Captain Hammer wrote:I'm sober now.
Im drunk now Cap'n.
Captain Hammer wrote:I'm sober now.
Captain Hammer wrote:Um, there's 20 official turns. 11 of them are left-handers: turns 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 15, 19 and 20.
Altough the first turn is a left-hander. That's uncommon. Although it's also anti-clockwise; a left-hand first turn on a clockwise circuit is really rare. Magny-Cours is the only one I know of.
JeremyMcClean wrote:Istanbul?
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
P_Friesacher wrote:JeremyMcClean wrote:Istanbul?
Is anti-clockwise.
However, I think the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve fits the description. And 1990ies Monza.
And Zolder, I think.
Captain Hammer wrote:The point is that it's very uncommon to see a clockwise configuration with a left-hander as the first corner.
JeremyMcClean wrote:Lewis Hamilton is a better track designer than Hermann Tilke!
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
Captain Hammer wrote:JeremyMcClean wrote:Lewis Hamilton is a better track designer than Hermann Tilke!
Actually ... he's not. Hamilton's circuit is almost entirely flat out; there's only two braking points in a lap and there is nowhere to overtake. All it will do is produce processional races. I recall reading someone on another forum was trying to make it in rFactor, but abandoned it after a series of early tests where no-one passed anyone else.
JeremyMcClean wrote:Captain Hammer wrote:JeremyMcClean wrote:Lewis Hamilton is a better track designer than Hermann Tilke!
Actually ... he's not. Hamilton's circuit is almost entirely flat out; there's only two braking points in a lap and there is nowhere to overtake. All it will do is produce processional races. I recall reading someone on another forum was trying to make it in rFactor, but abandoned it after a series of early tests where no-one passed anyone else.
Hmm... you do have a good point. It's better than Singabore, though. Just saying....
Phoenix wrote:"Read F1 Rejects, it never lies"
Jeroen Krautmeir wrote:Krautmeir Engineering meanwhile had something like this in mind.
resir014 wrote:That Austin track looks awful.
I could suggest:
"For example, nowadays you need the run-off areas. The FIA will not accept tracks without the run-off. Having wide run-offs is not ideal for the view - and is very different from the old tracks where the guardrail was right by the edge of the track. It used to be completely different, but in our times it is not possible to do that any more."
"Then, remember, most track owners and investors want to have motorcycles too. And motorcycles have to have even more run-off, and different types. And some corners where for F1 or cars you do not need any run off, for motorcycles you need it. Then people criticise it and say, 'it is stupid to have this run off!'"
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
Captain Hammer wrote:Is.
watka wrote:Jeroen Krautmeir wrote:Krautmeir Engineering meanwhile had something like this in mind.
Isn't that St Jovite? If it is, it's in Canada.
Jeroen Krautmeir wrote:watka wrote:Jeroen Krautmeir wrote:Krautmeir Engineering meanwhile had something like this in mind.
Isn't that St Jovite? If it is, it's in Canada.
Part of it is. Actually, not much.
JeremyMcClean wrote:
Part of it is? It is cross-border? That's a weird location.
If so, then wherether country the pit lane is, that's the country of the grand prix. Or we can just throw in the title "North American Grand Prix" and get on with it.
That is a good idea, though.
madmark1974 wrote:JeremyMcClean wrote:
Part of it is? It is cross-border? That's a weird location.
If so, then wherether country the pit lane is, that's the country of the grand prix. Or we can just throw in the title "North American Grand Prix" and get on with it.
That is a good idea, though.
I also like that idea - here's my suggestion, a street race around Niagara Falls, you could cross over the river in which the falls are, which basically forms the USA/Canada border.
If Webber gets airborne again like at the Valencia street track, things could get very interesting ... Never mind going over the falls in a barrel .. A (can of) Red Bull would be better!
kevinbotz wrote:Cantonese is a completely nonsensical f*cking alien language masquerading as some grossly bastardised form of Chinese
Gonzo wrote:Wasn't there some sort of communisim in the East part of Germany?
ADx_Wales wrote:Maybe I've missed this suggestion/rumour earlier in the thread, but only one person (the owner) WANTS this race to be in Austin, the other people who live in Austin dont...
ADx_Wales wrote:BANANA!!!! CARLOS THAT IS BATHPLUGGING GENIUS!!!...Hurt myself laughing.
ADx_Wales wrote:Well if you lived under a rock, like I do, the things you found funny years ago I'd be laughing my blown diffuser off today.
ADx_Wales wrote:More Rocks than Sheep before anyone else chips in with their own personal cheap shots
thehemogoblin wrote:ADx_Wales wrote:More Rocks than Sheep before anyone else chips in with their own personal cheap shots
Your so-called "country" is horrible at every sport.
DonTirri wrote:thehemogoblin wrote:ADx_Wales wrote:More Rocks than Sheep before anyone else chips in with their own personal cheap shots
Your so-called "country" is horrible at every sport.
Horrible enough to ride the coattails of the English and the Scottish (and to a degree, the northern irish) in any major sport outside Football