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20 Sep 2024, 08:42 (Ref:4227504) | #1351 | ||
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The article was discussed at length in our group chat before being posted. It wasn't intended as a "you have to come to us to get info", but I can see how it comes across that way. But the "we need to get the info from the media" is true about everything, surely? Whether that's external media, or the WEC website (which is barely usable), or podcasts, or the commentary team. We rely on media to relay information. Without that every fan would need to dig through the technical PDFs every race, which isn't reasonable. To argue for the "fans don't need to know" side of things - how many people are aware LMGT3 has success ballast in WEC? Almost nobody. Because it's not mentioned anywhere other than some technical bulletins. The main sites rarely mention it, the commentary team doesn't mention it, RLM doesn't mention it. Since the media isn't talking about it, people aren't aware of it. Sidenote: If you have an opinion piece you'd want to write but have no where to post it, then theracingline.media is open to anyone on ten tenths who wants to. |
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20 Sep 2024, 10:33 (Ref:4227515) | #1352 | ||
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As an aside, I feel I ought to look at GT more. I’ve been automating the review of lap times, speeds, laps, stints, etc… as you might of noticed. For two reason. One is to teach myself python. Another is to make it easier for me to look at the data rather than spend the time pulling it together. Not that it took ages before, but I am time poor. I mention because one aim to be able to easily switch to look at different classes. Which, apart from Le Mans, I rarely did. Like the TV coverage I concentrated on the top class. Anyway, I agree, it is rarely mentioned that there is success ballast. I’ve been superficially tracking as I scrape the BoP data which, unless trl get their way is freely available. And people can’t handle them |
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20 Sep 2024, 15:27 (Ref:4227550) | #1353 | ||
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20 Sep 2024, 15:39 (Ref:4227553) | #1354 | |||||
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BoP. Brilliant or Pants.
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Just some context. I view this topic as interesting , but in the world order inconsequential. In the context of sportscar racing it is quite fundamental, but where we are now also, oddly, minor. It has as enabled me to see much more of the wonderful nuanced aspects of endurance racing. So I am flippant, amused and find the topic fun. Yet, also unimportant. Quote:
It does prove the point. People struggle to rationally dissect the bit of information provided ! Quote:
But overall I support it. If only because I am interested. |
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21 Sep 2024, 07:12 (Ref:4227609) | #1355 | |
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21 Sep 2024, 22:44 (Ref:4227697) | #1356 | |
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I'm curious as to why IMSA's BOP draws hardly any discussion,criticism, or controversy. The last post in the IMSA BOP thread is from July. If I didn't know any better, I'd say this is what happens when you remove Toyota
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21 Sep 2024, 23:40 (Ref:4227703) | #1357 | ||
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Less cars. Only one type of car at the moment. They just get on with it.
I haven’t got round to updating the IMSA charts I guess. |
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22 Sep 2024, 04:55 (Ref:4227743) | #1358 | |
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I think the "you can't have this good racing without bop" is not really true. I think it's something that manufacturers see and feel they have a good chance to win, like in GT3. If they were to do another cost-control measure, I think the manufacturers would show up too. Like a budget-cap, or chassis suppliers like now with lmdh/lmp2 (that might not happen).Just my opinion, I feel like bop is the 'easiest' way to appease the group. But it doesn't really stop out-spending by certain manufacturers.
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22 Sep 2024, 06:01 (Ref:4227745) | #1359 | |||
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For once, I agree. However, the ease at which BoP creates the conditions for close racing as opposed to any form of cost control cannot be ignored. Some manufacturers would show up for cost-controlled series, as long as they agreed with the level of cost-control. But denying the chance to spend their way out of trouble (regardless of if it works or not) would quickly see them leave. |
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22 Sep 2024, 11:12 (Ref:4227763) | #1360 | |
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One issue BoP has is that all of the manufacturers are completely delusional. They all think they're hard done by with the BoP. So now instead of a manufacturer just doing badly (Peugeot), they think the BoP is unfair.
