15 minute sessions with warm up and cool down laps so 10 minutes to the wall, 30 min breaks, 8 sessions/day.
After seeing what that did to my tires and brake pads I gotta wonder what else I need to upgrade to keep the car happy.
10mins of balls-to-the-wall is actually not too bad, especially if they give you a couple of cool down laps, with lots of air flow. One good thing with Stinger is that all 3 engines are equipped with engine oil coolers.
3.3T shows an OEM ATF cooler, though I'm not sure if every GT trim has it. If yours has one, you're much better off. Regardless, there are always
aftermarket oil cooler that can be added on. IMO, if a guy is committed to regular track days, keeping the fluids cool is a far better mitigation than changing fluids frequently.
Would replacing the service shop oil (I can only assume they use 5w30 synth) with 5w40 at the beginning of summer/track season be a better option? Then do a service shop oil job before the weather cools?
Since you live up in Canada, I'd say that might work, depending on how many miles you put on your car each season.
What's the best way to get an ATF temp reading? Would an OBD2
scanner show that? Not sure how to handle an ATF schedule when tracking a car.
Most OBD2 scanners should show Transmission Oil Temp. I use Torque Pro, and I had to buy a Hyundai/Kia plug-in to show ATF temp, but it was only a few dollars, so no biggie. If you have a piggie-back controller like JB4, then you're GTG.
The most important thing is to monitor all your temps. Then base your mitigation strategy based on what you see. As I mentioned, if your
3.3T has an ATF cooler and you live up in North with cool Summers, you might be okay. Even then, if this were my car, I would go early on the ATF flush interval... and I definitely not cheap out on changing the filter that is built-in to the pan.
FWIW, track prep goes beyond just engine oil and ATF oil. There are a whole lot of other attention points:
1. Brake fluid. This is arguably the most important fluid not to cheap out on frequent changing. Old fluids have lower wet boiling temp that would cause vapor lock when your brake calipers experience high temp at the track. We live in hot and humid south, flushing our track-active cars before start of each season is an absolute must. Up north... well, your call. There are test strips you can get, if you want a justification for not flushing frequently.
2. Brake pads. There are plenty of other threads on this topic, so I won't elaborate here.
3. Differential. If your car does not have LSD, I highly recommend you retrofit one on. Stinger/
G70's mechanical LSD does not have a diff oil cooler, so feel free to beat on this dead horse some more. Diff oil take less than a qt of gear oil, so there is little excuse not to err on the conservative side.
4. Alignment. If you want to track your car, do yourself a favor and find a shop that offer lifetime alignment policy. I got mine for less than $200, which is not a lot more than a single alignment check, and for sure way cheaper than track tires.
5. Tires. If you are gonna track regularly, dedicated track hoops will make a lot more sense than trying to run street tires on the track, or worse... risk track tires on the street.