Interesting Articles

How To Launch a Formula One Car

2010 Mercedes GP F1 Car

It’s February, the beginning of a motorsports season (unless, of course, you’re A1GP, which you’re not, because you actually exist) F1 car launch and test season, and in this year more than ever, the strategies for launching a car are many and varied.

If you’re an F1 fan, or even a general racing fan, you’ll be familiar with launches.

They generally consist of drivers, and more occasionally team principal, pulling back a cover, normally of a colour corresponding to the car beneath or the sponsors there on, and revealing a car that looks like it’s been polished to the point just before the paint gets rubbed off.

We get treated to a tidal wave of stories and press releases about how the whole team has been locked in the factory over the winter, designers forced to spend Christmas poring over the front wing design, engine technicians fighting surviving on Pro Plus as they squeeze that extra horsepower out of an old block, simply to get the car finished on time.

Read more

How to plan for your next Corporate Retreat

Global Racing Schools takes a look at how you can plan an event for your employees that will be a wonderful break from work, whilst at the same time being productive.
How often does your company, or your top employees, get away from the office for a corporate retreat? A vastly different environment, with no distractions and premise of work?
The value of corporate retreats is that they remove the team from outside distractions for a sufficient length of time to contemplate strategic and governance issues, including the team’s own development.
Corporate retreats help to solidify a management team or board of directors and enhance its effectiveness by giving members time to get to know each other and to do long range or strategic planning for the organisation. A regular dedicated time spent at a corporate retreat off-site and away from distractions should be considered essential.

Read more

What Is F1 for a Common Man?

Let us come to a question, which has been forgotten by FIA, FOTA, FOM and all others who claim that that they are the saviors of Formula One. It is the question of what F1 means for a common man.

F1 is a medium, a source, an option, which helps them to get relieved from their daily routine of life.

It is something different for people who are employed either with the federations or those with the participants/who make a living out of them, who are a very small percentage, maximum one or two percent of the whole base and for their benefit the industry is run currently.

Who has built F1: Is it the common people like us who have fancied the super fast cars, the teams, the tracks, the glamour,and the great racing drivers?

Have we championed and stood behind the great names of Lotus, Brabham, Ferrari etc. and turned them into their present iconic status? It is one very high end show business and we hold the keys for their fortunes.

The various groups who claim that they are acting in the goodwill of saving F1 should understand the sacrifices that we make to watch when it on (either on the track or on television).

We make sacrifices to see the sport. How many of us would have lied to their girlfriends for watching F1, how many would have fought with their wives, parents, siblings, saved money religiously to watch the sport in person or on television?

We need to have participants from the fans, who need to be present across these federations to make the sport livelier and make it worth for the money that we pay.

We people, the common people across the globe, have helped built the massive empires of Bernie, Dietrich Mateschitz, Flavio Briatore, CVC, Michael Schumacher, the legacy of teams etc.

We are the ones who buy their sports cars, road cars, buy products of their sponsors, pay the ticket fee, the fee on television and probably all tangible and intangible monetary components associated with the F1 showbiz.

Does it really matter to us in our day to day life whether a V12, V10, or V8 runs in the car, the tires are grooved or have slicks, whether any particular personality sits on the pit wall or not?

All we need is the spectacle, a worthy spectacle, which is worthy for the hard-earned money that we pay for this wonderful F1 circus.

But the sport has been very successful over the last few years in providing a wonderful off-track action, which even any scriptwriter/soap opera could not beat. Championships being argued in the court, teams having to spend a massive budget for lawyers and off-track events, millions of dollars thrown in flop technologies like KERS etc, the list goes endless without creating anything to improve the spectacle.

Even the new rules of the 2009 and the countless man hours of OWG haven’t provided us any improvement in the spectacle, all we have is a former Scuderia man running a Ferrari kind of show albeit a white car and a British driver with one similarity, poor o Rubens in he usual No. 2 spot.

In this kind of tough global economic scenario, it is said that “Cash is King”. We still pay the same money for the F1 circus and our returns in the form of the spectacle haven’t increased.

