Good Advice guys, another reason to take it in steps as suggested and insisted by driving schools, is your eyes are lens, and your ears are microphones to your brain, so your brain/computer needs to upgrade it's software so it can get caught up to all that new input coming at it that fast. Most drivers that drove a quick/fast dragster for the 1'st time maybe drove a fast door car , but not too many have ever driven a 9 second race car. So let your software upgrade your brain for all that new input coming faster than anything it's seen before.
And yes, each time down the track you will feel more in control, you will have less visual distortions. Shut-her down if you even have a hint the car is ahead of you.
My 1'st time driving a FED C/D it all happened too fast. now that was in 1962, with a flagman, and before VHT was even invented.
Each run after the first run I felt more in control, to the point I could pick which cone I wanted to shut it off.
One of my new JrFuel guys has been building his early Hemi on a Pro-stock truck block [ Real Trick combo] drove an A/FD about 10 or 15 years ago, so he figured a JF car would be easy. He has taken his car down the track 5 or 6 times, but not to the finish line, yet, and I think his JrFuel is leaving much harder than his A Fuel can did 10-15 years ago. i know our JF car can run 60 foots 1.01 to 1.06.
So lesson here is to take it easy and in steps. And don't have your tune-up set on kill, you want laps, seat time, so you can help decide on changes to improve your performance.
Have Fun and race Smart.
Jon Hansen