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22 Sep 2024, 13:25 (Ref:4227775) | #1361 | ||
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If they really believe this then it is bad as they might leave. Although they probably would have left, or not even joined, without BoP. So no worse off and if they do a better job than Peugeot they will have a decent chance.
It also could just be talk to make themselves feel better and they understand the actual situation. Which is then just being tedious for no real reason. Still it could be worse. Pescarolo could have a team |
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22 Sep 2024, 15:24 (Ref:4227806) | #1362 | ||
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Without BOP: we'd probably have a tech/spending war and whoever gets ahead on tech and usually budget will most likely dominate. Same things basically killed Group C and original IMSA GTP, killed original GT1, and ultimately basically killed LMP1 as we knew it.
With BOP: with have the possibility of politicking and sandbagging, as well as cars being restricted from whatever their capabilities might be if the only major rules we had were just basic rules like in LMP 900 and LMP1 such as minimum weight, a power cap (be it air restrictor/turbo boost or fuel flow) and max/min dimensions. (Already happens in GT racing where several cars already due to BOP and overall performance windows the racing cars get restricted down to making less power than the road cars do, BTW). IMO, neither system is obviously perfect, so I guess it's sort of pick your poison, as with almost anything else in life. I will say though that when close racing happens organically like in the ALMS in '03-'05, mostly due to all the teams being basically privateer teams and such, I do think that both teams, fans, and even sanctioning bodies do get spoiled by that and they do resort to BOP and overall to the technical regs to try and create that again when a factory team comes back in with a new car and reasserts the dominance that they had a few years before. Last edited by chernaudi; 22 Sep 2024 at 15:51. |
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22 Sep 2024, 15:31 (Ref:4227809) | #1363 | ||
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Politicking was just as bad before. There is only one thing people can whinge about and they are asked not to. And if you know anything you can just roll your eyes.
The sandbagging. I’m yet to be convinced that this is anymore than people just running their weekends or natural ebb and flow! Possible is probably a decent way to describe it. As we, again, always had this. Now the governing body actually looks out for it in the data. |
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22 Sep 2024, 15:59 (Ref:4227826) | #1364 | ||
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And IMO, when Pescarolo and Dyson complained to the ACO and IMSA about the R10 having such an advantage and trying to pin that all on diesel engine tech, I do believe that they seemed to forget how much the old R8 thrashed them (often to a worse degree than the R10 ever did) when it was in its prime. And in later years, development on the R8 trailed off (as LMP 900/LMP1 rules were in flux at this time) and were being run by private teams. That allowed other private teams to at least try and catch up. When a factory team comes in with a new car that has tons of development potential, is built around the new rules package, and is fully backed by the factory, can we realistically at the time expect a private team to stick it to them?
IMO, the difference was way more in the camp of factory vs privateer as far as that goes. Only way to mitigate that is with performance balancing (based on team/car capabilities), or cost/tech/performance caps. Unless you want to go down the spec car route. Last edited by chernaudi; 22 Sep 2024 at 16:06. |
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23 Sep 2024, 16:18 (Ref:4228134) | #1365 | |
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Which is strange coming from the ACO's line- "pillow of laziness". Bop gives entitlement and then when you look at that statement it's another thing to consider. Results aren't guaranteed but the bop will try to prop you up because your team is not at the front. It's supposed to be based on potential of the car, so I wonder how they figure that, especially for new entries.
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23 Sep 2024, 17:57 (Ref:4228149) | #1366 | ||
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IMO if it's based on car potential, then BOP only should be changed significantly once or twice a season for the sprint races. Again, my opinion, if you're changing BOP every race, it's either a success/results based penalty/rewards system, or your data is horribly flawed, or the sanctioning body is trying to tweak things for the sake of the show.
