Already I've had a dream where I thought the Indy 500 was tomorrow, and woke up feeling excited, until the crushing reality set in.
![Pantano :pantano:](./images/smilies/icon_pantano.png)
Fetzie on Ferrari wrote:How does a driver hurtling around a race track while they're sous-viding in their overalls have a better understanding of the race than a team of strategy engineers in an air-conditioned room?l
watka wrote:I'm coping by playing Project Cars all winter.
Rob Dylan wrote:Mercedes paying homage to the other W12 chassis by breaking down 30 minutes in
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
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?
UgncreativeUsergname wrote:watka wrote:I'm coping by playing Project Cars all winter.
Similar idea with me. Whether it's actually playing the games or running series, less real racing means more fake racing.
mario wrote:UgncreativeUsergname wrote:watka wrote:I'm coping by playing Project Cars all winter.
Similar idea with me. Whether it's actually playing the games or running series, less real racing means more fake racing.
I'm half surprised that I haven't seen some suggesting perhaps having a few online sim races amongst the forum members in the off season (or perhaps they already have and I've just missed them).
watka wrote:I find it amusing that whilst you're one of the more openly Christian guys here, you are still first and foremost associated with an eye for the ladies!
MCard LOLAdinizintheoven wrote:GOOD CHRISTIANS do not go to jail. EVERYONE ON FORMULA ONE REJECTS should be in jail.
mario wrote:UgncreativeUsergname wrote:watka wrote:I'm coping by playing Project Cars all winter.
Similar idea with me. Whether it's actually playing the games or running series, less real racing means more fake racing.
I'm half surprised that I haven't seen some suggesting perhaps having a few online sim races amongst the forum members in the off season (or perhaps they already have and I've just missed them).
TheFlyingCaterham wrote:I'd certainly be up for doing a couple of races on Gran Turismo, at least.
dr-baker wrote:I think the shock retirement of the reigning world champion and speculation over permutations of his replacement have helped against the deprivation in the run-up to Christmas.
mario wrote:TheFlyingCaterham wrote:I'd certainly be up for doing a couple of races on Gran Turismo, at least.
I'd thought more of PC racing sims, since it seems that everybody and their dog has a copy of something like rFactor or GT Legends (especially the former given the sheer volume of mods developed for it).
mario wrote:I'm half surprised that I haven't seen some suggesting perhaps having a few online sim races amongst the forum members in the off season (or perhaps they already have and I've just missed them).
Mitch Hedberg wrote:I want to be a race car passenger: just a guy who bugs the driver. Say man, can I turn on the radio? You should slow down. Why do we gotta keep going in circles? Man, you really like Tide...
mario wrote:I'm half surprised that I haven't seen some suggesting perhaps having a few online sim races amongst the forum members in the off season (or perhaps they already have and I've just missed them).
Ataxia wrote:A few of us used to race against each other in GT6 a while ago, although it usually resulted in either RRR or peteroli winning. Regardless, it was fun; if people have PS4s, we'll have to try and get something together when GT Sport comes out...whenever the hell that is.
Ataxia wrote:mario wrote:I'm half surprised that I haven't seen some suggesting perhaps having a few online sim races amongst the forum members in the off season (or perhaps they already have and I've just missed them).
A few of us used to race against each other in GT6 a while ago, although it usually resulted in either RRR or peteroli winning. Regardless, it was fun; if people have PS4s, we'll have to try and get something together when GT Sport comes out...whenever the hell that is.
Mario on Gutierrez after the Italian Grand Prix wrote:He's no longer just a bit of a tool, he's the entire tool set.
giraurd wrote:If people were up for some casual PC racing I would vouch for rFactor; yes it's outdated, but the upside is that it will run on even terrible PC's, it functions reliably online, and most importantly it's got a wide variety of tracks and different historical mods that would work as an equalizer. On a forum like this, what more exciting prospect would you imagine than the, uhm, slower guys in a Ferrari 641 or a Williams FW14B, competing against the quicker guys in the cockpit of the beautiful sticker-free Andrea Moda -- or the W12 engined Life that sounds in-game exactly like James Allen once described it...?
Not sure how much the cost is these days, but then again there are *certain* ways to circumvent that as well...
Mario on Gutierrez after the Italian Grand Prix wrote:He's no longer just a bit of a tool, he's the entire tool set.
