We took the Clio to Zandvoort for the Open Track Zandvoort double header on Saturday 28th February and Sunday 1st March 2026. It was a great weekend at a track that is just wild in terms of camber and layout.

In the weeks running up to our visit to the Netherlands the car had slowly been put back together and prepped for a long drive and two track days back to back. When the alignment was looked at a few weeks ago it had been pointed out that the aux belt looked slightly damaged. Ethan remedied that within 24 hours.

We packed up the car on Thursday and travelled over to Zandvoort on the Euro Tunnel early on Friday morning. This was the first long journey that we had done in the Clio with a stripped out interior other than completing a few short journeys and me taking the Clio to Donington Park and back. The journey was okay but I spent all of it wearing ear plugs and Ethan spent all of it wearing noise cancelling AirPods. There was not much conversation going on during the long motorway stints.

Neither of us had been to Zandvoort before. I had unintentionally booked a hotel that was directly opposite the track which was very convenient. As we arrived on Friday afternoon we walked over to the circuit as we could see that there were cars on track. It looked like there was a test day running for some GT3 or GT4 cars. The weather at this stage was wet with light but constant drizzle.

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I had been looking at the weather forecasts in the week before the trip and they had suggested that we would get rain over the weekend. On Friday the forecast suggested that there would be rain on both days, but a few hours of dry weather in between. On Saturday morning I opened the curtains at the hotel to see that the weather was looking a bit grim as it was damp outside and there were dark clouds in the sky.

We usually book a garage for a track day but the garages were about £500 per day at Zandvoort so I did not bother. Helpfully I knew someone who had booked a garage and they were happy for us to store out spare wheels and tools in their garage. Later on the second day we sneaked in to an unused garage.

When we got to the track I realised that bringing a Clio 200 to a European track day was a bit like bringing a knife to a gun fight. The range of cars that were on the track day included a few Clio 182s and another Clio 200 on the Saturday. There were about 4 or 5 Porsche GT3 RSs, lots of other Porsche variants, many BMW M cars including a large amount of OG M2s. Virtually every other car at the track day would have been faster and more capable than the Clio 200.

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Zanvoort is a very different circuit to the other tracks that I have been to. It doesn’t feature on mainstream console racing games so to prepare for the track day I watched a few videos on YouTube - there weren’t many that involved Clios and most of them were Clio Cup cars crashing. One track day video showed a Clio 197 doing a last time of 2m 10s so I set that target in my head as the time to equal or beat. It is really difficult to describe the amount of camber that Zandvoort has on certain corners. If you have ever been to the Nurburgring you will know that the Carousel is pretty wild when you drop in to the cambered section and then jump out of it. Shell Oils corner at Oulton has a lot of camber. Zandvoort has large amounts of camber on lots of the corners. The first corner Tarzanbocht is cambered which then takes you in to another set of corners when you reach Hugenholtzbocht which is a 180 degree corner on what feels like 45 degrees of camber. Later in the course when you go through the Audi S Bocht and Hunterud it is another 180 degree corner with excessive amounts of camber. On the last corner Arie Luvenoukbocht you build up speed on the banked corner to then speed down the straight to the start finish line. Videos of the circuit do not give you a real feel for how dramatic the camber changes really are. If you watch videos of cars going round Paddock Hill bend at Brands Hatch or cars going round the Nurburgring they never really capture the elevation changes.

We did the sighting laps and kept the road wheels on that have a combination of PS5 tyres at the front and PS4 tyres at the back. When we finished the two sighting laps I genuinely thought that me driving on Zandvoort in the rain was going to end up in disaster. Despite watching a few videos I did not know the full track layout, there was going to be no grip due to the weather, our car is set up with about 4 degrees of negative camber so is not suited to wet conditions, and the biggest disaster factor that that it was me driving.

I made Ethan drive the first two sessions. Although the day had started wet by mid morning the conditions were getting better as the track was drying out a little and the rain was holding off. I then plucked up the courage to take the Clio out. I had seen Ethan struggle for grip on certain parts of the circuit so I drove even more carefully. Although I survived the first session my driving was erratic as I was trying not to hold up traffic and my lack of confidence showed as I was trying to keep out of the way of others but slowing down at inappropriate points. With a combination of rain and red flags we did 3 sessions in the morning and had an early lunch.