Although we find Ferrari championing the FOTA alliance this year, let us not forget that how an alliance called GPMA (Grand Prix Manufacturers Association) was crucified by the Italian Marquee in 2005. I am not trying to blame Ferrari, but pointing the fact that they are partly responsible for the recent and huge blow up among FIA, FOTA and FOM.

Had Ferrari not altered their status quo with Bernie and Max in 2005, we would not have seen such a large blow up of events like the mad and autocratic rules of Max and the loss of iconic tracks from the calendar, which have currently put the sport in this kind of a scenario.

I am not advocating that GPMA should have started their independent series, but should have done what FOTA is currently doing. They should have stayed in F1, but similar to what was achieved recently a better bargaining power for the teams in the whole stake.

It would have definitely taken the sport to a much better shape than what it is currently today.

GPMA could have still been a powerful alliance, which could have obtained a better bargain for the sport (I mean prevailing of common sense by protecting the race promoters from such an exorbitant fee, spiraling ticket prices, better presence in Americas, empty tracks like Turkey, China and proposed new venues, which have no relevance to motorsports).

Although F1 stands as the second most viewed sporting event after football, it is ranked way below in the recent list of top 200 sporting properties across the world.

It is the shame for the sport that Ferrari is values higher as a global sporting property than F1 and F1 stands way down in valuations with NASCAR albeit having such a large fan base globally.

The benefits, which could have been claimed if GPMA had stood together, are as follows.

  1. FIA would have remained as a pure facilitator and not a enforcer of technological and commercial regulations, probably Mad Max wouldn’t be president now at all.
  2. Bernie’s greed of overcharging for all versions of cash inflows would have seen a little sanity.
  3. We would not be facing such a scenario at all today.
  4. Probably the value returns for the common man would have increased.
  5. Ticket prices would not have skyrocketed.
  6. Race promoters would have been shielded from the ever increasing hosting fees, with a justifiable percentage.
  7. We wouldn’t have seen this much mad rule changes in the last three years.
  8. Apart from this, the crown jewel of FIA, i.e. F1 need not have undergone such a complex rule change every year for qualifying, yielding little or no improvement in spectacle.
  9. We would not have lost Michelin, the scrap between Michael and Fernando during 2006 was further spiced up by the Bridgestone vs. Michelin battle. Now post the exit of Michelin, even Bridgestone would accept the lack of competition and a driving force for their staff. Of course, we would have missed viewing the green painted earth conserving tires of Bridgestone last year, which was such a big joke.

The list goes endless, but I’ve just highlighted based on my understanding of the sport over the last decade.

F1 as a sport and its various stakeholders have built their own individual multi-billion empire by depriving the man in the pub by refusing him to provide the due spectacle for which he had paid. We are not concerned about with whom Max settles in Chelsea or whether Luca runs for Italian Presidency or even Bernie gets divorced.

We need simple things like a better show at an affordable price across all commercial mediums, more overtaking, better battles on track, new talent, new innovations, which keeps on helping teams to find tenths of seconds here and there producing a better show.

These are aspects, which will take the sport in the path of growth and in the absence of these events, the sport will die slowly.

It is time for the various factions, who claim as demigods to protect F1 to consider fan representatives for the welfare and betterment of the sport.

Unless and until this happens, the  entry of large and new sponsors, enhancement of valuation of F1 as a brand and potential growth to the next levels will be withheld and the man in the pub will get cheated once again, which is not a very good scenario.

Source: bleacherreport

Read more

Looking Ahead: Thoughts on the Future of Formula One

By: Adam Eckert

Another year, another season of Formula One, and, it seems, more of the controversy that seems to dog the world’s most prestigious motorsport at every turn.

Six races in, and we have already seen debates over loopholes in the technical regulations, the “Liargate” scandal involving the McLaren and Toyota teams, and the proposal of a budget cap for the 2010 season that has brought nine of the ten teams to the brink of withdrawal from the sport as a whole, even as new teams are lining up their entries.

Though the Formula One Teams Association (FOTA) has now confirmed its constituents’ entries for 2010, many questions still linger about the future and governance of Formula One.

Naturally, teams, drivers, pundits, and fans alike all have their own ideas on how to improve F1…

Here are five ideas that I believe will help F1 survive and prosper in the coming years.

