Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Magnum P.I. Alert!: Ferrari 458 GTS

3622

Get your mustache and hawaiian shirt ready if this targa topped variant turns out to be true. The rumor is that Ferrari will opt for a removable hardtop (or as some suggested, a Superamerica like flip top) so as not to compete with the hard top convertible California, a car not in the Maranello lineup when the 430 Spyder was for sale.

The last GTS was the 355 and before that of course Ferrari went "targa" with the 308 and the Dino 246 GTS.


Ferrari Dino 246 GTS
(photos: M.Alreshaid, Laurent Duchene)



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Monday, August 30, 2010

Necessary Accident?

Vettel was punished for "Causing an unecessary accident" , I imagine the race stewards, which included Nigel Mansell again, must have come to the conclusion that Barrichello slamming into Alonso was a "Necessary accident"?



Indeed, Barrichello was out of the race but certainly the FIA is known to give penalties to be served in future races, witness Schumacher. Perhaps these penalties depend on who is being hit and who is doing the hitting.

No question about it, Vettel made a driving mistake but looking at the long onboard replay, it does not look as close as it does from trackside shots. It was an unforced error but were the stewards correct in inflicting the drive through?






The perennial problem with Formula 1, the inconsistent application of penalties. Let's review a few notable incidents this season, I'm sure I forgot a few, but can we find a pattern?

- Webber hit Hamilton in Melbourne; no penalty
- Hamilton released in the path of Vettel in China: no penalty
- Button went unnecessarily slow behind the SC in China - no sanction.
- Barrichello tosses his steering wheel in the path of other cars in Monaco; no sanction
- Schumacher safety car move in Monaco; 20second penalty
- Schumacher vs Barrichello in Hungary : 10 grid spot penalty
- Vettel let too much space in Hungary behind the SC: Drive through
- Kubica hit Sutil in the pits at Hungary - 10 second penalty.
- Trulli hit Di Grassi under yellow in qualifying Spa; No penalty
- Vettel lost control of hit car and hit someone; DT-penalty
- Barrichello brakes too late and hit Alonso; No Penalty

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Sunday, August 29, 2010

Payback at Spa

I'm not necessarily referring to Hamilton finally winning in Spa but for the fans who suffer through so many boring races. Here is just a quick scoring of the 2010 Belgian GP.

Brilliant:
Hamilton. one of his best races ever, he took advantage of Webber's lousy start and was able to control the field in very difficult conditions, he turned in an amazing set of fast laps when needed and was lucky enough not to hit anything when he did make his one mistake.
Spa: payback for all the boring races you will watch during a the Formula 1 season.

Unlucky:
Jenson Button, Fernando Alonso, both had their races ruined by another driver who forgot how to brake in the wet. Alonso's trouble of course started saturday when the team made the wrong tire choice and he ended up in 10th spot. His mistake towards the end of the race though was entirely self inflicted and frankly inexcusable.

Missed Opportunities:
Webber's start, Kubica's pit stop. Massa's competent but completely uninspired race.

Shocking:
Sebastian Vettel, Rubens Barrichello. Starting to have real doubts about the Vettel,, yes shit happens but it sure happens a lot to him.
As for Barrichello, after all the (actually not so convincing) maudlin tributes to him on the BBC for his 300th GP start, the Ziggy of Formula 1 makes the mistake his did? Making it worse, in typical Rubens fashion, he later blamed it "on the wet conditions" as if those existed just for him.

Great show:
MIchael Schumacher: 21st to 7th says it all
Force India: What is it about Force India and Spa? their straight line speed was incredible. Both Sutil and Liuzzi had great drives.
Renault: great to see the team climb back on top.


(I'm away on vacation so for now just the BBC's Highlights.... more as I'm able)



PROVISIONAL RACE RESULTS

The Belgian Grand Prix
Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium;
44 laps; 308.052km;
Weather: Mixed.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1h29m04.268s
2. Webber Red Bull-Renault +1.571
3. Kubica Renault +3.493
4. Massa Ferrari +8.264
5. Sutil Force India-Mercedes +9.094
6. Rosberg Mercedes +12.359
7. Schumacher Mercedes +15.548
8. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari +16.678
9. Petrov Renault +23.851
10. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari +29.457
11. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes +34.831
12. De la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari +36.019
13. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari +39.895
14. Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth +1 lap
15. Vettel Red Bull-Renault +1 lap
16. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth +1 lap
17. Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth +1 lap
18. Glock Virgin-Cosworth +1 lap
19. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth +1 lap
20. Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth +2 laps

Fastest lap: Hamilton, 1m49.069s

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Alonso Ferrari 38
Button McLaren-Mercedes 16
Senna HRT-Cosworth 6
Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 1

All timing unofficial

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Spa Waters

Will it be dry Sunday, will it be wet? If we, the spectators, are lucky it will be both and we'll have another dramatic Belgian GP. It's possible some in the top ten might have gambled on more of a wet setup, who knows. Starting in front at Spa is not quite as crucial as, say, just keeping it on the track as the GP3 kids illustrated Saturday.



