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2 Jul 2008, 15:55 (Ref:2242293) | #126 | |||
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"The Great Race" 22 November 1960 - 21 July 1999 |
2 Jul 2008, 21:20 (Ref:2242543) | #127 | ||
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Michael Delaney was wrong. In between is not waiting - in between is the glory, the passion. In between is what elevates racing. |
2 Jul 2008, 21:21 (Ref:2242545) | #128 | |||
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If so, you could stop that by homologating the cars at the start of the season and not allowing the teams to change the package until the end of the season, or maybe allow allow changes in the package at set points e.g. every four rounds. |
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3 Jul 2008, 12:36 (Ref:2243011) | #129 | |||
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But if you don't let the FIA touch it they go and try to start a rival they can control (GP2 vs F2)....actually back in the day they even used to start rival series to one's they did control (Procar) |
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3 Jul 2008, 13:06 (Ref:2243026) | #130 | ||
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I asked Alan Gow what he thought there would be after S2000, he ripped my question apart a bit but I still kind of got a bit of an answer from him. Well, kind of...
http://www.btcc.net/forum/showthread.php?t=6473 |
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3 Jul 2008, 14:54 (Ref:2243106) | #131 | |
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Thanks for that interesting Q & A Sniper
Re: FIA messing things up, the only thing that can possibly said to their defence is that lately they at least seem to slowly learn from all their previous mistakes and slowly but surely fix things. Sad it in many cases has taken them a decade. |
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3 Jul 2008, 15:48 (Ref:2243168) | #132 | ||
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Gow mentioned a very interesting thing right there: "That's exactly how Super Touring (which were originally designed for the UK), and later S2000 (which were designed for international use), came about...."
Well then, why is S2000 in such better shape in the national series with twice as many manufacturers then WTCC when it wasnt even designed for them? IMHO, it wouldnt be hard to design a new set of regulations that would suit the national series even better then S2000 and that would see an even bigger feild of semi-factory teams, national companys/teams building their own cars with some help from the factory/importers, just like the ST days in BTCC and many teams in both STCC and BTCC today. |
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3 Jul 2008, 19:30 (Ref:2243290) | #133 | ||
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I think it has to do with the FIA buraucracy. It is probably much easier to get a car nationally homologated then internationally. So for privateers that may be technically able to prepare a car of a brand of a manufacturer that is not officially involved in the WTCC, the administrative burden would be to hard and costly, or maybe even, when the manufacturer doesn't want to permit the entrance) impossible to enter that car. That team will be forced to use the 14th Seat or the 26th BMW...
That means that the rules itself aren't bad for attracting several brands of cars, exept for the international homologation procedure. Correct me if i'm wrong btw, i'm just speculating about the possible anwer |
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3 Jul 2008, 20:06 (Ref:2243320) | #134 | |||
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3 Jul 2008, 22:44 (Ref:2243437) | #135 | ||
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Michael Delaney was wrong. In between is not waiting - in between is the glory, the passion. In between is what elevates racing. |
4 Jul 2008, 08:50 (Ref:2243694) | #136 | ||
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The BTC rules also made ugly cars with weird sidepods
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4 Jul 2008, 10:55 (Ref:2243750) | #137 | |||
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Wasn't the Nordschleife mentioned some time ago? |
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4 Jul 2008, 11:44 (Ref:2243796) | #138 | |||
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4 Jul 2008, 12:43 (Ref:2243839) | #139 | |
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Endurance race would be great occasion for Seat to get another advantage, as their front tyres won't last long...
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4 Jul 2008, 16:30 (Ref:2244035) | #140 | |||
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The problem lies within the technical regulations of the S2000 cars (as I've said several times before) and it needs to be changed, remember the SuperTourers where built to run sprint races too, and yet they could to the Bathurst 1000 flat out for 7 hours turning racelaps only 1 to 2 sec slower then qual laps, and reaching topspeeds of almost 270km/h. And the 98 poletime was 2.14.9 which is about 5 sec slower then what the V8s run, so they wherent even slow laps. Not many S2000 cars can do that, if any. |
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4 Jul 2008, 20:39 (Ref:2244221) | #141 | |
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I'm pretty sure there have been S2000 cars in the Nürburgring 24h.
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5 Jul 2008, 11:02 (Ref:2244522) | #142 | ||
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@ Dead Eye: Where there any? They must have rebuilt the cars 4 times during the race if the statements about the lasting of parts is true.
@ Duke Toaster: The dramatic track and the existence of 'highlights' will surely cover that problem. @ THIM: That might be a problem, though the Nordschleife might not be to hard on the tyres due to lower grip, and the relatively large chances on rain. @ PorschefanNo1: Hmmm, that might be a problem.... |
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5 Jul 2008, 15:12 (Ref:2244619) | #143 | |
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I must say that I do think the 1, perhaps even 2, endurance races with the same parts would be a good solution to make sure teams NEEDS to have a car that sticks together more than 1-2 sprint races.
The problem with the national championships and national homologated cars... well that's for the national series to fix, no? Im sure they are more than capable to properly regulate that if the S2000 cars are put under better restrictions. |
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5 Jul 2008, 15:30 (Ref:2244633) | #144 | |
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Most recent example: The 320d with the works drivers was a diesel engined version of the S2000 car, wasn't it? Other than that, there were some BMWs and I believe a couple of Alfas too a few years ago. I don't think reliability is the reason we don't see many, though. I remember reading that an S2000 car simply costs more to run and buy than something built exclusively for the Nordschleife regs.
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5 Jul 2008, 19:17 (Ref:2244736) | #145 | |||
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And also, on the 24h of the Ring you dont drive flatout, far from it, at the Bathurst 1000 in the ST days they really did drive flatout through the whole race, and without detuning the engines even. Last edited by PorscheFanNo1; 5 Jul 2008 at 19:24. |
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6 Jul 2008, 05:38 (Ref:2244935) | #146 | ||
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while some of the ideas are good simply pointing out that the cars break so easily in the current S2000 well it best be changed. this is a simple Duh...
i do like the idea of a long race to ensure that cars are built tough. and a long distance race is great anyway as the skills of the teams and drivers and its great fun when the cars are rubber ed and dirty and fighting within an inch of exhaustion... i would think some spec built components would help reliability and of course even some things up a bit.. i am not sure outside of Spec ECU (perish the thought) that you can mandate rev limits well and keep reliability. perhaps a 2.5L rule for engines to maintain the power levels or up by little and have more flexability- i don't know if a smaller engine is better for racing longevity (2.0 or 1.5 turbo) although a 2.0 turbo can get some great power and be manufacturer centred,,, |
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