1.  Consistent & Clear Technical Regulations

Understanding the technical regulations to which each car on the F1 grid must conform to is a black art in and of itself, but in recent years, even the teams have run into confusion over the regulations.

Nowhere was this more apparent than at the 2009 season-opening Australian Grand Prix, where several protests were lodged against the “double-decker” rear diffusers of the Williams, Toyota, and Brawn GP teams, which exploited a grey area in the regulations to gain significantly more downforce than their competitors.

Though designers from these teams had supposedly pointed out the ambiguity in the regulations to the other teams, little notice was taken until the three diffuser teams had shown much greater speed than their rivals, particularly the Brawn team.

Though protests were lodged at both the Australian and Malaysian GPs, it took the FIA until April to rule the double diffusers legal.

Had this ambiguity in the regulations been cleared up prior to the season start, it would have saved huge amounts of money for the other seven teams who have been forced to redesign parts of their cars in order to incorporate the double diffuser and gain back lost time.

Hand-in-hand with regulatory clarity comes year-to-year consistency in the technical regulations.

2009 marked the single biggest set of technical changes in the history of F1, but even before the season started, there was discussion of a new set of regulations for 2010 as incentive for an optional budget cap.

Regulatory consistency is necessary for two reasons: first, to allow for closer competition. With only minor changes to the cars for the past five to six years, teams have come closer together in terms of performance—a result of settling in and adapting to consistent regulations.

2009 has seen none of this, with the Brawn GP team winning five out of six races, including three 1-2 finishes, and all but eliminating real competition at the front; the only way that anyone will catch them in the coming years is for other teams to be allowed to adapt to the regulations.

Second, the supposed goal of cost-cutting championed by FIA president Max Mosley may as well be thrown out the window if regulations are to continually change.

We have already seen the teams spending millions of dollars on designing completely new cars, incorporating the double-decker diffuser into those designs midseason, and designing, building, and developing the new-for-2009 Kinetic Energy Recovery System (KERS).

It is hard to imagine that the cost to the teams will be anywhere near the $60 million Mosley intends to cap the teams at in 2010 if they are forced to deal with continual regulatory upheaval.

2.  An appointed board of race stewards, including at least one former driver

Nothing caused more debate and controversy in 2008 than the calls of the race stewards at many grands prix. Though there were several controversial and inconsistent calls over the course of the season, the one that sticks out the most is the 25-second penalty given to McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton at the Belgian Grand Prix.

One must also consider the fact that after cutting a chicane to overtake Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen for the lead, he relinquished the position, but re-passed Raikkonen one corner later.

Though the penalty itself was controversial at the time, it was made much more so by the fact that in both previous and subsequent races, drivers regularly committed the same offense and were either given mere warnings or were overlooked altogether.

Similar issues arose with unsafe pit releases—some drivers were given drive-through penalties and others got off with relatively minor monetary fines.

Inconsistent stewarding did more to hurt Formula One in 2008 than any other single factor.  Not only did it cast doubt on both the regulations and the FIA’s ability to adequately administer them, but it also gave the distinct impression that the championship results were being meddled with by outside parties.

More often than not, Ferrari’s Felipe Massa was the beneficiary of other drivers’ penalties and had Hamilton not been demoted in Belgium, he would have clinched the 2008 title in China rather than at the season-ending Brazilian GP.

Though Max Mosley’s rationale of involving local FIA affiliates with the Grands Prix through stewarding appointments is sound, it brings in far too much inconsistency in the stewarding practices, and without at least one steward who actually understands the rigors of driving and has driven in F1 races, the stewards can never get a complete picture of what is happening on track.

3.  Bring F1 back to its home circuits

The Formula One calendar changes every year, but many, myself included, believe that some recent changes to the schedule have hurt the sport.

Most notably, the omission of the Canadian Grand Prix for 2009 means that North America no longer has a Grand Prix, the United States GP having been dropped for 2008.

The French GP, another staple of the Formula One calendar in the country where Grand Prix racing began, has also been dropped for 2009, and the future of the British Grand Prix is also in doubt.