As for qualifying, check out Webber's pole lap although the one I really would like to see is Hamilton's miraculous final lap where he somehow was able to come 2/10 from Webber's dry pole time but on a partially wet track! Amazing.




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ALMS Mosport: Ride along in the #92 BMW M3

Tommy Milner keeping cool at the office, in this case the newly rebuilt #92 BMW M3 GT which had been destroyed in a crash at Raod America just this past week end.

Millner and Bill Auberlen qualified second in the GT calss less than three 1/100 of a second behind the Flying Lizard Porsche of Bergmaister/Long.


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Friday, August 27, 2010

Ferrari tops the Belgian Headlines Grand Prix

AloSpa

Fernando Alonso dominated both Friday practice sessions, the fist one being very wet and the second being wet except for the very end. The Ferrari seemed pretty at ease in the wet but not especially in dry conditions despite the result.

Nice result for Force India with Sutil certainly looking to raise his profile in his search for a different ride next year.

Perhaps most interesting is the comparative lack of performance from the RedBull cars, I'm sure I'm not the only one wondering if the FIA stricter wing flex testing has affected them the most. Hard to say, since fuel loads are not known. and may have been concentrating more long runs.

Speaking of aero, fantastic clip from under Jenson Button's nose, the water makes the airflow clearly visible.


Pos Driver Team Time Gap Laps

1. Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1m49.032s 25
2. Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1m49.157s +0.125 17
3. Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1m49.248s +0.216 14
4. Robert Kubica Renault 1m49.282s +0.250 20
5. Felipe Massa Ferrari 1m49.588s +0.556 23
6. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1m49.689s +0.657 19
7. Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1m49.755s +0.723 20
8. Pedro de la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari 1m50.081s +1.049 27
9. Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 1m50.128s +1.096 22
10. Kamui Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 1m50.200s +1.168 24
11. Vitaly Petrov Renault 1m50.251s +1.219 24
12. Michael Schumacher Mercedes 1m50.341s +1.309 23
13. Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1m50.382s +1.350 21
14. Jaime Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m50.682s +1.650 25
15. Nico Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 1m50.831s +1.799 20
16. Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 1m51.520s +2.488 17
17. Sebastien Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m51.523s +2.491 25
18. Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 1m51.636s +2.604 19
19. Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 1m53.480s +4.448 15
20. Jarno Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 1m53.639s +4.607 21
21. Lucas di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 1m54.325s +5.293 17
22. Bruno Senna HRT-Cosworth 1m55.751s +6.719 24
23. Sakon Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 1m56.039s +7.007 21
24. Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 2m03.179s +14.147 3



(BBC)

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Thursday, August 26, 2010

Ferrari's awesome achievement.

Ferrari 458 Italia - Shark...Squale...

Forget the sensationalist headlines about a few examples burning to the ground, Ferrari was really on fire when Evo tested the 458 Italia on its reference track and Maranello's latest managed a lap 1.5 seconds faster than the already fantastic 430 Scuderia.

What makes this incredible is that the 458 is not meant to be a track focused special, it's very much conceived, let's say, as a 911 Turbo rather than a GT3. The 458 weight in on the EVO scales at 3370lbs (1529kg) and is not running the Scuderia's Pirelli Corsa tires but rather a more everyday Michelin Pilot, albeit a special version developed specifically for the car.

A note of caution though, at the Nürburgring, a slightly heavier 458 was only one second faster than a Scuderia (7:38) as tested by Sport Auto. whatever the numbers, the potential of a 458 Scuderia (or CS) makes our mouth water!



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Big Racing week end!

Huge racing week end this one. Of course Formula 1 is at Spa but also, MotoGP at Indianapolis, ALMS at Mosport and last but not least the Porsche Club of America is at New Jersey Motorsport Park where our own CG will be flying the Axis flag high! Go CG!

Anyway about Spa, the track everyone loves, this is a lovely clip the BBC made last year.



