Go faster in autocross: The apps, sensors and traces you need

J.G.
By J.G. Pasterjak
Aug 8, 2024 | Autocross, data, TrackAddict, ApexPro, Harry's Lap Timer, SoloStorm | Posted in Features | From the Oct. 2022 issue | Never miss an article

Photography Credit: Perry Bennett

One of the keys to going fast is knowing how fast you’re going, and one of the best ways to know how fast you’re going is with some sort of data acquisition system. For road racers, data acquisition has become more or less standard. 

But where does this leave autocrossers? Has the democratization of data for the track crowd rubbed off on the autocross side, or did the cone crowd get left behind? 

What’s Out There?

The options for autocross data acquisition aren’t as numerous or advanced as the options for track use, but there are still some powerful data suites out there. Most prominently, SoloStorm was designed from the ground up as an autocross-savvy data capture solution. Although it works fine for track use as well, the feature package was designed for–and by–autocrossers and their specific needs. 

The basic package starts at $220 and uses an Android device’s internal GPS and accelerometer. But it can be expanded to draw data from more powerful outboard accelerometers, GPS devices, cameras and OBD readers. 

SoloStorm is powerful and flexible, but it does require a bit of knowledge of the Android workspace. If you’ve never used anything but iPads and iPhones, expect an intensive learning period before everything is seamless.

SoloStorm offers a powerful and versatile data suite for autocross, and one of its biggest strengths is its expandability. It can be run with just an Android smartphone or expanded with video, outboard accelerometers, OBD data and high-resolution Bluetooth GPS modules, like this one from Dual. Photography Credit: Courtesy Jesse Waymire (side-by-side video)

Our other favorite plug-and-play data system for autocross is the ApexPro. Like SoloStorm, ApexPro is also a full-featured track data system that can set up a non-looping, point-to-point course with a separate start and finish line–basically, the ability to record an autocross, something not found in many systems aimed at track use.

What makes the $589 ApexPro one of our favorite units is its ease of use and convenient form factor. The entire unit fits in your pocket and works with an external GPS receiver and accelerometer. 

The ApexPro was originally designed for track use, but the option to add custom start and finish lines makes it an exceptional and easy-to-use autocross data tool. Its compact form factor makes it easy to move from car to car, and its simplicity allows for nearly instantaneous setup. Photography Credits: Courtesy ApexPro

Pair it with an iPad or iPhone–Android options are in the works–and you have a powerful, easy-to-use data partner. Anyone familiar with iOS functionality will feel right at home and be up to speed right away. An OBD module is now available as well to add even more car-based channels to the data capture.

And as far as dedicated data systems that consciously cater to the autocross market, that’s about it. But some enterprising drivers have figured out ways to adapt other systems to autocross use. The VCM Suite from HPTuners and the TrackAddict and Harry’s LapTimer apps have all been used to track autocross data with varying success. In some cases, like the phone-based apps, the user typically sets up an autocross course as a segment of a track so the data is gathered from two separate points. 

Finally, GM’s built-in Performance Data Recorder, available in Corvettes and Camaros, can track some important data streams in an autocross situation, although it makes overlaying multiple data streams for comparison difficult.

What Do You Need?

What you need really comes down to what channels you want to monitor, but there’s often a catch in autocross situations: that seriously compressed timeframe for analyzing any data. Autocross grids can recycle in a matter of minutes, putting real pressure on drivers who want to review data. 

For this reason, we put a real premium on ease of use. Being Apple cultists from the days when Macs had mouses with one button and a wire, we tend to gravitate toward the iOS-based ApexPro. Users more comfortable in an Android environment could have better success with SoloStorm for the same reasons.

But what hardware do you need? That depends on the data you want to track and what you want to do with the info. At the most basic level, you should be able to generate, with a few clicks, a speed/distance trace that you can overlay with other speed/distance traces. After that, having a friction circle display is beneficial for analyzing corner entry and exit. 

Just those two channels can pay huge dividends, whether you’re running solo or sharing a car with a co-driver. 

Next, we’d add some car-based channels from an OBD connection. Throttle position is probably the most notable, but brake pressure and steering angle are also useful additions if you can capture them.

What Do You Do With the Data?

Ah yes, the big question. As we mentioned before, autocrossers usually have to analyze their data very quickly–while they’re also checking and adjusting tire pressures, switching drivers, sipping a cool beverage, or doing one of the other dozen things that have to be crammed into the few minutes between runs. 

So your data analysis needs to be streamlined and limited to things you can easily put into action on a subsequent run. That said, we’ll focus primarily on a speed trace. Backing that up, if time allows, we’ll cross-reference that data with a friction circle and a throttle position trace if it’s available. 

Analyzing a speed trace on an autocross course is similar to looking at one from a road course, but there are a few peculiarities. Autocross puts a huge premium on getting on and staying on the throttle, so you want that speed trace to have a nice, consistent upward trajectory from the minimum speed point in a corner. Momentary plateaus in the acceleration graph almost always correlate to throttle lifts, so figure out why you weren’t staying on the gas and take steps to fix it. 