As the “traditional” European races have fallen off the calendar, they have been replaced with races in Asia and the Middle East, with Malaysia, China, Bahrain, Turkey, Singapore, and Abu Dhabi gaining races since 2003, and plans reportedly afoot for races in India and South Korea in 2011 and 2012 respectively.

While this global expansion is undoubtedly good for Formula One as a business alone, one must remember the fans and the lack thereof at many of these new races.

While the night race at Singapore was one of the most spectacular races in recent memory, many of the other circuits, especially China and Bahrain, have been lacking in both spectators and on-track action, although Turkey has produced three years of very good racing on a well-designed track.

This is a somewhat radical proposition, but I believe that the next Concorde Agreement, the contract signed by the teams to guarantee participation in F1, should contain a requirement for F1 to visit 13 countries which have traditionally held well-attended races at first-class circuits.

These 13 countries are: Australia, Spain, Monaco, Britain, Germany, Hungary, Belgium, Italy, Japan, Brazil, France, Canada, and the USA.

Given an 18 to 20 race calendar, this leaves five to seven slots open for the Asian and Middle Eastern circuits.

Though this schedule could preclude F1’s expansion to new venues, I believe that keeping Formula One as a true world sport will do far more to ensure its future than moving half the calendar to countries that have never held a Grand Prix, while further padding Bernie Ecclestone’s already massive bank account would.

4.  Bring Formula One back to the United States

Throughout the recent and ongoing discussion of untapped markets for Formula One to expand into, there remains one glaring omission: the United States.

The USA has had some sort of involvement throughout the history of F1, from the Indy 500 counting for the first several years of the F1 championship, to the long history of F1 at Watkins Glen International Circuit, Mario Andretti’s 1978 championship, and the hugely popular races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway from 1999 to 2007.

However, 2008 saw the U.S. Grand Prix pulled from the calendar, and with the Canadian GP following for 2009, North America is left without a Formula One race. Common sense, and a straw poll of fellow American F1 fans, would indicate that few people, if any, supported this decision.

The fans obviously want an F1 race close to home, and never let it be said that there aren’t any American F1 fans; I was lucky enough to attend the final USGP at Indianapolis in 2007, and short of British soccer fans, I’ve never seen a group of people more excited about their sport.

The teams also want races in North America—the USA is the single biggest market for the car companies (with the exception of Renault) supporting F1 and fielding teams, and they will want all the exposure they can get in the U.S.

There are three things that need to happen, however, before F1 can gain a hold in the American mainstream in the same fashion as Indycar and NASCAR.

First, the entire season’s worth of races needs to be broadcast on one of the major networks, or major cable channels such as ESPN, with a concerted advertising push behind it; new fans won’t watch if they don’t know where to do so.

Second, there needs to be an American team and American drivers in the sport that the U.S. fan base can rally around. With the exit of Scott Speed in 2006, no American drivers were left in the sport, and Speed was the first since Michael Andretti’s ill-fated stint with McLaren in 1993, and no American has had the support necessary to even challenge for wins since Mario Andretti left the sport.

Fortunately, the USF1 team, run by Peter Windsor and Ken Anderson, has submitted an entry for 2010 and has committed to designing and building a competitive car in the U.S. and fielding at least one American driver.

Third, the U.S. needs a Grand Prix.

No matter what people say about NASCAR and Indycar taking up all the racing fans in the U.S., if there is a race…people will come.

The first two or three runnings of the USGP at Indianapolis drew more fans than the Super Bowl, and attendance stayed strong throughout the race’s tenure.

My understanding of the reason why Formula One’s contract with Indianapolis Motor Speedway was not renewed essentially boils down to money and to Tony George’s unwillingness to acquiesce to Bernie Ecclestone’s ever increasing monetary demands (which, though it got the USGP taken off the calendar, I commend him for).

As I see it, there are four venues in the U.S. of the caliber to hold the USGP: Indianapolis, which recently revamped its infield road course; Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca in California, which has always been a world-class circuit; Barber Motorsports Park in Alabama, recently built with modern facilities, and Road America in Wisconsin, though it will need a significantly revamped pit and hospitality facilities to be considered.

It is up to the track’s management to make their case for hosting the USGP, to the FIA and Formula One Management to work in the best interests of the sport, and fans worldwide to bring back the United States and Canadian Grands Prix.

