Pace·note

A data workbench for people who want to understand motorsport.

The complete analysis stack — from timing sheet to published clip, in one surface.

A six-hour broadcast can still leave you without a clear picture of why the race played out the way it did. It's too fast and too dense at the same time. Pacenote is where you go to fill in what the broadcast left out — lap times, pit windows, strategy calls, teammate comparisons — at your own pace.

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"Six hours of broadcast. Still no idea why he lost. Pacenote is where you find out."

Session Analysis

Classification, lap times, gap charts, strategy overlays, and race control in one view. Every session from every round, structured the same way — so you always know where to look.

The Full Weekend

Not just the race. Practice, qualifying, sprint — how the car evolved, who found pace and who didn't, the context behind Sunday that the Sunday broadcast skips over.

Rivals & Teammates

How are the teammates comparing? Where are the rivals gaining? The questions that pile up during a broadcast are the ones Pacenote is built to answer.

Object Views

Every driver, team, and circuit as a structured data object. Follow a storyline across a career, a championship, or a single complicated race.

F1 is too fast and too dense to fully follow in real time. By the end of a six-hour broadcast you still might not know why the race played out the way it did — who really had the pace, when the strategy call changed everything, what the teammates were doing in the midfield.

Pacenote is built for people who want to go slow on the data after going fast on the broadcast. Strategists, serious fans, analysts, and anyone with questions the broadcast didn't answer.

Pacenote is in private beta.

Subscriber access is not yet open. Leave your email and we'll reach out when it does.

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