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One of the most organized Mini-Z clubs in the Pacific Northwest. Participates in the HFAY international online points series. Monday evening and Saturday sessions, $10 per visit.

How Club Racing Works

Club nights at PDX Mini-Z typically follow the standard Mini-Z format: open practice to warm up and dial in your car, qualifying heats to seed the grid, then main events. Experienced members usually set up in the same pits each week -- introduce yourself. The Mini-Z community is small enough that regulars will notice a new face and most of them will tell you exactly what tire is working on the track tonight.

The club races at PDX Mini-Z in Portland, OR. Current schedule: Monday evenings, $10 per session; Saturday day events.

Racing Classes

PDX Mini-Z runs the following classes at their home venue: stock, modified. If you're new to club racing, start in Stock class. The spec rules keep the cars close, which means your lap times actually reflect how well you drive, not how much you've spent on the car.

Running stock first teaches you the track and the format without the noise of trying to dial in a modified setup at the same time. Once you're consistently in the front half of the grid in stock, you'll have the baseline to evaluate whether a modified class makes sense for your goals.

How to Join

Most Mini-Z clubs don't require a formal membership application to show up -- you can usually walk in on a club night, pay the track fee, and race. If PDX Mini-Z has a membership structure with perks like unlimited practice or a reduced per-race fee, it's typically worth it after your third or fourth visit.

The fastest way to get connected is to join the club's Facebook group or contact them directly. Ask what class is most active right now and whether there are loaner cars available if you don't have a car yet. Most established clubs have a few loaners for new members to try before they commit to buying.

Reach out via the club website, or their Facebook group .

New to Club Racing?

If this is your first time at a club race night, read Your First Race Night before you go. It covers what happens at sign-in, how the heat structure works, marshal rail etiquette, and what not to do in your first qualifying heat. Short read, saves you from the most common new-racer mistakes.