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Robert Wickens mostly paralyzed in a car crash few years back worked with GM and P.M Motorsports to get him back into racing but with a Z06 GT3.R
After completing his first laps around Sebring International Raceway in a specially adapted Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.R, and in between a more rigorous second day of testing at the circuit, Robert Wickens reflected on his first experiences as the countdown to his much-anticipated IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship return with DXDT Racing on the Long Beach street circuit.
“So far, I feel like a kid on Christmas!” said Wickens, whose smile reflected his joy of driving the Corvette GT3 with its cutting-edge hand control system for the first time in real life.
“It’s been a lot of work so far. Yesterday, I got my first taste in the Corvette Z06 GT3.R just before lunch. Got a couple laps in, then we had to stop for a lunch break, and then kind of hit the ground running in the afternoon.
“I felt like we finished in a good place yesterday. And then, thankfully, got a good night’s rest and a lot of planning ahead of today. So far, today has been running super smoothly. But I think the biggest takeaway I have so far is that it feels like the Bosch EBS, and the hand control system that was developed by Pratt Miller, it was like it belonged in this car.
There hasn’t been a single hiccup. It’s like when they designed this Z06 GT3.R, this was always in the plan. It just feels like it belongs in the car.
“Immediately, I felt way more comfortable with the braking feeling and braking sensation than I had in my past, racing in TCR with the Bosch EBS. It was a massive step forward, so hats off to all the men and women at Bosch and also Pratt Miller and DXDT, really, for collaborating to make this all possible.”
But even before driving his new Corvette Z06 GT3.R for the first time in earnest yesterday, Wickens has been preparing at home, using his custom-built racing simulator setup to get ready for driving a GT3 car for the first time in actual competition.
“Racing on my home simulator, not only is it very fun, but it made my dexterity and my resolution of my hand, for throttle application in particular, just stronger and stronger. And I think after driving this Corvette Z06, I feel like the next step for me is actually to start doing more throttle application with my right hand, just to build that muscle memory,” Wickens said, comparing his home simulator to the real car.
“My brake that I use on my home simulator is very different to what we have in the race car, but for throttle purpose, I think it’s very helpful.
“For people that don’t know, I pretty much do 98 percent of my throttle application with my left hand, so that I can freely upshift with my right hand, and then brake with my right hand and downshift with the left hand. There’s a few corners here where I feel like I need to start practicing using throttle with both hands a little bit more.”
He will also try to draw on some of his past racing experiences in single-seaters, silhouette DTM touring cars, and even his lone IMSA start to date in an ORECA FLM09 prototype. That includes his IndyCar start at Long Beach back in 2018, his Rookie of the Year-winning campaign which was cut short due to the catastrophic injuries he sustained later that year in a crash at Pocono Raceway.
Up to this point in his comeback, Wickens has only driven front-wheel drive TCR cars. His 2023 TCR title in the Michelin Pilot Challenge highlights just how good he’s been since starting his second racing life reflecting the natural talent that was always clear in his progression through multiple racing categories.
“I feel at home in a rear-wheel-drive car I feel like I never left, in a way,” Wickens said. “That being said, a TCR car, with it being front-wheel drive, a lot of your instability moments are all kind of corner entry and mid-corner. By the time you apply throttle, you’re not really fighting the car. It’s been an interesting adjustment here, trying to maintain a consistent throttle position while the rear is starting to slide or step out a little bit.
That’s taken some getting used to, and I still need to learn that. Sometimes I’ll get a snap oversteer and I’ll accidentally lift off the throttle completely and just bleed loads of lap time.
After completing his first laps around Sebring International Raceway in a specially adapted Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.R, and in between a more rigorous second day of testing at the circuit, Robert Wickens reflected on his first experiences as the countdown to his much-anticipated IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship return with DXDT Racing on the Long Beach street circuit.
“So far, I feel like a kid on Christmas!” said Wickens, whose smile reflected his joy of driving the Corvette GT3 with its cutting-edge hand control system for the first time in real life.
“It’s been a lot of work so far. Yesterday, I got my first taste in the Corvette Z06 GT3.R just before lunch. Got a couple laps in, then we had to stop for a lunch break, and then kind of hit the ground running in the afternoon.
“I felt like we finished in a good place yesterday. And then, thankfully, got a good night’s rest and a lot of planning ahead of today. So far, today has been running super smoothly. But I think the biggest takeaway I have so far is that it feels like the Bosch EBS, and the hand control system that was developed by Pratt Miller, it was like it belonged in this car.
There hasn’t been a single hiccup. It’s like when they designed this Z06 GT3.R, this was always in the plan. It just feels like it belongs in the car.
“Immediately, I felt way more comfortable with the braking feeling and braking sensation than I had in my past, racing in TCR with the Bosch EBS. It was a massive step forward, so hats off to all the men and women at Bosch and also Pratt Miller and DXDT, really, for collaborating to make this all possible.”
But even before driving his new Corvette Z06 GT3.R for the first time in earnest yesterday, Wickens has been preparing at home, using his custom-built racing simulator setup to get ready for driving a GT3 car for the first time in actual competition.
“Racing on my home simulator, not only is it very fun, but it made my dexterity and my resolution of my hand, for throttle application in particular, just stronger and stronger. And I think after driving this Corvette Z06, I feel like the next step for me is actually to start doing more throttle application with my right hand, just to build that muscle memory,” Wickens said, comparing his home simulator to the real car.
“My brake that I use on my home simulator is very different to what we have in the race car, but for throttle purpose, I think it’s very helpful.
“For people that don’t know, I pretty much do 98 percent of my throttle application with my left hand, so that I can freely upshift with my right hand, and then brake with my right hand and downshift with the left hand. There’s a few corners here where I feel like I need to start practicing using throttle with both hands a little bit more.”
He will also try to draw on some of his past racing experiences in single-seaters, silhouette DTM touring cars, and even his lone IMSA start to date in an ORECA FLM09 prototype. That includes his IndyCar start at Long Beach back in 2018, his Rookie of the Year-winning campaign which was cut short due to the catastrophic injuries he sustained later that year in a crash at Pocono Raceway.
Up to this point in his comeback, Wickens has only driven front-wheel drive TCR cars. His 2023 TCR title in the Michelin Pilot Challenge highlights just how good he’s been since starting his second racing life reflecting the natural talent that was always clear in his progression through multiple racing categories.
“I feel at home in a rear-wheel-drive car I feel like I never left, in a way,” Wickens said. “That being said, a TCR car, with it being front-wheel drive, a lot of your instability moments are all kind of corner entry and mid-corner. By the time you apply throttle, you’re not really fighting the car. It’s been an interesting adjustment here, trying to maintain a consistent throttle position while the rear is starting to slide or step out a little bit.
That’s taken some getting used to, and I still need to learn that. Sometimes I’ll get a snap oversteer and I’ll accidentally lift off the throttle completely and just bleed loads of lap time.