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Wednesday, August 25, 2010



You know the car, you know the place and no, I don't know....

(thanks Jochen@frozenspeed.com)
Picture was taken Monday and the car was being run by Caparo Cars at a Ringweekends event --> READ MORE

Terminator!



That's what this picture of the #92 BMW M3 ALMS car getting rebuilt in the Rahal-Letterman Racing shop reminds me of. The original car was involved in a crash at Road America and chassis written off. The team has a race this coming week end so time for rebuild is short.

One of the cool things about the rebuild pictures is seeing to what extent the M3 is modified for racing. As you may know, the gearbox is moved to the back in a transaxle design, the front suspension is not struts like on the street M3 but A arms, like on most new and future BMW's. Most triking is how the engine is mounted, lower and much further back to help lowering and centering the mass.



Follow RLR's progress on Facebook
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Flying Cars




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Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Adventured Development

Alpine1


You may have noticed from our track videos a bunch of us use Alpinestars gear and Axis Styles has been using the stuff for motorcross since before you probably knew it even existed.

What with the recent post about CG's latest adventure toy and the fact that from time to time we like to promote products we actually use, I thought you might enjoy this clip about the design process for the Alpinestars Tech Touring line of adventure riding gear.


Alpinestars Tech Touring
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Monday, August 23, 2010

Fixing a leaking differential...with a straw!

20100819_WGI_OPT_5813

A mechanic will replace parts that are broken, a truly great mechanic will tell you why that part is breaking.

Let me explain and it's a bit of a long story: at Watkins Glen last week, I once again had a problem with oil leaking out of my car's differential. This has been a nagging issue due to the driver's side stub axle "popping" out from the diff case. The stub could be pushed back in by hand but it would inevitably come out again and I was black flagged, I think 4 times on my first day with Group52.

94

Consensus seemed to point to a weakened or bent "c" clip, a 29 cent part which on my BMW M Coupe sits at the end of the stub axle assembly. General advice was to replace the whole left and right side units. By the afternoon of day one, I was ready to call it a day and drive back to NY having done only one clean session. This is precisely what happened last two times I went to then Glen and you'll understand I was not a happy camper.

7

But then I asked Spencer Cox for help. Spencer runs Speedsport Tuning which you will find in our "Axis recommends" section, he takes care of CG and Stee's race cars, he's the top as far as Porsche club racing prep. and support. "Tell you what, you take out the stub and I'll see what I can do about about the 'c' clip." Spencer told me so, what the heck, I jack the car and start wrenching.

I'd been told getting the stub axles out would be a big hassle involving removal of the exhaust and swaybar and various hours of labor but, as it turned out, none of that was necessary. The e30 derived trailing arms on the M Coupe droop far enough to allow for a pretty easy job. Once the stub was out some opined it might actually be what was worn and would need replacing.

Spencer looked at the part,looked at the retaining clip and said something else was the problem, that clip is not what's holding the stub in anyway. We had looked at ride height before jacking the car and it's not so low as to cause an issue but now as I pushed the stub back in, Spencer says "why is your axle spring loaded"?

"What, that's not how it's supposed to be?"
."...NO!"
"Oh... "
"Pass me those needle nose pliers."


188

With that Spencer loosens the clamp around the outside CV joint boot, a clearly audible sucking sound is heard and the whole axle moves about a half inch towards the center of the car!

Tuns out a vacuum had formed in that boot strong enough to pull the axle sufficiently far for it to pop out of the diff case. Spencer said this is actually quite common in hard run cars and that what they do with race cars is precisely what he did to mine: he inserted a spray can straw under the boot allowing for pressure to be equalized.

P1000926

Well, I could not believe it and I had to wait for the next morning to find out but not a single drop of oil came out of that case all day.

Morals of the story: look for why things are braking, don't just replace parts and good mechanics are hard to find, truly great mechanics almost impossible to find so please support and treat these gentlemen well. Their expertise will save your day. Spencer, you're the man!

Another big thanks goes to Sander Lee, one of Speedsport's clients who had brought Mr. Cox to the Glen. Without him both Adil (who had electronic gremlins act up on his GT3) and I would have gone home early. Cheers!

Home
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2010 Rallye Deutschland, a different look



Rally Deutschland is tarmac but also gravel. There is a moment there at 2:26... have a look. The way that Suzuki Skoda shoot up the tiny side road (can you call that a road?) is just buckets full of awesome!
(JM Video.be)
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You like old Porsches?

RSR

How about old RSR's on a slightly damp track? I have to say though, Putz Motorsports would not cut it in New York City.