Miguel98 wrote:giraurd wrote:If people were up for some casual PC racing I would vouch for rFactor; yes it's outdated, but the upside is that it will run on even terrible PC's, it functions reliably online, and most importantly it's got a wide variety of tracks and different historical mods that would work as an equalizer. On a forum like this, what more exciting prospect would you imagine than the, uhm, slower guys in a Ferrari 641 or a Williams FW14B, competing against the quicker guys in the cockpit of the beautiful sticker-free Andrea Moda -- or the W12 engined Life that sounds in-game exactly like James Allen once described it...?
Not sure how much the cost is these days, but then again there are *certain* ways to circumvent that as well...
rFactor can be easilly obtained online for free, and it does bring up with the online mod on - I just don't remember if to setup a random server you had to pay or not (i don't think so).
Doesn't take much to setup a mod as well, and it's playable with a PS3 controller or something alike, for those who don't own a steering wheel.
mario wrote:Miguel98 wrote:giraurd wrote:If people were up for some casual PC racing I would vouch for rFactor; yes it's outdated, but the upside is that it will run on even terrible PC's, it functions reliably online, and most importantly it's got a wide variety of tracks and different historical mods that would work as an equalizer. On a forum like this, what more exciting prospect would you imagine than the, uhm, slower guys in a Ferrari 641 or a Williams FW14B, competing against the quicker guys in the cockpit of the beautiful sticker-free Andrea Moda -- or the W12 engined Life that sounds in-game exactly like James Allen once described it...?
Not sure how much the cost is these days, but then again there are *certain* ways to circumvent that as well...
rFactor can be easilly obtained online for free, and it does bring up with the online mod on - I just don't remember if to setup a random server you had to pay or not (i don't think so).
Doesn't take much to setup a mod as well, and it's playable with a PS3 controller or something alike, for those who don't own a steering wheel.
That was my reasoning towards suggesting something like rFactor, or any of the older gMotor based titles (rFactor, GTR2, GT Legends and the like) - although they are on the old side, that does also mean that the system requirements are fairly light and you do have tonnes of mods out there (although there is quite a lot of garbage out there, there are also excellent mods like Virtua_LM's Group C mod).
You could also choose whether or not you want to go for something like a historical mixed class mod, or perhaps aim to even things up with a league mod (where the cars have the same physics).
Mario on Gutierrez after the Italian Grand Prix wrote:He's no longer just a bit of a tool, he's the entire tool set.
This Could Be You wrote:How about the Touring Car Legends mod for rFactor- it offers a multi-class touring car setup, runs OK on rubbish computers and offers interesting cars (Holden Commodore and Ford Mustangs vs Toyota Corollas and Volvo 240s anyone?) that have... entertaining handling.
Mario on Gutierrez after the Italian Grand Prix wrote:He's no longer just a bit of a tool, he's the entire tool set.
pasta_maldonado wrote:The stewards have recommended that Alan Jones learns to drive.
Nuppiz wrote:While a GP Rejects Prototype C session sounds like a lot of fun (although most of the people would be fighting over who gets to drive the infamous BRM P351), I agree that touring cars offer the best balance between competitiveness and ease of driving. They can also be driven decently enough on a keyboard if no proper controller is available.
pi314159 wrote:I'm really looking forward to the Daytona 24 this year. The 24 Hours of Daytona are set for the most high-profile field in many years. The old tube-frame DPs have finally been sent to their rightful place in historic racing, and their place is taken by the new DPi class - modified LMP2 cars that are, behind LMP1, the second-fastest sportscar category. So far, Cadillac, Mazda and Nissan have committed to the new class, which is combined with unmodified Dallara, Ligier, Oreca and Riley LMP2 cars into the Prototype class. Many famous drivers will make an appearance at Daytona: Rebellion Racing are showing up with an all-star lineup of Brendon Hartley, Sebastien Buemi, Nick Heidfeld and Stephane Sarrazin. DragonSpeed are running Loic Duval. Jeff Gordon will race for Wayne Taylor Racing.
The GT Le Mans class is also worth watching, with four Fords, two Porsches, two Corvettes, two BMWs and a Ferrari expected for Daytona.
mario wrote:Nuppiz wrote:While a GP Rejects Prototype C session sounds like a lot of fun (although most of the people would be fighting over who gets to drive the infamous BRM P351), I agree that touring cars offer the best balance between competitiveness and ease of driving. They can also be driven decently enough on a keyboard if no proper controller is available.
I'd thought more of the one by Virtua_LM, which covers the earlier days of that class and does include a small selection of GT cars as well (the BMW M1, Porsche 928, 930 and 934 IIRC), along with the C2 category cars (i.e. the less powerful prototypes, such as the Alba).
Mario on Gutierrez after the Italian Grand Prix wrote:He's no longer just a bit of a tool, he's the entire tool set.