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Red flags were a regular feature at Zandvoort, maybe not as bad as they are at Donington Park but there was a fairly constant stream. Zandvoort seems to operate a different policy to UK circuits that if you break down they give you the chance to recover your vehicle before they get out their recovery truck. On both days I saw a pick up truck that towed a few vehicles off track. I did not see any flat bed recovery trucks operated by the circuit. There was one break down when a Clio 182’s gearbox failed. The pick up truck had tried to tow the car off track but the tow strap snapped twice. Eventually the driver drove is own flatbed recovery truck on the track and winched his Clio on to the back of it before driving it off of the circuit.

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Over lunch on the first day it tipped it down with rain and reset the track conditions to how they had been at the start of the day. We completed another 3 sessions on track but by 4.30pm decided to finish. The weather had not been good enough to get out the semi slicks and even a few people that I spoke to who gone out on semi slicks changed back to road tyres for more grip. We knew that we had a second day on track and when we looked at the weather forecast for Sunday at 5pm on Saturday evening it looked like we would have dry morning with rain by Sunday lunchtime. My driving had improved by the end of the day but I was left unsatisfied as my best lap time was 2m 26 in the wet which was way of my 2m 10s target. Also, I felt like the Clio had a lot more to offer if we could get some dry track time.

After a good meal and a good sleep we got up on Sunday morning to see the sun and what looked like dry conditions. There was still some moisture on the ground but lots of cars lapping would be enough to dry the track out. After our very short journey to the track we swapped the road wheels for the track wheels which had a set of Direzzas on that had only done about 25 easy laps at Donington Park with a dodgy gearbox meaning they were brand new other than being scrubbed in. The Gaz Golds were stiffened up slightly and tyre pressures were set. We were going to make the most of the weather.

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Ethan did the first session on the second day. He set a reference lap of 2m 17s. It was obvious that the Clio had so much more grip with drier weather and semi slicks. The Clio’s negative camber was working. I did the second session and for once managed to beat Ethan’s time by a few hundredths. By the third session Ethan was flying with a 2m 07s lap time. I did the last session before lunch and managed to get closer to my arbitrary target time with a 2m 11s lap time. I came in from this session feeling that I was taking the right lines in every corner and I could see where I could improve - mainly braking less to carry more speed.

Although the weather forecast suggested that we would get rain around 12pm it held off until 4pm.

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Ethan did his fastest session after lunch with a 2m 05s lap time. His afternoon sessions were good as he was clearly pushing more capable cars around the track who then conceded that they were not as fast in the corners even if they should be faster in a straight line.

My best session was also in the afternoon when I reached my target lap time of 2m 10s. At this point I felt like I had “completed” Zandvoort. It was my best driving of the weekend.

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Ethan did his last session about 3pm and I went out again just before 4pm. After doing about 2 laps there was some light rain and I decided that I was ready to finish for the day. The car was still in one piece, I had enjoyed my time on track, and I was going to tempt fate by pushing the car in weather conditions that meant less grip. After coming in to the paddock the rain cleared up but I had still had enough.

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The Clio has survived back to back track days, and the gearbox has worked. They say that patience is a virtue and being patient with the gearbox is probably the way forward. Rather than trying to rush gear changes we both accept that the Clio will change gear when it is ready. Everything on the car seems to be okay. The arch liners in the front are starting to lose bigger and bigger chunks after each track day. The tyres still have a lot of life left in them.

If you have the chance to do a track day at Zandvoort then do it. It is an amazing track and I may well go back there in the future.

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Phil and some of his buddies were there in November a couple of times already and there was no issue with the weather from what I know. So you can get lucky.
 
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We went to Donington Park yesterday for the unofficial Renault Sport track day on 16.03.2026. It was a Javelin day track on the National circuit layout.

The car had finished two days at Zandvoort relatively unscathed. An AeroCatch bolt was replaced to secure a bonnet pin in place that we had lost before arriving in Zandvoort, and the front part of the front arch liners were finally removed as they were starting to be more of a danger than help due to the amount they had worn away. These prep tasks were done at home before we set off for Donington.

