2008 Formula 1 Discussion
Faced with Lombard Street, they'd probably clear the brush and straight-line it.
Re street courses: When the Champ Cars were racing in St. Louis, the drivers uniformly complained about the rough streets, even though they had been freshly paved.
I won 3-day tickets to the '08 Champ Car race here in Houston. No one showed up. There's talk of a race in '09, which is the only way I can redeem the tickets.
Re street courses: When the Champ Cars were racing in St. Louis, the drivers uniformly complained about the rough streets, even though they had been freshly paved.
I won 3-day tickets to the '08 Champ Car race here in Houston. No one showed up. There's talk of a race in '09, which is the only way I can redeem the tickets.
I suppose the only way to run F1 in San Fran and still use the real twisties (like Lombard) would be to swap the regular cars for the karts most of them learned how to drive in.....or maybe Mustangs. F1 drivers racing in Mustangs.....now that sounds like real entertainment! But enough of this levity.
I've seen good street circuits, but not many. Most are either very dangerous or look like racing through concrete canyons lined with lots of armco and ugly fencing, or both. I think Singapore might be one of the good ones. I just hope they don't use the perceived success of Singapore to justify more of them, because I can't see getting many of them right.
-----------------
edit: I changed my mind -- forget the Mustangs and make it MINI Coopers!
I've seen good street circuits, but not many. Most are either very dangerous or look like racing through concrete canyons lined with lots of armco and ugly fencing, or both. I think Singapore might be one of the good ones. I just hope they don't use the perceived success of Singapore to justify more of them, because I can't see getting many of them right.
-----------------
edit: I changed my mind -- forget the Mustangs and make it MINI Coopers!
Last edited by kurvhugr; Sep 29, 2008 at 04:47 PM.
Massa calls for safety car rethink.
Waaaaaah! Luck is part of the game. It would be impossible to remove it from the equasion.
Waaaaaah! Luck is part of the game. It would be impossible to remove it from the equasion.
Massa calls for safety car rethink.
Waaaaaah! Luck is part of the game. It would be impossible to remove it from the equasion.
Waaaaaah! Luck is part of the game. It would be impossible to remove it from the equasion.
Plans for the Donington Park redevelopment look interesting.
http://www.grandprix.com/jpeg/misc/d...anoct08-lg.jpg
However, according to this article, still no word on where the $175 million will come from.....
http://www.grandprix.com/jpeg/misc/d...anoct08-lg.jpg
However, according to this article, still no word on where the $175 million will come from.....
Holy crap.
Canadian GP dropped for 2009.
I wonder if track conditions had anything to do with this or if it was because it's the only stop in North America?
This sucks.
Canadian GP dropped for 2009.
I wonder if track conditions had anything to do with this or if it was because it's the only stop in North America?
This sucks.
F1 is just getting less and less interesting all the time. Meanwhile, sports car racing -- with the ALMS and Speed World Challenge -- is getting better. I just returned from Petit Le Mans where ALMS had a starting field of 38 entries. Not to mention ALMS and Speed/SCCA doesn't hate having fans in attendance.
At this point I feel like the rest of the world can have F1. Good riddance to it from North America.
At this point I feel like the rest of the world can have F1. Good riddance to it from North America.
F1 has more problems than just cost. It's not very fan friendly, it's overly political, application of the rules is ambiguous and uneven, and there just isn't a whole lot of action much of the time. It started to become a big bore.
Next year GT2 will get the addition of Corvette Racing (moving over from GT1) and one or two teams fielding the BMW M3 GTR. Two of the Acura teams will move up from LMP2 to LMP1. GT1 will effectively disappear, but the remaining three classes will all be very strong and competitive.
I can't wait for Sebring.
What's more likely is we'll see F1 preempted for practice sessions for some NASCAR feeder series no sober person cares about. They already do that for supplemental F1 programming. Put me down for "Speed Channel Sucks."
I agree. Managing slower/faster traffic adds a terrific component to the racing. It's the sports car way.
I agree. Managing slower/faster traffic adds a terrific component to the racing. It's the sports car way.
Over in the RSR motorsports thead there is mention of more ST class coverage for the Koni series, so hopefully we'll get more sports car coverage in general on speed next year.
I think that the regenerative breaking is our best hope to make F1 racing more interesting in the near future. Experience in the field leans toward the larger manufactures, but if someone can turn it into a real advantage it would probably change the field considerably. Not to mention, it would be really nice to have the technology on our own cars eventually, if applied in the same manner =)
I think that the regenerative breaking is our best hope to make F1 racing more interesting in the near future. Experience in the field leans toward the larger manufactures, but if someone can turn it into a real advantage it would probably change the field considerably. Not to mention, it would be really nice to have the technology on our own cars eventually, if applied in the same manner =)


