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10 Apr 2010, 10:58 (Ref:2669946) | #1 | ||
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Which Series would you pick as your next step?
If you were a karter and you had to make a series pick, which would you pick and why? Based on Cost, performance and etc
Formula BMW- Cost $285,000 (0-60 (3.0 seconds) Top Speed 140mph Formula Renault- Cost $200,000 (Undisclosed) Top Speed 140 mph Formula Ford- Cost $100,000 (3.7 seconds) Top Speed 140mph Formula Vee (1200 in Canada)-(4.2 Seconds) Cost $21,000 Top Speed 140 Mph If i made a mistake please don't freak out, just let me know. Also All cost are based on Canadian Funds. Thank you |
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10 Apr 2010, 11:52 (Ref:2669971) | #2 | ||
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In the UK, I would say to forget FFord (totally irrelevant to any single seaters other than historics) and FVee (doesn't really exist over here). FBMW is more expensive and has less media coverage and public attention (even though it supports some F1 races) than British FRenault. But that's talking about European FBMW.
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10 Apr 2010, 13:26 (Ref:2670051) | #3 | |
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How about FPA? If only I had the money, I would move into that after this season in Superkarts.
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10 Apr 2010, 13:40 (Ref:2670064) | #4 | |||
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Plenty of other series you could mention, BARC Formula Renault and FPA, or are you talking about the ladder in the USA? Presumably you are because your talking dollars. Formula Renault cars exceed 140mph btw. I think FF Duratecs do too at some fast circuits, quicker in a straight line over FBMW. (There's also plenty of other threads about the pros and cons of several single-seater series and budgets etc). |
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10 Apr 2010, 13:44 (Ref:2670068) | #5 | |
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i'd pick fford duratec without any shadow of a doubt, i'd run the car myself with the assistance of an engineer/mechanic and the best data system i could afford, and learn the first year, then spend the money on a championship winning team if i felt it necessary the following year.
the rest will teach you very little that will assist you in being a racing driver in terms of available data, silly regs or track time, or won't give you enough respect for your future career. if i had a big wad of cash or some big sponsor i'd try and get some f3 testing in at the same time though wherever regulations allowed. |
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10 Apr 2010, 13:50 (Ref:2670071) | #6 | ||
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10 Apr 2010, 14:04 (Ref:2670077) | #7 | ||
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It depends on if you honestly expect your career to make it all the way to getting paid to drive top level single seaters, if you do then Renault is definately the best option (or maybe a year of ford then graduate to renault).
Many F1 drivers did it (Kimi went straight from renault to F1) - so it has a good rep Renault have a driver development program & a career ladder (although how much longer that will last is unknown) British series gets live free to air TV If you have a tight budget already, it will only get tighter in more senior championships so you may as well forget it. If you realise that you are talented but the chance of F1 is remote (or your daddy isn't as rich as you might hope), then do a year or 2 of F-Ford then switch into something with a roof. edit - Bella's point about buying test time in something bigger is a good one |
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10 Apr 2010, 23:37 (Ref:2670341) | #8 | ||
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I have a question then.
Im the PR and Marketing director for the Canadian Formula 1200 (Vee) series. How did Formula BMW success so many years? It seems outrageous in terms of pricing and what you really get as a stepping ladder. And does it really come down to the driver? Or is it more of a team? |
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11 Apr 2010, 03:04 (Ref:2670393) | #9 | ||
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1. Marketing hype and slick hospitality(for the low end of the open wheel ladder) 2. Various prizes at times which included F1 tests 3. Backing from BMW 4. Rich dads willing to cough up thinking a "name" series would look better for junior. Nice hospitality and other visibility made it easier to pass the cost off as a tax write off for business dealings and other B2B stuff. Once the "funny money" from the real estate and financial sector vanished so did FBMW. |
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11 Apr 2010, 08:30 (Ref:2670440) | #10 | |||
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11 Apr 2010, 09:55 (Ref:2670515) | #11 | ||
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and now that BMW F1 is gone? Now it just slowly goes away? what a real shame. It just come and goes like no 2morrow
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11 Apr 2010, 10:02 (Ref:2670522) | #12 | ||
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bella and runshaw have it spot on.
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11 Apr 2010, 13:00 (Ref:2670660) | #13 | |
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I have always been a big Formula Ford fan for gaining the basics, but in the UK I think you also have to look at Formula Renault as a great entry level formula. The fact that FR offer so much Quality testing time is a real plus. During the season they have 24+ official exclusive test days. (not crowded general test days) Running with all the competitors that you race against. The learning potential with this system is enormous.
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11 Apr 2010, 18:46 (Ref:2671017) | #14 | |
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but do you still get a half arsed data system that just doesn't give out enough information? there's no point in having billions and billions of test days if you can't go beyond the absolute basics with a driver...
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12 Apr 2010, 11:07 (Ref:2671327) | #15 | ||
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Depending on budget, i would go FF or Formula Renault. FBMW was quite good but it's really expensive, and it's dying now so i wouldn't go in it. A season in BARC FR isn't too bad either, it's basically a cheaper version of FR, it's a good stepping stone.
Since your Canadian, i wouldn't take out the American road either. Skip Barber, F2000, Formula Mazda, which are all quite good. Then they progress into Indycar Lights which i think is getting stronger and stronger each year with a lot of european drivers making the move there now too. You see this year there is like 18 or so cars, and only 2 americans in the series. Quite a number of Canadians and of course now growing strenth in European drivers. |
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14 Apr 2010, 04:06 (Ref:2672442) | #16 | |||
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