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18 Jul 2012, 21:27 (Ref:3108210) | #26 | |
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Get the ACO on the phone. Poach those FIA GT1 teams!!!
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18 Jul 2012, 21:53 (Ref:3108225) | #27 | ||
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Eat Sportscars Sleep Sportscars Drink Gulf |
18 Jul 2012, 22:01 (Ref:3108228) | #28 | ||
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The only cars that are truly expensive are the BMW and the Corvette because those are basically homologation specials not customer cars. |
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18 Jul 2012, 22:06 (Ref:3108230) | #29 | |||
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A new Porsche RSR can be yours for a cool 498.000 Euro + VAT. GT3 R comes in at a paltry 304.500 Euros - that's 193.500 Euro cheaper. Last edited by Speed-King; 18 Jul 2012 at 22:15. |
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Ceterum censeo GTE-Am esse delendam. |
18 Jul 2012, 22:16 (Ref:3108236) | #30 | ||
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19 Jul 2012, 03:12 (Ref:3108337) | #31 | ||
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In all honesty, I would be absolutely, without doubt, be all chips in on the WEC no matter where they went and what TV/internet stream deal they had if they chose to include a certain end of the year race that I dare not bring up again for the fear of the inquisition.
With Sebring and Le Mans complete for 2012, so is the WEC. I really don't care. But since the question was asked, to improve it, besides the above, just find some way convince more people to spend money to enter more elite teams, and race in Antarctica for all I care; just give me a way to view it in HD live or replay. |
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19 Jul 2012, 05:38 (Ref:3108370) | #32 | ||
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I would very much like to hear Graham Goodwins remarks on this topic .
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19 Jul 2012, 07:39 (Ref:3108418) | #33 | |
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19 Jul 2012, 08:02 (Ref:3108428) | #34 | |
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The 2011 spec Ferrari was €480,000 sans tax as are the other prices for the GT3 above.The 2012 spec could be less for many reasons including the volume of production and customer loyalty by many many teams like ESM, AF Corse, Krohn, Luxury.
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19 Jul 2012, 08:11 (Ref:3108431) | #35 | |
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480.000€ sans tax, just think that for an italian team (i mean an italian team signed as an italian company in the italian chamber of commerce like AF Corse) will be required more than 580.000€ to buy one car. Actually the only GT3 car that has a price over 400.000 is the AMG sls, the others have around 250-350.000€ as price. The 2012 upgraded specs have a less drag body parts (you can notice the differences on the front hood) a revised electronics and an engine that consumes much less than the 2011 version. Is unprobable that with these updates the car price is lower.
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19 Jul 2012, 18:13 (Ref:3108669) | #36 | |
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Kessel listed a well used GTE-Am ready 458 in November for a cool 450.000€. Rebuilt engine and gearbox, no mention of spares either. Add many hundreds of thousands for spares and rebuilds, another couple of hundred thousand for logistics and preparation. Then you are ready to find out how long it takes you to be immortalised as the person who maimed or killed (insert professional driver(s)'s name here). Or you could buy a cost-capped P2 car for 100k less, find some single-seater drivers who are ready to spend their budget on something more productive than posh Mario-Kart and be competitive in a Pro-Am format that is far more rewarding. Easy choice for me!
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19 Jul 2012, 18:30 (Ref:3108675) | #37 | |
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is the reason why a lot of team run cheaper GT3 cars (cheaper not only in the price but for the maintenance) and only few unbacked teams run GTE cars.
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19 Jul 2012, 21:47 (Ref:3108791) | #38 | |
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19 Jul 2012, 21:52 (Ref:3108792) | #39 | ||
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Yeah, but back then the basic GT3 car was the Porsche GT3 Cup...
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Ceterum censeo GTE-Am esse delendam. |
20 Jul 2012, 00:11 (Ref:3108832) | #40 | ||
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Will help all of ACO racing in addition to the WEC:
WEC should be an LMP1 championship only. The ACO opened the ILMC up to GT's because of the factory involvement in GTE. If you want to make LMP1 a manufacturer class, don't reward manufacturers for going to a different class! If manufacturers want to be World Champions they must compete in LMP1. Piggyback off of existing strong races. If the WEC can put together an eight to twelve car LMP1 field that would be more beneficial to ACO style sports car racing than robbing the ELMS and other ACO championships of entrants by effectively creating a competing championship. It might be too late with the current death knells we're hearing about the ELMS. Round 1 Sebring ALMS Round 2 Spa ELMS Round 3 Le Mans Round 4 Silverstone ELMS Round 5 Japan/China AsLMS Round 6 Petit Le Mans ALMS Go where the crowds are and don't hurt existing events and partners by robbing them of content like factory cars or marquis races. Finally develop some way to reward manufacturers for involvement in your partner series (ALMS, ELMS, AsLMS). The benefit to the WEC is to have perhaps a dozen races outside of the Championship events that draw eyeballs to ACO style racing and the premier brands outside of the short, yet strung out WEC series season. It also rewards your partners (who have helped save/build) the sport of sports car racing which delivers great content to Le Mans and now the WEC year-in, year-out. I don't know if a "to enter the WEC you must have at least one car entered in one of ALMS, AsLMS, or ELMS" would work, but a system that would actually BENEFIT ACO style racing, not just transfer content from one area to another (i.e. the WEC currently) would be cool. Not for the WEC: Take displacement limitations off of the GTE class to help lessen the need for waivers. Further changes to GTE should include the allowance and balancing of hybrid drive trains and more liberal allowance of forced induction where it exists on the road car homologation. Chris |
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20 Jul 2012, 01:13 (Ref:3108842) | #41 | ||
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Quote:
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“Fernando Alonso has revealed that he would like to contest the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the world’s oldest and most famous sports car race" |
20 Jul 2012, 01:34 (Ref:3108843) | #42 | |||
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20 Jul 2012, 01:44 (Ref:3108845) | #43 | |||
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Chris |
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20 Jul 2012, 20:05 (Ref:3109218) | #44 | ||
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Remembering an idea I had for the WTCC, could work for WEC and help the smaller series at the same time. You could have the European rounds of WEC forming the ELMS, US rounds forming part of the ALMS and the Asian rounds forming the AsLMS.
