The North Carolina Center for Automotive Research (NCCAR) is a non-profit organization that provides automobile manufacturers, motorsports teams, government agencies, and private institutions a state-of-the-art, 2-mile (3.21-km) road course for testing ground and high-performance training facility. The NCCAR track is the main facility of a 155-acres lot surrounded by a forest in the outskirts of Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. The complex also includes a 2-acre area for vehicle dynamics testing (VDA) and 2-mile off-road course for all-terrain vehicles driver training and competitions. There are significant precipitations in Roanoke rapids throughout the year, with ideal temperatures for racing the NCCAR track during the four seasons, as winters only have 4 inches of snow on average per year.
The NCCAR raceway is compatible with both the clockwise and the counterclockwise orientations, providing a smooth asphalt surface and ample grassed run-off areas at both sides of the track, with no curbs. The 0.5-mile (0.8-km) long straightaway contains the Start/Finish line and is the ideal track segment for getting any vehicle to top speed. There are 11 constant radius turns in the circuit, some of them super tight and others super long. The average velocity is around 75 mph (120 km/h) for both orientations.
Racing in the NCCAR road course counterclockwise means facing the tightest turn of the circuit in the beginning, right at the end of the front straightaway. That results in an average lap time of 1:38.1 with an average speed of 75 mph (120 km/h), very similar to the clockwise times. That happens because the last stretch compensates for the initial speed reduction, as racers accelerate to top speed after exiting turn number 8, all the way through the sweeper number nine and the full extension of the main straightaway.