arrow_back Willow Springs Raceway (Streets - CCW)

Willow Springs Raceway (Streets - CCW) Track Map

360
Direction
Counterclockwise
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Turns
14
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Length
1.56 mi
terrain
Vertical Gain
117 ft
Elevation Profile
track notes

Willow Springs Raceway's Streets circuit counterclockwise configuration delivers 2.897 kilometers through 14 turns representing the traditional direction for this technical low-speed layout, located at America's oldest permanent road course near Rosamond, 129 kilometers north of Los Angeles in Mojave Desert. This CCW routing emphasizes the Streets circuit's driver development and setup-focused character where tight corners and linked combinations arrive in quick succession, creating 75 mph average speeds contrasting Big Willow's 161 mph high-speed desert racing. The counterclockwise direction showcases the Fishbowl section and various technical corners designed for CCW flow, while the circuit's 1987 establishment as setup development tool provides lower-risk environment compared to Big Willow's unforgiving 322 kph speeds where mistakes cost dramatically more than Streets' technical precision-testing layout.

The Streets CCW configuration's character emerges from being the circuit's primary design direction where 14-turn density creates constant brake-turn-throttle cycles. The counterclockwise routing flows naturally through technical sections where corner compression demands smooth inputs rather than aggressive over-driving, rewarding chassis balance and driver finesse over raw power. The late-2021 repaving addressed deteriorating surface quality complaints while maintaining challenging geometry that Streets operators intended for mimicking California street circuit characteristics. Mojave Desert climate creates surface temperatures exceeding 60°C in summer while winter sessions operate in moderate conditions, with extreme temperature swings affecting grip hour-to-hour across 2.9-kilometer technical challenge. The Streets' relationship to Big Willow provides facility versatility—slower vehicles and intermediate drivers utilize Streets for confidence building before attempting Big Willow's intimidating speeds, while experienced drivers use Streets for setup refinement unavailable on the high-speed main circuit. Track day organizations, driving schools, and club racers utilize CCW as standard direction. The configuration particularly demonstrates how dedicated technical circuits serve development purposes unavailable at pure speed venues, where Streets' tight corners and minimal straight-line recovery create environment punishing setup mistakes immediately rather than allowing speed-based compensation across Willow Springs' complementary low-speed technical facility designed specifically for chassis development and driver skill building impossible on Big Willow's desert speed challenge.

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