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Group 52: the Rat's still where it's at.

_NIK0308

If you don't know the Rat then you don't know Jack, but if you ever do get to run with Group 52, the east coast's best, expert only, invitation only, open track club you will have know Jack.

We talked about Group 52 before here, it's where you go when you've had enough of the various car club "driving schools" and you are grown up enough to be fully at ease on track and just as good at looking ahead while keeping an eye on the mirror so you don't panic when 600HP (OK fine, 450) crashman trucks roar inches from you into a braking zone. It's all cool, everyone there is (mostly) in total control and (generally) an adult. I've now been to quite a few of these events and every time I'm amazed at how well having essentially a single rule (don't be an a-hole or you'll go home and never return) works.

Continued after the jump

More pictures on TracktimePhotos.com

It was my first time back at Watkins Glen since the catastrophic engine explosion in my MCoupe exactly one year ago and I was happy to see that despite year old track tires I was able to do a few laps in the 2:12 range, the same as with the old expired S54. I did however have some issues...again with a leaking differential which kind of ruined my first day. But, I ended up fighting the urge to quit and the diff problem was resolved. That interesting issue and how it was resolved in my next post.

I was there with Axis Adil who was running his newly acquired 997 GT3 for the first time. He did very well, running in the low 2:10 with ease. There is no way around it, 997 gt3 are awesome cars. (you might want to turn the volume down for this one)



It was also interesting running the "Short course" for the first time. Having that long straight after the outer loop sure puts a different prospective onto "turn 10" (which becomes turn 6, I think). Here are a couple of rather slow I'm afraid, laps right before I was black flagged for leaking diff oil...again.



Group 52 is by invitation so by all means I encourage you to seek someone who can recommend you (including us). Remember though that those who sponsor are responsible for your actions and will also be sent home if you mess up. Not an issue if you are ready. How good do you have to be? hmmm let's say that if you can drive a Mini Cooper S around the Glen like this guy you will be fine!



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Sunday, August 22, 2010

Bill Auberlen, Scott Tucker crash at Road America: You be the judge.

To me it looks like the BMW must have cut the LMPC rear left in the first contact and then slowed, I can't tell if the Porsche that was right behind the M3 had any kind of a role in this.

The other Rahal Letterman BMW M3 of Joey Hand and Dirk Müller went on to win GT though.





Home
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Saturday, August 21, 2010

Sports Utility Vehicle

What's at the end of the rainbow?

What's at the end of the rainbow? Fine, it's a bit hard to see but it's our idea of what an SUV is...find out after the jump

P1000915
Adil's Porsche 997 GT3 SUV
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Not just 4 wheels



Axis CG just took delivery of a KTM Adventure 990, Axis Justin used to race motocross, Tracktards are of course not just about four wheels. So let's follow Justin Bell on a road trip and get one car guy's prospective on BMW's latest and greatest bike, the S1000RR.


(Justin Bell.com)
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Friday, August 20, 2010

Gran Turismo 5 Sued by Italian Horse Race!



OK, bare with me because this is crazy: In the upcoming and long awaited Gran Turismo 5, a fictional racing track in the very real town of Siena, where twice a year a historic horse race is held. This is a tradition going back to the middle ages and it's essentially ritualized gang warfare involving bribery, betrayal, drugged horses and much eating and drinking. Horses from each of Siena's "hoods" are ridden bareback around the main square, many crash some have died, it's all wholesome good fun.

Of course then city fathers are now outraged their precious square be depicted with electronic go-karts running around...SCANDALO! The outrage will continue through the Italian court system unless, presumably, Sony ponies up a "cultural contribution" large enough to prevent the game from being confiscated ahead of its planned release in November.

Another excuse to delay the launch another 5 years.

(Sole 24ore, Telegraph)
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Ode to Salt

Always wanted to go to Speed Week... anyone up for a road trip sometimes?



Ode to Salt a film by Josh Clason
If you are into it, Speedhunters has some fantastic photography.
home --> READ MORE

Montoya and the ZR-1: Director's Cut

Here is a different take on Juan Pablo Montoya's media day at the GM proving grounds, the so called "Lutz 'ring".
The Corvette ZR-1 gets the hooligan stamp of approval from JPM who himself seems to find it a challenge keeping it going in one direction! What a sound.


