Roebling Road
Roebling Road is an unusual circuit, in so much as it doesn't allow spectators. In spite of this, the track is busy, hosting events of one sort or another, most days of the year.
The track was originally financed and owned by Robert Roebling, great grandson of John A. Roebling, the designer of the Brooklyn Bridge. Based near Savannah, Georgia, it was opened in August 1958, and named the Savannah International Raceway. Unfortunately the organisers found it difficult to attract race entries, and the circuit suffered from having an overly abrasive surface, being built to the same standards as Highway 17, which was under construction nearby.
In 1976 the circuit was renamed Roebling Road, the track was later resurfaced, and in 1992 it was sold to the Buccaneer region of the S.C.C.A., and has continued under it's ownership to the present day.
SCX-5030 Roebling Road

| C8204 | R3 | x10 |
| C8205 | S | x16 |
| C8200 | 1/4S | x2 |
| C8235 | R4 | x15 |
| C8234 | 1/2 R2 | x1 |
| C8206 | R2 | x7 |
| C8207 | 1/2S | x3 |