5. Don’t forget the fans

Between the 2007 and 2008 seasons, the Formula One Teams Association (FOTA) surveyed thousands of F1 fans worldwide about the state of the sport—what was working, what wasn’t, and what needed to be improved.

They incorporated the survey findings into a proposal to the FIA, which was submitted before the 2009 season for several changes to the sporting regulations, including a points system that put greater emphasis on winning while keeping competition close throughout the grid, a ban on refueling, and several other changes which would have taken effect in 2009 and 2010.

The FIA rejected FOTA’s proposal in full, choosing instead to attempt a regulatory change which would have seen the driver with the most wins crowned champion.

Besides the fact that it was a clear violation of the sporting regulations, I honestly believe that no one, teams, drivers, or fans, supported this change, and it was fortunately dropped shortly before the season opener.

Nevertheless, the FIA did more than just reject a document when it turned down FOTA’s proposal—it rejected the opinions of fans worldwide.

We have already seen the folly of the winner-take-all system this season, in which Jenson Button would conceivably have already taken the championship, having won five out of six races so far.

The FIA absolutely must take into consideration the findings of the fan survey and the continual feedback of both the fans and the teams which make up the sport.

I, for one, want nothing to do with a sport whose regulatory body continually and blatantly disregards the opinion of its fans and constituent teams. With FOTA united against Max Mosley’s budget cap proposal for 2010, and the discussion it has produced however, I believe we are seeing the beginning of an era of greater cooperation between the FIA and FOTA.

From here, the sport can only move forward.

Source: bleacherreport.com

Read more

F1 2009: The Story So Far

By: Adam Elliott

The 2009 Formula 1 season began just two weeks after the end of the 2008 season with the first test session of the year.

However, it wasn’t until December 2008 that the season became interesting with the shock announcement that Honda was due to leave Formula 1 because of the worldwide recession taking its toll on the business.

Following several discussions in January, the final lineup for 2009 was confirmed as:

  • Ferrari – Raikkonen/Massa
  • McLaren-Mercedes – Hamilton/Kovalainen
  • BMW Sauber – Kubica/Heidfeld
  • Renault – Alonso/Piquet Jr
  • Toyota – Glock/Trulli
  • Toro Rosso-Ferrari – Bourdais/Buemi
  • Red Bull-Renault – Webber/Vettel
  • Williams-Toyota – Rosberg/Nakajima
  • Force India-Mercedes – Sutil/Fisichella
  • Brawn-Mercedes – Button/Barrichello
  • New rules and new tyres were introduced at the start of the season leading to the major teams having to design drastically different cars with new body styling. The ability to cope with the return to slicks was something all teams had to deal with.

    The biggest technical change was the introduction of KERS (Kinetic Energy Recovery System), meaning that the teams were all facing a new technical challenge and that would ultimately lead to a major decision for the weight/power argument.

    The FIA made their first biggest intervention of the season, the decision to introduce a rule change meaning the driver who won the most races would become the World Champion—this was quickly rescinded after FOTA (Formula One Teams Association) voiced their opposition.

    The pre-season testing had been limiting the use for establishing the quickest teams so far. Many teams were opting to use revised versions of their 2008 cars with new parts at various sessions.

    It wasn’t until March 9 that all teams produced their 2009 cars at the Barcelona test.

    Here the first glimpse of the season started to become clear. Ross Brawn showed his technical ability had carried over into his newly purchased, and former Honda, team.

    McLaren also showed their difficulties with the car, consistently being considerably slower than the majority of the pack. Brawn were the biggest surprise, topping the time charts on numerous occasions.

    March also saw the start of the first major debate of the year: the rear diffuser!

    Williams, Toyota, and Brawn all operated with a “double” rear diffuser which became the subject of numerous appeals by the remaining seven teams.

    Brawn, led by Button, took the weekend opening weekend in Melbourne by storm, living up to his pre-season promise, as he secured both the pole and race victory, and was followed by his teammate Barrichello.

    Toyota followed then Renault with the remainder of the field coming in behind. The Ferrari team was disappointingly slow, with Massa retiring and Raikkonen being classified as 15th despite failing to reach the chequered flag.