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MAJ_0401
(Photo: Julien Mahiels)
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Monday, August 16, 2010

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Valentino Rossi will ride for Ducati, writes love letter to his Yamaha



The worst kept secret of the MotoGP season has been made official today: The Doctor will ride a red Ducati for the next two seasons. In parting Valentino hand wrote a "love letter" to his Yamaha M1 and the team.

"It's hard to explain in a few words what my relationship with Yamaha has been for the past seven years. Many things have changed since that far away 2004 but especially her, my M1. At the time she was forlorn mid field MotoGP, derided by most riders and experts. Now, after having helped her grow and improve you can see her there, smiling in her stall, sought after and admired, treated like the belle of the ball...."

You could say it might be a parting note to Jorge Lorenzo too, enjoy the bike I made for you buddy, see you next year!end of post --> READ MORE

Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion: Sights and Sounds






More after the jump






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Reminder: ALMS Mid-Ohio broadcast today

Surfin' U.S.A.
(photo: Kevin HD)
Honestly, I still can't get over the pinnacle of sports car racing in the US cannot find a live slot on television but, be that as it may, the ALMS race from Mid Ohio will finally be broadcast today starting at 12:30 PM ET on CBS.

A few more videos are after the jump.
(special note to anyone tuning in via iPhone or iPad: YouTube released a new player which is apparently compatible, would you let me know if you can view these videos?)

















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Saturday, August 14, 2010

The right balance

997 GT3Rs with our new CR shocks

A little film by Swedish shock masters Öhlins, featuring our friend Ron Simons from RSR Nürburg. Ron makes it clear why car companies test on that track, the perfect place to work out a very difficult compromise for chassis engineers. Have a look.



(those struts and shocks look fantastic, don't they?)

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Friday, August 13, 2010

Instant Depreciation

Ferrari owners have a reputation, it's not a good one. It's been that way forever as Il Commendatore famously said "there are Ferrari owners and Ferrari drivers".

Question is, crashing your just delivered 458 right outside the Ferrari factory gates after doing burnouts and pulls on Maranello city streets makes it
A: epically embarrassing or
B: more convenient for repairs?

Well, they do say cars depreciate as soon as they leave the showroom...


(cvdzijden/YouTube)

Ok so thanks to one of our readers, the facts of the case emerge and spoil it a little bit: the car is claimed to be a rental which in turn explains whi renting exotics is so expensive! Let's face it, if you were going to crash a $200k + rental, more fun to do it at the Nurburgring than on a back street of Maranello. A further win would be that you might make Darwin happy! Win.

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Thursday, August 12, 2010

Next Generation Porsche 991: longer, wider, lighter, faster and...more expensive?



According to UK's AUTOCAR the scoop on the next generation Porsche 911 (991) is that it will be bigger, yet lighter and more fuel efficient then the current 997 but it will also move more upmarket compared to the current models. This is most puzzling, because we wonder precisely what that means, that Porsche can charge more for Boxsters or that there needs to be room made for a $40000 Porsche?

In any case, the article claims the car will be, no surprises here, a refinement of the same basic ideas Porsche has been developing for the last half century: it will not be a mid engined 911. The front end will still be shared with the Boxster, Engines will be a 3.6 with 365hp for the Carrera and a 3.8 with 415HP for the Carrera S. In the continuing war between car designers and people who actually track their cars, score one for the marketing guys, the car will come standard with 20" wheels...

(autocar)

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Wednesday, August 11, 2010


Taso's shop, August 11. 2010 by AC

Got a cool shot for Picture of the Day? send it to us! --> READ MORE

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Bruce's Batmobile

Add filmmaking to the list pf things they do very well in Woking. In this short clip Gordon Cuppock and Tyler Alexander remember Bruce Mclaren while looking over an M8D



Speaking of cool Mclarens, check this out



More cool Mclaren videos after the jump









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Ferrari 458 Challenge testing video

A video of a Ferrari 458 Challenge testing different aero configuration at Fiorano.

The car is pushed by the same 570HP motor as the street version but with a radical weight loss, brakes from 599XX and 19 inch Pirelli slicks, achieved a lap time of 1:16.5. Compare that with the 1:24 of the 599GTO and the 1:16.2 of the Ferrari FXX. That's without using a rear wing, imagine what the 458 GT will be like...


(auto-motor-sport)
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Monday, August 09, 2010

Spec e30 taught him well!



You're on board with Mike Skeen at Mid Ohio.

You remember Mike: Spec e30, that TV show whose name escapes me now and then onto Trans Am and Grand Am. Mid Ohio was his debut in the SCCA's World Challenge GT series (yes it still exists) and after qualifying the Carlisle Companies/Cragar Corvette a few thousands off pole, he went on to win the Saturday race and set the fastest race lap (1:27.296 ).