So for example (Using this year as a guideline): 1. Sebring (ALMS) 2. Bahrain (AsLMS) 3. Spa (ELMS) 4. Silverstone (ELMS) 5. Le Mans (WEC - Halo Race) 6. Imola (ELMS) 7. Fuji (AsLMS) 8. Interlagos (ALMS) 9. Petit Le Mans (ALMS) 10. Shanghai (AsLMS) Teams that do the whole calendar are eligible for WEC. That way the smaller championships stay connected to WEC, but at the same time there will be healthy grids for the races. Keeping it to 10 races helps to keep things simple. (Le Mans would only give points for WEC, but the invite system for teams outside of WEC would remain in place.) |
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21 Jul 2012, 00:32 (Ref:3109301) | #45 | |
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^^ I like it.
Also, get a good TV deal. Arrange a deal with the TV channel "Velocity". There isn't much content on there, so they could fit 6-7 hours into their schedule to show the races live. Then have a weekly half hour discussion show telling us about the past races this season, the upcoming races this season, the rumor mill, interviews, etc. Hindy would be a perfect guy for this. Have the manufacturers build 8-10 cars for private teams to run. That way one of two private teams can run Audis or Toyotas and there will be enough cars for backups. If the privateers can't handle diesel or hybrid technology, build them a normal car. Don't be drastically changing the rules every year or every other year. Privateers can't afford to buy new cars every year, so keep the rules mostly the same for 3-4 years. Then when the rules have to be changed, give the teams roughly a 2 year warning in advance, so they can plan ahead. Keep the classes simple so that people can understand them and can tell the difference between the classes. WEC isn't that bad, but most people can't tell the difference between GTE-Pro and GTE-Am. 4 classes is enough. |
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21 Jul 2012, 01:10 (Ref:3109310) | #46 | |||
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WEC series should also have a several of engineering interviews, and demonstrations of cars in different areas such as cabin, engine and technology. The teams are able to present an open factories and competitive operation. Each factory LMP1 team should have three cars and the WEC needs more car manufacturers will hopefully Honda and others come. Private team must also be involved in the competitive spirit at their like in other series and hopefully some private team could challenge the factory team's LMP1 class. |
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“Fernando Alonso has revealed that he would like to contest the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the world’s oldest and most famous sports car race" |
21 Jul 2012, 01:24 (Ref:3109314) | #47 | ||
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I Rosputnik doesn't have a bad idea. However, the older I get, the more I realise, that championships are overrated. There's only two that seriously count, the F1 and WRC titles. Everything else? It's all about winning big races in those series. A "World Sportscar/GT Championship", under any guise, is pointless. What does winning those series mean? Nothing. While it may only be one race and it's not called a "World Championship", the Le Mans 24 hour is , in effect, a World Championship event on it's own, even if it's an unofficial title.
My advice to improve the WEC, is not to have it. That is not having a crack at it. |
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21 Jul 2012, 03:48 (Ref:3109343) | #48 | ||
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I don't care if Le Mans is the big race; just one race isn't enough. I can't say that I'd particularly care about it if the ALMS was only Sebring and Road Atlanta. Part of that is, I wouldn't really know that these things even existed without those other races, and for all I'd know, they're still running Porsche 962s and Jaguar XJRs at Le Mans.
Besides, there is long history of sportscar racing in Britain (Dundrod, Goodwood, Silverstone, Brands Hatch, Oulton Park), France (Montlhery, Reims, Le Mans, Dijon, Paul Ricard), Portugal (Vila Real, Estoril, Algarve), Belgium (Spa), Germany (Nurburgring, Hockenheim), Italy (Mugello, Monza, Enna, Imola, Mille Miglia, Targa Florio, Coppa Acerbo), and you get the picture. So Le Mans is the big one, but these other places do NOT deserve to be shafted just because of that. At least some of these deserve to see the big cars/teams/drivers as well, and I want to see more of that heritage, those great circuits, and those awesome cars than just what a single race can offer. It takes a big series with the pull to get sponsors and TV to get those things, so that those of us who can't just go on a whim to all of those places in person can partake of the sport as well. Elsewhere in the world of racing, CART was FAR MORE to me than merely the Indianapolis 500. After several seasons of a lot more Winston Cup races on network TV, the Daytona 500 isn't quite so standalone anymore, and once the series goes to TNT and ESPN after the first 12-13 races on FOX, I'm not really fired up about it anymore, until the next season starts. Apart from "futbol" and Wimbledon, the typical stick and ball games/sports just don't do it for me. Auto racing fills that gap, period, because, for me, it is the only thing that can, and it has a nice, LONG season to boot. (And let's face it, here in the States, we don't see much of the crazy winter sports I like-skiing, bobsledding, etc-so those don't provide a reliable fall-back either.) |
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21 Jul 2012, 03:57 (Ref:3109344) | #49 | ||
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21 Jul 2012, 11:27 (Ref:3109430) | #50 | |
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I keep having to remind myself that 2012 WEC is not over yet, it is just that we are in a massive chasm of time between Le Mans and Silverstone. Closing that gap up might keep the momentum of the championship stable, rather than the new fan suddenly losing interest after Le Mans.
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