    Hamilton was disqualified from the race in a scandal which saw Hamilton accused of lying and it ultimately cost Ron Dennis his job with the F1 side of the business.

    Button continued his dominance at the second race of the year taking the pole and race victory for the second straight time. Ferrari and McLaren struggled with only Hamilton managing to secure points for seventh. Toyota continued to lead the chase of the Brawn’s while the BMW of Heidfeld showed the desire to compete by finishing on the podium in second.

    Following Malaysia, F1 made a brief stop over in Paris (no cars were there, just lawyers and suits). Here Brawn, Toyota, and Williams were declared to be legal following challenges to the rear diffusers. The seven remaining teams found themselves playing catch up in the design race as well as on the track as the season was already well underway.

    So on to China and race three. This time Vettel stuck his Red Bull on the pole and by the end of the race, Vettel remained up front followed by his teammate, Mark Webber. Brawn brought up third and fourth and Kovalainen secured his only point of the season so far. Hamilton, Ferrari, and Trulli were disappointments in the third race of the season.

    Bahrain was the place for the fourth race of the year and saw a return to the Brawn show as Button came out the clear winner for the third time this season. Vettel continued to demonstrate that his team was getting close to Brawn with a second place while Ferrari finally managed to get their first points of the season with a sixth place finish for Raikkonen. Hamilton managed his best finish of the season with a fourth.

    Spain marked the fifth race and Barrichello’s attempted to take the spotlight from Button and Barrichello actually got the jump on Button and had the stronger strategy during the opening of the race.

    However, Button’s pace and change of tactics handed him his fourth race victory. Red Bull continued to chase and Ferrari scored more points with Massa claiming his first points—although a lack of reliability saw Raikkonen retire. Hamilton again failed to score and Kovalainen suffered his third retirement of the year.

    Monaco was the most recent race to date.

    Brawn again showed its power. Button’s last minute qualifying lap saw him snatch the pole and he stayed up front all race once again in capturing the victory in beautiful Monaco.

    Barrichello again was the wing man for Button. Massa and Raikkonen showed Ferrari’s continued development by capturing points, although Massa still placed behind Webber. Hamilton was out of the points after crashing in qualifying and starting from the back of the pack.

    So in summary, both on and off track in 2009, it has been an enthralling season.

    As for what will happen for the rest of the season and beyond is a complete unknown. The Ferrari team is definitely improving, but they have to match the very quick Red Bull and the seemingly reliable and dominating Brawn. McLaren are miles behind and Renault might be considering a driver change, among other things.

    All that being said though, I wouldn’t be surprised to see Force India score a race win and see Piquet challenge for the top of the points. After all, as the great Murray Walker always said, “F1 is backwards!”

    However, it’s really Button and Brawn’s season to lose at this point.

    Source: bleacherreport.com

    Read more

    Formula 1’s virtual reality

    By: JOE SAWARD

    The decision to ban all circuit testing in the Formula 1 season was designed to save the teams money. For the big teams, however, the battle has simply moved from the race tracks to the factories where advanced simulation technology will take over from actual running. Teams these days are using an arfray of different tools to make the cars go faster. These include highly-advanced rolling-road wind tunnels, transient dynos and seven-post rigs. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) is developing fast. The goal of all of these expensive items is to ensure that the racing cars are as competitive as possible – and as reliable. But simulation techniques in Formula 1 are now beginning to go far beyond that. Computers crunch away to work out every conceivable race strategy and increasingly the teams are realising the value of what are known as “driver-in-the-loop simulators”. This means that rather than engineers playing with computers, as happens with other simulation, the F1 drivers sit in “virtual” F1 cars and drive them.

    There may be a belief that the F1 simulators are simply glorified computer games, which have a limited value in teaching drivers circuits that they have never visited, but the story is much more complicated than that.

    Simulator technologies came to Formula 1 first because teams recognised that they could make money by working with computer gaming companies in order to create entertainment for the public. The first racing computer game was Gran Trak 10, a single-player racing arcade game released by Atari in 1974. The first big success was Pole Position, a Namco game in which a player had to complete a lap in a certain amount of time in order to qualify for a race at the Fuji Speedway. If successful the car would race with other cars. As home computers developed in the 1980s the first true F1 game appeared, called Formula One Grand Prix (F1GP), which was released in 1992. Nowadays you can sit at home and drive F1 cars, playing with many different parameters such as the fuel loads, tyre wear and so on. But home computers can only do so much. One may have a steering wheel and pedals, but there are none of the real sensations of what it is really like to drive an F1 car.