We travelled up to Donington Park the night before and during the journey the dashboard suddenly came up with a "Stop" and "Low battery" warning. After stopping and restarting the car the warning message went away. We continued driving up the M1 and then the message came back, another message later came on of Check ESP. Each time we stopped and power cycled the car the warning messages would disappear. We decided that the alternator was dying very slowly. During the rest of the journey the low battery message would come on for a period of time and then go off, and sometimes just the check ESP warning would come on with the service spanner light. There was not much we could do to fix the issue so we just hoped that the alternator would die slowly and be alright for the track day.

We stayed at the Days Inn hotel on the services close to Donington Park. I managed to get a twin room for £35 on a Sunday night that I thought was very cheap. Some other track day participants were also at the accommodation.

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On the morning of the track day @EthanMenace decided that the front brake pads were too low and put in a fresh set of DS 1.11s just before the sighting laps. There was no time to bed in the brake pads so that was just done on track. There was about 2 to 3mm left on the old pads. Neither of us wanted to use up all of the pads and get down to bare metal on track.

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The weather forecast for weeks had predicted rain throughout the day, but on Monday the weather forecast was that it would be dryish in the morning and then rain in the afternoon. It started out bright in the morning and the weather was actually okay for the day. The track was wet for the first hour or so and then dried out.

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There was a huge number of Clios and Meganes booked on to the track day, most of the cars there were Clio 197/200s or Megane 250/265/275s. There were a few Megane 225s, Clio 200Ts and Clio 172/182s. I do not think that I have seen so many liquid yellow cars gathered together in the same place before. The only Renault Sport colour missing for a 197/200 was alien green. Other cars booked on the track day like Porsches and Caterfields were massively outnumbered.

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Despite the track being damp we threw on the Direzzas and did the sighting laps and Ethan did the first session. It became clear that the track was really busy and that was causing people to get stuck in traffic with similar powered cars so there was not much overtaking going or, or opportunities for overtaking. It felt like the day could be full of parade laps.

I did the second session - well I say session but I basically went out and spun the car at the chicane approaching the start finish line when I lost the back end. I failed to account for the tyres not being up to temperature and the track still being slightly damp. Rookie error. I showed everyone what not to do.

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The morning got better as the traffic on track calmed down slightly. We both enjoyed some good sessions battling with other Clios and Meganes. We got through 5 sessions in the morning, including my one lap "special" session. In the early dry sessions we both set some sensible lap times.

The track day was good. There were lots of cars on track, in the garages and paddock that I recognised and follow on social media. It was nice to see some of these Clios and Megane's in real life.

The rain that had been forecast arrived about 2pm. But, it was just light rain that did not really cause any issues as it was so light the track stayed pretty dry and there was only a slight drop in overall grip. The rain seemed to scare a lot of people off and the paddock cleared out pretty quickly leaving the track clear for some more good sessions. There was some heavier rain about 4pm but that was still not enough to change the track conditions too much.

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We managed a total of 10 sessions throughout the day and the best sessions were in the afternoon when there was less traffic on track but enough traffic to chase, follow, and sometimes pass other similar cars.

The Clio performed well all day. Despite the alternator slowly dying - it lasted the day and the journey home.

Donington Park is famous for red flags and yesterday did not disappoint. You sometimes forget when you book a track day at Donington Park that you will get twice as many red flags than you do anywhere else. There were probably 12 red flags yesterday with cars breaking down, blowing up, or ending up in places they had to be recovered from.

The Clio has suffered from "The Curse of Donington" in recent years. At Donington we have had gearboxes fail, brake discs crack and other failures that have ruined our day. I am pleased to report that the Clio managed to get through the track day with no real problems or failures. Other than sorting out the alternator the Clio is ready to be booked on to and do another track day.
 
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Here are five of the best photos from Donington. Rob Baxter was taking photos on Monday - he knows how to take a good car photo. There were over a hundred photos of our Clio.

Shots like this with multiple Clios in a train were easy to capture with so many Clios on track.

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This was a rare sight - a non Renault car in the photo.

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The tyre stack at the chicane had been moved away from the racing line allowing us to take liberties with track limits.

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