Again, my opinion, if that's the intent (trying to drum up excitement for the show), then just say it. Super GT had no issue with saying that's their purpose behind BOP and rewards weight dating well back into the JGTC era. And as far as why it's not a big topic in IMSA, one, only GTP cars run in IMSA right now (and even when LMH comes in with the Aston Martin, that car will be non-hybrid to my knowledge, though that's still a variable of it's own), while in the WEC and LM LMH (all of which in the series now run FWD hybrid systems) and GTP run together in the LMH class. Two, though IMSA usually makes changes each race in the GTP and GTD classes, they're relatively minor changes than the bigger swings that the ACO takes with the WEC. Is IMSA's data better than the ACO's? Is it because of the LMH and LMDH/GTP dual subclass structure in the WEC right now? And of course, Aston Martin will also run in the WEC with a hybrid-less car next year, too. So that's another variable. |
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23 Sep 2024, 18:17 (Ref:4228154) | #1367 | ||
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I think the difference was way more in the camp of Audi vs privateers. I think people still don't quite (or no longer) appreciate how much Audi changed the prototype game with the R8. After all, Panoz were quite able hang with both the original R8R as well as the BMW V12 LMR in 1999 while the R8 was head and shoulders above the BMW.
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23 Sep 2024, 23:59 (Ref:4228191) | #1368 | ||
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Where does this it’s about the potential things come from? I’m losing track, but I don’t recall it coming from the ACO. For this iteration anyway. Although we have the language thing and it could well be semantics.
And even if it is you should still be tweaking it all the time, because your assessment of it will develop as you understand it more, get more data, and develop your models of what the potential is. It is false to claim that changing it regularly proves anything to do with it being success ballast. Tweaking your view as you learn! Imagine that! |
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24 Sep 2024, 04:38 (Ref:4228205) | #1369 | ||||
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Quote:
Quote:
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24 Sep 2024, 10:31 (Ref:4228232) | #1370 | ||
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Perfect, thank you. I didn’t think of using google. Epic fail.
I thought they’d stopped saying it this time round even if was inferred as I didn’t recall it. Inferred because obviously you never get to ultimate potential. You need lots of data to try and assess the potential, as none of them ever get to potential. Close, but not there. We see that just from the difference of each driver. So it’s not based on success, nor actual performance, but potential. Which as things going on performance will tend towards. Small changes as you get data is the best way to make that work. Imagine having extra data and saying oh look, we were weren’t quite right, never mind, or when provide with later information deciding to not look and do a worse job. |
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24 Sep 2024, 18:51 (Ref:4228291) | #1371 | ||
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I think this is going to be the ACO's go-to in response to any "success ballast" accusations. Judging by this thread it's not quite getting through...
I assumed the ACO would take data points from each car and plug them into a ChassisSim (or some bespoke version of the same type of software) to produce a theoretical maximum performance, which they reference when deciding BoP. More data refines the model, but it does rely on being close to the "solution" so that the simulation remains aligned with the race-derived numbers. |
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25 Sep 2024, 02:59 (Ref:4228332) | #1372 | ||
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Quote:
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25 Sep 2024, 06:50 (Ref:4228335) | #1373 | ||
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Of course they're not following guidelines of their own, it's obvious and understandable. I think that for any adjustment they work very hard but can't believe they don't discuss/negociate with the team.
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25 Sep 2024, 07:52 (Ref:4228342) | #1374 | ||
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My thing with the current BOP it seems to be penalising Toyota for building a very good car that is great on tyres. They almost always seem to get back to the front on the 2nd stint. Even in Fuji when not alright fastest they were climbing up the leader board on the 2nd stints. It seems to combat their tyre advantage they make the cars heavier and less power on a race by race basis. To me if you built a car that is great on tyres that should not be bopped against. It should be on the other manufacturers to do the same
However Toyota did not help themselves with penalties and crashes in the last race. |
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25 Sep 2024, 10:11 (Ref:4228349) | #1375 | ||
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Penalties, contacts, crashes are all about Human Factor all mainly about drivers and sometimes pit wall.This wont ever be BoP'ed.
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