    Formula 1 engineers began to realise that advanced simulation could be a tool not just for driver training, but also to work on technical solutions and set-up conundrums. Simulation can improve lap times and save time and money by giving the team a way to test without needing to put the cars on the race track. Virtual testing is now a reality.

    One of the problems with simulators is that some of them induce sickness because of a discrepancy between the perception of visual motion and the corresponding motion cues. This led engineers to look at ways to overcome the problem and to the development of what are called dynamic simulators, which have the entire hexapod moving around to meet the body’s need for the sensation of real motion.

    The bottom line is that there is no such thing as a standard simulator. Each one is a prototype and the most interesting element in their use in F1 is that most of the systems have been developed in-house by the teams, rather than being developed with specialist partnerships. One thing that is clear is that the experts on simulators have also been moving as teams realise the value of what they do not have.

    There is general agreement that the two best systems at the moment are the two that have had the most development: McLaren is believed to have spent as much as $40m on its system and used British Aerospace technology, developed for the Eurofighter aircraft. At Woking the driver sits in a full-size F1 monocoque, in front of a large, curved plasma screen. The whole device is mounted on a hexapod which moves around an area about the size of a professional basketball court, in response to the driver’s steering and pedal input. This is the only dynamic F1 simulator in F1 at the moment.

    Up to now Ferrari has been using a fairly simple unit, which is housed at the Fiat Research Centre in Turin. The team had recently announced a partnership with the US firm Moog. This will be the very latest dynamic device.

    “The dynamic driving simulator is a new step for us in developing virtual tests that give drivers the true feel of a real environment and direct feedback on their actions,” says Scuderia Ferrari’s head of R&D Marco Fainello. “It will support the new breed of tests we are planning to launch.”

    What is clear is that the teams believe that the F1 simulators are the most advanced of all.

    “I think they are better than the best flight simulators,” says Red Bull Racing’s Geoff Willis. “Those are now more about training and not so much about performance.”

    Since the end of 2006 an astonishing 30m Wiis have been sold. They cost around $250, which means that it is a $7.5bn market. The first company to get to the markets with simulation technology as is seen in F1 stands to make even bigger profits. In the meantime money can still be made. Recently the Costa cruise ship line bought a series of F1 simulators from a Dutch company called VESC to try to attract customers (mainly Italians) to its ships.

    The fullscale machines, complete with hexapods, are now cruising the world.

    Source: grandprix.com

    Read more

    How to Become a Race Car Driver

    Car racing is an exciting sport to watch and even more exciting when you are the one racing at dangerous speeds around a track, trying to be first. If you want to learn how to become a race car driver, read the following steps.

    Step 1
    Decide what kind of car racing you want to do, whether it’s Nascar racing, open wheel racing, drag racing or another type of car racing.

    Step 2

    Learn all you can about the type of racing you want to do. Read books, magazines, search the Internet and watch races on television and in person. Learn about every aspect of racing, not just driving. The more knowledge you have about racing, the better prepared you will be.

    Step 3
    Visit racetracks and talk to anyone involved in the sport. Drivers, crew members, mechanics, track officials and owners all have lots of information to share. This can also allow you to make new friends and connections in the racing world.

    Step 4
    Work at a racetrack or with a racing team. Sell tickets, clean the track, clean cars or car parts, run errands or even become a crew member. Working jobs like these can help you learn even more about racing from different perspectives.

    Step 5
    Attend one of many racing schools around the country that teaches the type of racing you want to do. Race schools teach you the mechanics, basics and advanced methods of race car driving.

    Step 6

    Start racing through a school series, which is cheaper than professional racing circuits. You may need a sponser unless you have plenty of financial backing.

    Step 7
    Drive a race car any chance you get. Every time you get behind the wheel equals more experience and training for you.

    Source: ehow.com

    Read more