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11 Sep 2013, 07:08 (Ref:3301888) | #76 | |||
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Why you feel the need to continually beat on about the look of the car, whilst proclaiming the apocalypse I am unsure. The car is what it is and its what the series has atleast for the forseeable future. |
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Upon entry into the Bathurst 1000, it should be mandatory to view the compelling "Moffat - Man and the Mountain" film |
11 Sep 2013, 13:44 (Ref:3302114) | #77 | |||
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I personally think the look of the car has a negative affect but that aside. The problem the teams face is two fold, firstly the chassis costs much than originally foreseen and secondly spare parts have to be purchased from Dallara, because of the deal the IRL did with them, at a much higher cost than going to a 3rd party and this makes it extremely hard, especially for the smaller teams to operate, within their budgets. |
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"If you're not winning you're not trying." Colin Chapman. |
12 Sep 2013, 02:47 (Ref:3302514) | #78 | ||
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Did the chassis cost change? From memory it was stable however the spare parts were the concern of the teams.
The cost of operating the current car is less that the previous car & less that what it would be in an open formula. By no means am I suggesting this the best structure long term for the series, however the current situation has reduced costs, just not to the extent that was planned or presented to teams in 2011. Last edited by D.R.T.; 12 Sep 2013 at 03:02. |
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Upon entry into the Bathurst 1000, it should be mandatory to view the compelling "Moffat - Man and the Mountain" film |
13 Sep 2013, 17:50 (Ref:3303484) | #79 | |||
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http://www.crash.net/indycar/news/18...aero_kits.html, It says at the bottom of the fifth paragraph, ''the DW12 chassis was meant to cost around $385,000 but in practice has come in at nearer $600,000.'' |
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"If you're not winning you're not trying." Colin Chapman. |
15 Sep 2013, 05:50 (Ref:3304101) | #80 | |
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Show an event like the 2013 Baltimore race or Sonoma to a bunch of F1 fans, and almost all of them will probably ask, "Why would I want to watch something like this ever again?". Showing a race where half of time is spent under yellow is like begging the viewer to change the channel. What other things look terrible and could be better? Boring street courses where cars bounce like basketballs on uneven pavement and where cars have nowhere to go but to crash into the walls? Amateurish drivers who constantly crash into each other and make Maldonado look like a saint? The frequent yellows that turn everyone's strategy into a lottery by the end of race? After so many yellows, at the end of day I often have a hard time seeing whether the front runners are there because they were fast, or maybe they just got lucky with the yellows coming at the right time. Forget the ugly cars. I could live with them. There is just no good flow to many of IndyCars races. This was the case before 2012 as well. Solution? Give us more road courses in the schedule. Also, do something about full course cautions. Learn something from F1's local yellows.
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15 Sep 2013, 11:02 (Ref:3304176) | #81 | ||
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The Baltimore race was fine. They've stacked up at Long Beach since the glory years and they stacked up here. It's not pretty perhaps but it's no big deal either.
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If I had asked my customer what they wanted, they would've said a faster horse. -Henry Ford |
15 Sep 2013, 12:36 (Ref:3304213) | #82 | |||
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"If you're not winning you're not trying." Colin Chapman. |
15 Sep 2013, 12:40 (Ref:3304215) | #83 | |||
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Could not have said it better myself. |
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15 Sep 2013, 12:46 (Ref:3304219) | #84 | |||
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Sonoma and Baltimore were two of the very worst Indy Car/Champ Car races I have ever seen in my 35 some odd years of watching North American top-tier open wheel racing, and they came back-to-back. Imagine someone watching Sonoma for the first time, and a seasoned Indy Car fan says to them "ah that was a fluky race, it will be much better next weekend" and then you show Baltimore to them!!!!! Yikes. New fan permanently lost. If you want to show a new fan how exciting this sport can be, show them the last couple of Indy 500's. Or show them the set up and pass of Kimball on Pagenaud at Mid-Ohio. Or show them how Hinch set up Sato on the last lap at Sao Paulo (although in all fairness, it was a lot of yellow flags too). But, those are the moments that show Indy Car at it's best. Defiinitely not Sonoma and Baltimore!! |
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15 Sep 2013, 12:59 (Ref:3304226) | #85 | |||
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"If you're not winning you're not trying." Colin Chapman. |
15 Sep 2013, 14:54 (Ref:3304261) | #86 | |||
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I wouldn't be able to convince someone to watch Indycar because the cars look like plastic life boats on wheels. I switched onto Indycar on an F1 weekend recently with my mind distracted with other things and it took a good few seconds to adjust to the fact that these aren't dizzy GP2 cars but Indycars. That's very telling. When I first got into Indycars during the 80's, I was watching F1 and stumbled upon Indycar in the evening and my head exploded! F1 was a tough turbo sport in the 80's. Real mean machines but this Indycar had all F1 had but with even more teeth and variety! If I had stumbled onto these plastic things today never having seen Indycar, I'd see some junior single seater-esque formula and I'd switch over without a second thought. Until these Indycars look like beasts and aim to look more muscular and fierce than F1 so as to turn the heads of fans who have never seen the sport, Indycar isn't going anywhere IMO. |
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If I had asked my customer what they wanted, they would've said a faster horse. -Henry Ford |
16 Sep 2013, 03:10 (Ref:3304515) | #87 | |||
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These two races have made Indy Car look like an absolute laughingstock the past few weeks. If you want to grow the popularity of current Indy Car racing, these two races were not the way to do it. |
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16 Sep 2013, 03:47 (Ref:3304520) | #88 | ||
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American Racing seems to have a lot more safety car periods (full course cautions) than Europe. It's really not so bad they have them so much, but what really kills me is why they always last so long. There seems to be no urgency most of the time clearing a wreck or whatever. Then when it is finally clear, instead of going green again, they have like 10 minutes behind the safety car. It's ridiculous.