Next, look for any areas of consistent speed. Spoiler alert: Autocrosses rarely keep a car at a consistent speed for very long, so any horizontal areas on the speed trace should be red flags. About the only spots you might see near-horizontal lines are particularly long, sweeping, constant-radius corners–again, rare in most autocrosses–or in the middle of particularly long slaloms. (We’re talking at least six- or seven-pylon slaloms.) 

If you’re seeing horizontal speed traces anywhere but those rare occurrences, give that section a little more attention to determine why you aren’t braking later into the section or accelerating sooner out of it.

Braking takes a bit of experience to properly examine because many autocross situations require brakes to be used in fairly nonintuitive ways–to force weight transfer into a corner or to make a momentary attitude adjustment, for example. 

Whether on a track or an autocross course, you’re looking for a nice, sharp peak at the top of the curve–where you’re transitioning crisply from throttle to brake–as well as a crisp trough at the bottom–where you’re releasing the brake and getting back on the throttle. 

Know your charts. The friction circle cloud is a great place to get a snapshot of an entire autocross run. Are a lot of dots grouped toward the center of the chart? That’s bad and shows periods of inaction or coasting. 

Here, the dip in the speed-versus-distance trace reveals that we entered the first section of a slalom a little slower than ideal. 

What does this dip in the middle of a long, left-hand corner say? Did we get too aggressive on initial throttle and have to back way off to gather the car back up? We spent more than three car lengths of distance to regain our previous speed. 

Unlike on a road course, though, you’ll likely see a lot more non-threshold and very momentary brake applications where your goal is to bleed off a few miles per hour or extend braking while still cornering. So if you see some braking traces that look nonstandard, ask yourself if there’s a way to accomplish the same thing in less time or over a shorter distance–but also realize that the uniqueness of the autocross environment makes for an occasional funky brake trace.

Once you have multiple runs in the data system’s memory banks, you can begin overlaying them and looking for differences. Remember, you’re up against the clock here, so first look for the low-hanging fruit. Usually this means large areas of higher speeds, particularly in places where the speed trace is closer to horizontal–like those sweepers and long slaloms. More speed over more distance means greater reduction in time than momentary speed differences.

However, in many cases, particularly if you’re a driver of higher skill, all you’ll have to work with are those momentary speed differences near the peaks and troughs. And many of these differences will be the result of a compromise–like trading a slower mid-corner speed for a higher peak speed in the following straight. 

When faced with a compromise, favor the path that results in the greater speed differential over the longer distance. If you’re able to hold a 1 mph advantage through the end of a 120-foot straight by dropping the minimum speed through a 30-foot-long turn by just 1 mph, put your energy into the move that has you traveling faster for longer. 

And remember, it’s pretty easy to get overwhelmed with too much data in too short a time, so focus first on things you can confidently change in subsequent runs.

Also, always remember to hit “save.”

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Comments
thashane
thashane GRM+ Memberand Reader
8/8/22 5:13 p.m.

I've had success with TackAddict (free). I also use it to import obd2 data into my videos through Racerender.

as long as I remember to turn it on. I mostly compare two runs in a playback, and see where I'm gaining or losing time, trying to remember what I did different. The white dot is a lap, and the blue dot is a lap where I was slower.

edit: the lap time isn't a true lap, since I don't setup the segments ahead of time, so it counts my return to staging as part if the lap. This is 22 Solo Nats Crows day 1.

bvanepps
bvanepps New Reader
8/8/22 6:36 p.m.

Im a 14 + year subscriber but can't access articles nor find detailed instructions how to.

 

David Elfering
David Elfering GRM+ Memberand Reader
8/21/22 9:07 p.m.

I used TrackAddict with an external OBD reader and Bluetooth GPS. I felt the combination was unreliable at autocross since I had to manage the connections. Two years ago I switched to Solostorm and RaceCapture. The built in data and gps integrates well for me and has been great for comparing data with co drivers. 

Jesse Ransom
Jesse Ransom GRM+ Memberand UltimaDork
8/21/22 9:19 p.m.
bvanepps said:

Im a 14 + year subscriber but can't access articles nor find detailed instructions how to.

Not sure whether this helps, and I don't know whether there's an index or tree or something somewhere, but here's at least some kind of interface to article access:

https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/articles/

JG Pasterjak
JG Pasterjak Production/Art Director
8/21/22 9:32 p.m.
David Elfering said:

I used TrackAddict with an external OBD reader and Bluetooth GPS. I felt the combination was unreliable at autocross since I had to manage the connections. Two years ago I switched to Solostorm and RaceCapture. The built in data and gps integrates well for me and has been great for comparing data with co drivers. 

