Thunderhill 5 Mile w/Double Bypass
Thunderhill Raceway Park is a motorsport complex located in northern California, an hour and a half drive away from Sacramento. It is without a doubt the most versatile racing facility in America, having several possible layouts such as 2-mile, 3-mile, and 5-mile road courses, as well as a 315’ x 550’ skidpad and a 662’ x 363’ autocross pad. Thunderhill follows designs planned by Steve Crawford, who envisioned building two independent road courses next to one another: a 2.87 miles East track and a West track with 1.99 miles. The 5-mile combination of both racetracks forms the longest road course in the United States.
Thunderhill East started operations in 1993, adding the West course in 1995. The East track takes advantage of the natural elevation changes in the field, having 15 exhilarating turns where drivers often lose sight of what is coming right ahead of them. The straight segments are ample and long enough to allow easy passing between drivers. Thunderhill West is more technical, requiring top driving skills to leverage momentum while taking its ten turns, which come in quick succession. The 25 Hours of Thunderhill, the most famous event of the circuit and longest endurance racing competition in America, takes place on the combined 5-mile road course since 2003.
Thunderhill Raceway Park's 5-Mile configuration with Double Bypass delivers 8.046 kilometers representing North America's longest permanent road course, located near Willows in Northern California where this combined East-West circuit layout utilizes both bypass sections avoiding The Cyclone and other technical variants. This counterclockwise mega-layout combines the 4.62-kilometer East track with 3.2-kilometer West course through connecting bypass roads, creating the continuous 5-mile configuration famous for hosting the 25 Hours of Thunderhill endurance race each December. The Double Bypass designation indicates avoidance of both The Cyclone blind hilltop left-hander on East circuit and the alternative technical sections, choosing faster flowing bypass routes that prioritize sustained speed over maximum technical challenge across Sacramento Valley's ultimate endurance racing venue.
The 5-Mile Double Bypass configuration's character derives from sheer length creating endurance-testing challenge. At 8+ kilometers, full laps require significant time enabling diverse vehicle performance across varied sections—East track's longer straights reward power while West circuit's tighter technical areas test chassis agility, with bypass sections maintaining flow rather than disrupting rhythm through difficult variants. Sacramento Valley's extreme climate creates 45°C+ summer track temperatures contrasting cool December conditions during the 25 Hours endurance classic, while the facility's 1997 East track and 2014 West addition created the combined 5-mile capability. The Double Bypass avoids The Cyclone's blind-crest challenge and other technical variants that slower groups navigate, making this the faster configuration for experienced drivers and competitive endurance events. NASA 25 Hours of Thunderhill, regional endurance series, and advanced track day groups utilize the full 5-mile Double Bypass seeking North America's longest continuous road racing challenge. The configuration particularly demonstrates how massive track length creates unique endurance characteristics—8-kilometer laps mean fewer pit stop cycles, different fuel strategy, extended tire stint planning, and driver stamina requirements unavailable at shorter circuits across California's premier combined-circuit endurance racing facility.