Cheers from Axis, Mike!
See more video after the jump




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Sunday, August 08, 2010

Lotus Exos T125 World Premiere: Lotus raises the stakes



The competition is fierce in the Track Day World Championship, Ferrari Fxx and 599XX, Pagani Zonda R, not to mention any number of British built barely legal contenders. Today Lotus raised the bar for the non-racing, track only market with the Exos T125 presented yesterday at Laguna Seca.

Our West Coast friend Rahul Nair, who attended the premiere and shot these videos and pictures, tells us the Cosworth powered Exos has a carbon fiber tub and a configuration inspired by current spec Formula 1 cars including carbon suspension and brakes but, as you see from the pictures, it rolls on a low profile tire similar to what F1 will likely move to after 2013.

The engine, a 3.5L V8, produces 650HP at 10,300 RPM (with a 10,800 "push to pass" option in case you find a Zonda R at your track day). The package is made more user friendly by allowing 4500 hours between engine rebuilds and a starter motor. No word if a UK only "street legal" kit will be offered but if so, it will be undoubtebly be hailed as "...actually quite comfortable"



Twenty five Exos are planned at a cool one million dollars apiece. The entry ticket will give the owner access to special track days and instruction from actual Formula 1 drivers in not just driving but also fitness. Think of it as the best gym class you even bought!

Huge gallery after the jump.
(thanks to Rahul Nair)






Home
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Red Bull's Adrian Newey in racing crash.

Formula 1 design genius Adrian Newey, a keen amateur racer and car collector, was involved in a nasty crash at the Snatterton track in the UK while racing a Ginetta G50 cup car. Nerfed from behind Newey, in the white #50 car, unfortunately rolled right onto the path of an oncoming car.

Reports are that he was taken to the hospital but no word yet on his condition, Hopefully nothing more than a checkup.


(itv/motorsport45)
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Friday, August 06, 2010

A Golden Time

Our friend, filmmaker and racer Alex King, sent us this very special recollection to share with you tracktards.

It's a snapshot of a simpler, perhaps happier time in racing. Even though the clip below is precisely what you would expect from a 1970's production (yes, there is some jazz flute...), I urge you to watch the whole thing, I promise you will enjoy it.




When my mom passed away in from cancer in late 2008, my dad uncovered this old film of them racing Formula Atlantic in the 1970s, in the golden days, when some of the best racers started and competed in that series.

Brack, Villeneuve, and even Hunt, Brambilla, Patrese, Lafitte and Pironi competed at a famous race at Trois Riveres . In 2004, I raced at the revival event there in his very own '73 March. I fought Duncan Dayton only retire from the lead with a tightening up motor.

It's a cool little video that is almost a preface to vintage racing these days. But oh my, how dangerous it was. Nice runoff eh?



It was certainly a great era for racing in F1 and all around the world. Low budget, highly competitive, great tracks, and really a ton of fun: what racing should be!

Drivers went onto F1 from Atlantic back then and everyone knows the stories of how Villenueve measured his bravery against these tooth-cut drivers from North America.

But also, that lifestyle is where my parents found romance and where I ultimately came from. They would pack up their bus and head across North America and Canada racing during the summer, James was racing and Barb was trusty with a stop watch.

My mom, Barbera, would have been 61 on Friday, August 6th, and even though she became a very successful jewelry artist later in life, and my Dad finally won the championship in Formula Atlantic 1982 (in the year I was born, he shared the St Pete podium with a young Paul Tracy), it's just cool to look back at our racing roots.

There is something carefree about that time that I think we need more of. Certainly the dynamic, fun and talented people made it better, and the money these days doesn't bring the value that you'd think...




MitoMedia
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Thursday, August 05, 2010

Dan Gurney and the Eagle at Spa

Arguably the best looking Grand Prix car of the 1960s, the Eagle-Westlake Mk 1, in a short video postcard narrated by the man himself.


(Road &Track)


Home --> READ MORE

Who needs wings?



Flashback: 1993 Porsche Carrera Cup final, Hockenheim.

Uwe Alzen in the blue car and Altfrid Hager are duking it out in their 964 Carrera Cup cars with blatant disregard for the edges of the track...

Don't miss Hager's hand gestures, priceless.


(photo: PasionPorsche.com)

home --> READ MORE

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Happy Birthday John Fitch!