I used SoloStorm quite a bit and liked it a lot, but I've noticed that I've been favoring ApexPro as they continue to ad features. Ultimately I think it's just my familiarity with the OSX devides that makes me lean Apex, but SoloStorm is a powerful and versatile suite of software for a great price.

adam525i
adam525i GRM+ Memberand Dork
8/22/22 10:14 a.m.

TrackAddict has worked best for me in Autocross and Rallycross of the phone apps but can still be flaky whether it actually starts and stops timing at the start finish line. Harry's and Racechrono have been worse in my opinion.

I just picked up a Racebox mini to try out which has very accurate GPS at 25 Hz along with built in G and pitch/yaw/slip sensors. Some apps can use the just the GPS data (Harry's and RaceChrono but not TrackAddict at this point) but it seems like to use all of the built in sensors the Racebox app is the only way to go and it is not setup well at the moment for this use. You can setup a course for timing autocross but it requires you to drive the course at > 10 km/h and press buttons at the same time on your phone to set Start/Split/Finish points. That is not practical to do at one of these events or an accurate way to define the course. I'll be using it this weekend at Mosport though and I think after that sending them some feedback on the app to hopefully get some improvements.

Edit - Just found where I can create custom courses without the device connected in the Raceox app using google maps so it should work, I'll see how it goes when I finally get to an autocross!

adam525i
adam525i GRM+ Memberand Dork
9/11/22 5:15 p.m.

So as a follow up to my post, I've now used the Racebox mini at Mosport and a local autocross and I'm very happy with it. When using it with their app all of the data is provided by the mini so the location of the phone does not matter which can be nice, I really wasn't interested at either event in the live timing so the app was opened, connected to the device and then thrown in the centre consol/glovebox.

On the track it worked as it should with accurate timing, g and yaw readings with the laps and sessions displayed in an easy way. You can easily compare one lap to another but it is based on time alone, in Circuit tools for example you can compare on position which is nice to see exactly what your speed delta is around a track. 

At the autocross I think I was most impressed as I've had a lot of issues with other phone based laptimers not starting, not finishing or doing nothing. With the app I setup a custom "open" circuit (rolling start with a different start and finish, "hillclimb" gives you a standing start that you hit go when you are staged and it starts timing on acceleration) as the start beams were out 30 ft into the course, up to 3 splits and the finish (set using my phones GPS position as I walked the course). The timer worked EVERY RUN which is a first for me, not only that but the timing was within a tenth of a second of the official timing so I was blown away by that. Again you could easily compare two runs to each other and see how you did around the course with a speed or G trace which is exactly what you need. The way the course is displayed in the app also shows a cornering G line as well which is interesting as you compare runs.

The app also uploads to their website automatically, the analysis on there is a little disappointing as it does not allow you to compare runs so I've only found it useful for downloading the data (.csv or .vbo) to use elsewhere but that is easy and painless.

So to sum it up I'm pretty happy with it for $179, it's a super accurate GPS and IMU running at 25 Hz, the app does what it is supposed to, it's worked every time I have remembered to open it and connect (which is easy). I just wish it could take in OBDII readings to the app as well for my newer car.

BRZCory
BRZCory GRM+ Memberand New Reader
11/7/22 12:57 p.m.

In reply to adam525i :

I hadn't heard of the Mini before, so I went and looked it up. It seems really impressive! Also, they've got the protocol documentation available, so it'd probably be pretty easy to hook it up to a custom phone app that integrated the OBD2 bluetooth data. It'd just take some programming to do it. To that end, it's gonna be pretty easy for them to add that feature in the future, since they're 90% of the way there already. Just needs an app update!

I've been toying with Harry's and my own DIY GPS solution for AX/RX data, but having a box with everything in there including the gyro and accelerometer is really an impressive package. I know what I'm asking for at X-mas!

pinchvalve (Forum Supporter)
pinchvalve (Forum Supporter) GRM+ Memberand MegaDork
11/8/22 9:17 a.m.

I have run TrackAddict on an iPhone and on an Android and have had good success. It works pretty well with just the phone's data, but I run an external GPS and a VeePeak OBD2 reader and that seems to make starts and stops more reliable. I usually set the start and finish lines manually. The only downside to me is that you can't export a video with data to YouTube from the phone. You either let it play and do a screen capture, or you have to export it to the RaceRender software, which is pretty good IMHO, but still an extra step. You can combine videos pretty easily in RaceRender, I use the phone's camera but sometimes add in an external GoPro. 

As of now, I just share videos with friends and ask for feedback, but I will be reading this article to see if I can actually use the trace data to go faster! 

 

adam525i
adam525i GRM+ Memberand Dork
11/8/22 9:24 a.m.
adam525i said:

You can easily compare one lap to another but it is based on time alone, in Circuit tools for example you can compare on position which is nice to see exactly what your speed delta is around a track. 

Just a quick follow up, in the app you can compare two runs/laps based on position rather than time into the run, once again I just had to find the option. 

I think the only disappointment is now that I have consistent data I know how much time I left on course at the end of the day taking the best from each run lol.

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