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- 14th May 2016, 21:17 at 9:17 pm #319893Tom_ec1Participant
Going to the race tomorrow but just noticed terms on tickets say no cameras allowed! This is crazy. Anyone been already this weekend and any idea whether I’ll have any difficulty bringing my DSLR in?
5th May 2015, 17:48 at 5:48 pm #297714Tom_ec1ParticipantI note that Autosport have raised their free article limit to 60 per month.
Response to growth of MotorSport.com ?
20th April 2015, 21:43 at 9:43 pm #297260Tom_ec1Participant1. Senna
2. Stewart
3. Hamilton
4. Prost
5. Alonso20th April 2015, 20:34 at 8:34 pm #297258Tom_ec1ParticipantRemember 2009 – the car was terrible for the first-half of the season – then getting pole positions and race wins by the end of the year.
20th April 2015, 17:37 at 5:37 pm #297251Tom_ec1ParticipantAlso, gap from McLaren to Merc this year so far:
Australia: 5.9%
Sepang: 2.4%
Shanghai: 3.7%
Bahrain: 2.7%
(based on fastest lap each weekend)Ignore individual differences and overall trend is moving in right direction…
20th April 2015, 17:35 at 5:35 pm #297250Tom_ec1Participant@PorscheF1 I think the key is the drivers, give Alonso and Button a semi-decent car and they will score points most weekends. Plus the law of diminishing returns – Honda should be able to find bigger gains.
17th January 2015, 10:44 at 10:44 am #290378Tom_ec1ParticipantThanks @MazdaChris. My expectation is broadly the same as yours. However, I would have thought that once you have run an engine on the track at a GP weekend, then you cannot make any changes (apart from the standard proviso about replacing identical parts for safety reasons).
If this is correct, then the four engines that teams use over the season would be materially different, perhaps with significant performance differences between early- and late-seasons (presumably, in that scenario, the early-season version would only be used in practice sessions once the newer versions arrive).
I believe that at the end of the season the teams will formally need to homologate their engine (or by 31 December 2015) in order to meet the (new) literal interpretation of the rules.
Then presumably this process repeats again in 2016, unless they agree to a change in the wording of the regulations.
17th January 2015, 8:04 at 8:04 am #290368Tom_ec1ParticipantBased on the new quotes from Charlie Whiting in the new BBC article below, it sounds like manufacturers can deploy the 32 tokens in phases.
For example, they may use 20 tokens prior to the Australian GP, then another 12 at later point(s).
For me, this still leaves one question unanswered:
– What happens to ‘older’ versions of the engine if new components are introduced mid season?
– For example, if a new version is introduced at the Chinese GP, does that mean (i) the Australian GP engine can no longer be used, (ii) the older engine can be used alongside the newer engine or (iii) the older engine can be upgraded to include the newer partsWhy the FIA are unable to provide a written explanation of the new rule (or better yet, the rule itself) on their website is beyond me.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/30860212
(Sadly for James Allen, this means his website’s lengthy article on the ‘strategy’ of when to use the new engines is wrong! It assumed they had to all be used in one go.)
29th December 2014, 11:52 at 11:52 am #289709Tom_ec1Participant1. Suzuka 1994
2. Bahrain 2014
3. Suzuka 200019th December 2014, 16:49 at 4:49 pm #289277Tom_ec1ParticipantYes. If anyone has found part 2 with English subtitles then please post it here as I am desperate to see it!
14th August 2013, 7:44 at 7:44 am #145822Tom_ec1ParticipantYou seem to get pole and win every race by massive margins. Perhaps you should consider turning some assists off next year? Or are you already on full expert mode, manual gears and all?
19th July 2013, 5:50 at 5:50 am #23911915th July 2013, 12:39 at 12:39 pm #238402Tom_ec1ParticipantDoes anyone know what time the testing will start?
On the website it says: “Please note that there is no timetable for this Event.”
I would guess it’s 9am-4pm, with a break 1-2pm. But grateful if anyone can confirm.
27th June 2013, 16:12 at 4:12 pm #238275Tom_ec1ParticipantI plugged in F1 2012 last night along with wheels/pedals and turned all assists off to see how it compares. Overall, I was very impressed by how similar the handling was (which, in fairness, people like Anthony Davidson has been saying for a while – although he’s on the payroll so I was initially suspicious). The main difference is the physicality, as my wheel doesn’t have force feedback or anything to replicate some of the g-forces – but that’s not something Codemasters have control over so I give them a lot more credit now for building a pretty realistic handling model.
I also have rFactor which has a slightly looser handling model. rFactor F1 cars have noticeably less grip in the high speed corners compared to the Ferrari sim (and F1 2012). I know lots of hard work goes into rFactor and the mods, but I can’t help but feel that in their desire to be super-realistic they have gone too far and increased difficulty to the extent that grip levels are not representative.
@Alex Field
No idea, but it sure is a workout – so you can’t just play in jeans and expect to feel comfortable!
15th January 2013, 15:23 at 3:23 pm #192230Tom_ec1ParticipantFinal result:
Renault – 839 points
Mercedes – 629 points
Ferrari – 552 points
Cosworth – 0 points - AuthorPosts