I also can't stand how ugly the cars are. The fronts aren't bad looking, but the rears are terrible. It's not open wheel at all, they may as well put full fenders on the cars. If these cars were racing when I was a kid, I would have never become a fan of the racing. |
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19 Sep 2013, 00:14 (Ref:3305951) | #89 | ||
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And yet Will Power, also a member of the 2007 Champ Car field, is rocking the world. The difference is that Power has a Penske-prepared car and Bourdais doesn't, and Allmendinger wasn't trying all that hard because he wanted back into NASCAR. Put Bourdais in a Penske car and he'd own the world, too.
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19 Sep 2013, 12:19 (Ref:3306149) | #90 | ||
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Bourdais would've been a great left field choice for that third Penske seat. Anyhow.
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If I had asked my customer what they wanted, they would've said a faster horse. -Henry Ford |
20 Sep 2013, 18:56 (Ref:3306735) | #91 | ||
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Indeed he woulda been, but that's Montoya's ride now, and JPM if he can get himself into shape and really want it could do some real damage to the established order in a Penske car. And don't think the boys at Ganassi and Andretti don't know it, either - they know who Juan Pablo Montoya is and what he can do. It'll be interesting how confident they are about beating Penske.
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20 Sep 2013, 22:30 (Ref:3306835) | #92 | |||
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2 Oct 2013, 14:54 (Ref:3311889) | #93 | ||
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Any news on a new title sponsor for next year?
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Roger Penske to Paul Tracy about the Indy 500: "We both won it but I've got the trophy" |
3 Oct 2013, 01:22 (Ref:3312057) | #94 | |||
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I have to agree with this.
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It's great to be here! |
3 Oct 2013, 12:27 (Ref:3312311) | #95 | ||
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Everyone really agrees with that article except the sports leaders [before Walker antway] and they should be moving gently but unwaveringly in that direction.
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If I had asked my customer what they wanted, they would've said a faster horse. -Henry Ford |
3 Oct 2013, 12:43 (Ref:3312322) | #96 | ||
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They are going to have to because I don't see how the series can remain sustainable, especially with falling TV advertising revenue and sponsors either leaving, like series sponsor Izod or reducing their presence and funding like Go-Daddy.
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"If you're not winning you're not trying." Colin Chapman. |
4 Oct 2013, 04:15 (Ref:3312607) | #97 | |
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There are probably only 2-3 teams that can afford the costs associated with an open formula. The rest will struggle with bringing the car to a race, much less staying competitive. I have no problem with the current spec formula, but custom aero kits (as was originally planned) would have been appreciated. I really liked the first leg of the championship up to and including the 500, but something went horribly wrong after it. The Texas snooze-fest. The Detroit weekend a bit too long, the yellow-fest at Sonoma and the crashfest at Baltimore.
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4 Oct 2013, 10:13 (Ref:3312686) | #98 | |||
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"If you're not winning you're not trying." Colin Chapman. |
6 Oct 2013, 00:02 (Ref:3313327) | #99 | ||
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Open chassis like in F1 with continual development wouldn't work, but open chassis with no development would work. Big teams could maybe even construct their own chassis if they wanted, or at least aero kit onto their purchased chassis. Smaller teams would have competitive options from multiple manufacturers to purchase.
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6 Oct 2013, 00:40 (Ref:3313337) | #100 | |||
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I still think the IRL/Iconic committee totally messed up by not choosing Lola, who originally came up with the aero-kit concept and a universal tub that Indy Lights and IndyCar teams could both use, saving Lights teams the cost of a new tub if they wanted to race in IndyCar itself. |
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"If you're not winning you're not trying." Colin Chapman. |
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