Happy 93rd to Mr. Fitch (August 4th, 1917). Best wishes from all us tracktards!

Biographical note by Carl Goodwin and John Fitch via Historicracing.com


"With just two Grand Prix races recorded against his name, the uninitiated may be given the false impression that John Fitch was just another insignificant run-of-the-mill driver - far from it.

An ocean racer, a fighter pilot, a test pilot, a professional racing driver, a team manager, race course director, prolific inventor, highway safety expert, automaker, and entrepreneur., he was born John Cooper Fitch in Indianapolis, Indiana, August 4, 1917. He is a descendent of the inventor of the steamboat. His step-father was an executive with the old Stutz car company so Fitch witnessed auto racing at an early age, attending the Indianapolis 500 race in the passenger seat of a Stutz Bearcat at the Brickyard.

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In the late thirties, Fitch went from Kentucky Military Institute to Lehigh University to study civil engineering. In 1939 he traveled to Europe and saw the last race at Brooklands just days before Chamberlain's declaration of World War II. Returning to the 'States, he sailed around the Gulf of Mexico in a 32-foot schooner from Sarasota to New Orleans.

In the spring of 1941 he volunteered in the Army Air Corps. In 1944, as a P-51 pilot in the Fourth Fighter Group on bomber escort missions near the end of World War II, he became one of the first Americans to shoot down a German ME 262 jet fighter. After 4 years of combat duty and just 2 months before the end of the war, he was himself shot down and became a POW.

Then seven years after shooting at the Germans, he was driving their racing cars - in the cockpit of a Mercedes-Benz 300SL prototype at the 1952 Pan American Road Race. The previous year he had been the first Sports Car Club of America National Champion.

For 18 years during the 50s and 60s, Fitch had a racing career that included driving for Mercedes-Benz and the Briggs Cunningham team, with major wins in the Grand Prix of Argentina, the Mille Miglia, Tourist Trophy and Sebring. Fitch also drove six times in the Le Mans 24-hour race, finishing as high as 3rd.

He was the first racing team manager for Corvette (in 1956 and 1957) and he was the first general manager of the Lime Rock race course.

He started in racing, as many of his era did, in an MG-TC, at Bridgehampton. The first two of five Fitch-designed cars were built in the early fifties: the Fitch Model B and the Fitch-Whitmore Jaguar. The "B" was a Fiat 1100 chassis with the small Ford 60 V8 tuned for midget racing and a modified Crosley body. The Jag special was an XK-120 with 800 pounds of bodywork replaced with lightweight aluminum. Both were successful racing cars.

In March 1951, on his first racing trip overseas, he won the Peron Grand Prix, a sports car race in Buenos Aires, driving an Allard-Cadillac that had been rebuilt from a wreck. This victory brought him to the attention of millionaire racer and entrant Briggs Cunningham, who took him into his sports car team, which was attempting to win Le Mans and other long-distance events. General Juan Peron generously awarded him membership in the Peronista Party. Evita gave him a trophy and a kiss (he admits that she died soon afterward).

In 1953, Fitch and co-driver Phil Walters beat the Aston Martin team at Sebring in a Chrysler-powered Cunningham C-4, much to their surprise. The British team manager thought he had the race won. "I never imagined anyone would beat us," John Wyer said. "Especially not Americans." It was the first Sebring victory for American drivers in an American car.

His escapades in racing included a 140 mph end-over-end crash at the wheel of a Cunningham C-5 at Rheims. That had the team baffled for nearly forty years before they realized that the body shape was an excellent wing, which caused the car to lift.

Having impressed Neubauer during a test in a 300SL Mercedes in 1952, Fitch finally got the call from the great man and found himself in the factory sports car team for 1955, and reserve driver at a couple of Grands Prix. He was in good company on the Mercedes team with Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss and Karl Kling. It was the most formidable racing team of all time, winning Formula One, Sports Racing, production GT sports cars and all classes including even Diesel passenger cars, all in a single year. A class win in the Mille Miglia was the high point of Fitch's driving career - fifth overall in a production 300SL behind 4 sports racing cars - the two Mercedes 300 SLRs of Moss and Fangio, Maglioli's Ferrari and Guiardini's Maserati. However, at Le Mans that year, Fitch's co-driver, Pierre Levegh, was involved in the worst accident in racing, killing 85 spectators.

