nelson Canache

Photo by: Jackie Buys

Dion added some thoughts from a driver's point of view, "Road America presents a big challenge to the car and driver in many different ways. To get a car and driver working well around the lap here requires quite a lot of compromise in the setup as well as execution on the driver's part.

At the end of the long straightaways the braking is crucial, and an aggressive brake pad and rotor combination is important while not going too far and losing brake performance towards the end of the race. You can gain time in this way on your competitors and in a spec class that is particularly useful.

As a driver you want an aggressive front end on turn in for the corners, especially in turns 5 and 8, where the road falls away from you as you head towards the apex, but you also need a car that has good balance once it takes a set so you can roll good speed through the long duration corners, especially the Carousel. And of course confidence in both ends of the car is critical through the high speed "Kink" on the back straight."

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