It directed his life into energy-absorbing safety barriers, and the installation of racing barriers at Lime Rock and Watkins Glen as early as 1968. When he returned from three years of racing in Europe at the end of the '55 season, Ed Cole, then Chief Engineer at Chevrolet, asked him to help realize his dream of making Corvette a world class racing marque. The first rung on that high ladder was in setting a production sports car record of 145 mph on the sand beach at Daytona.

As the Corvette team captain at Sebring in '56 and '57, Fitch struggled to make the early Corvettes capable of a respectable performance. The importance of Fitch's contribution has never been fully recognized. Just two months before the 12-hour race, he started with a nice boulevard sports car that could not complete a single lap without breaking. When the event commenced, it began with a team of Fitch prepared sports cars ready to race. With two class wins and the team prize, he concluded "It was less than we had hoped for, but probably more than we deserved." None other than Dick Thompson was one of the eight drivers that made it possible.

In 1959 he drove a factory Porsche Spyder with Edgar Barth to a second in class and fifth overall in the Sebring 12-hour race. Racing with his friend and patron Briggs Cunningham, he ran D-Type and Lister Jaguars at Lime Rock, Road America and Thompson CT. As Lime Rock circuit director, he organized and drove in the famous Formula Libre race. He took a fourth place to winner Roger Ward in an Offy midget (that shocked the sports car troops!).

In 1960, he went back to Le Mans with the Cunningham Team and more American cars: Corvettes, three of them. The Corvettes had been tested and refined at Bridgehampton and later in the Sebring race. With Ferrari pilot Bob Grossman as co-driver, they finished 8th overall, equal to the Corvette finish at Le Mans in 2001, 41 years later. In both cases, a production sports car finished ahead of dozens of all-out sports racing machines.

In the early and mid 60s, with introduction of the Chevrolet Corvair, Fitch created two versions for the car enthusiast. One was the Fitch Sprint based on the production Corvair, the other the Fitch Phoenix. The former had four carburetors, an extensively revised rear suspension, faster steering, better brakes and many other refinements. The latter is conceded to be a timeless classic, as well as a performer at only 2150 lbs.

East Coast racing in a two-liter Maserati and a Cooper Monaco rounded out the final years of his career. The poignant tale of his last race begins at the 1966 Sebring event. Fitch and Cunningham were driving a Porsche 904. Well into the race, a valve broke and the car was out of contention.

They both officially retired from serious racing on the spot."

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Tuesday, August 03, 2010

Ferrari 612 replacement will be inspired by a Z3 MCoupe...and a Jeep!



Ok a bit of a stretch, a Z3 MCoupe because signs point to it having a 2 volume "shooting break" body style. In reality, it's following the design trend started by the Aston Rapide and the Porsche Panamera, a big 4 seat hatchback. You've probably seen the pictures of the heavily disguised test mule by now, maybe seen that short video clip.

But perhaps more interesting than what the bodywork may or may not eventually look like are further confirmations that the top of the line v12, codenamed F151, will have a 4wd system, possibly switchable and a Porsche RSR-hybrid like system with electric motors driving the front wheels in a KERS type arrangement. A different approach than Porsche who instead is making their 918 Spyder be more like a hyper Prius with the way it uses electric motors rather than using its hybrid fig leaf for pure performance enhancement. 4wd. as we mentioned before on Axis, is a must to compete in a segment that has seen such a success for the Bentley Continental. The F151 should make its debut in 2011.
(autowereld.com)



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Sunday, August 01, 2010

That Schumacher move...



"You can be a nice guy off the track but if you're a nice guy in Formula 1, you will never win anything"
Ayrton Senna.

After Schumacher pulled that tough, desperate move on poor old Barrichello, I wondered: was this a return to what, week in and week out we hear Formula 1 is not anymore? There was some real hate going on there, some actual bad blood.

Of course, one view is that Schumacher has lost the plot, that a real champion would have know he had no chance in that situation, with the Brazilian on fresh soft tires behind him and moved over gracefully. It's a valid point, but not if you are going to complain that Formula 1 has become too sterile or if you know how a real racer's mind works.

Schumacher was certainly thinking about the final points position but, I'm guessing, he also remembered how Barrichello has spent the past couple of years trying to convince anyone who would listen how he was really faster than the German, if only he had been allowed to win. Barrichello even went as far as calling Schumacher, gay. I'm sure that was all misting inside the Mercedes driver's red helmet and he wasn't going to give up easily.

Barrichello for his part was probably thinking about how in his native Brazil, he's seen as a nice guy but a bit of a whiner, how there have been articles down there saying Brazilian autosport used to be Senna, Fittipaldi, Piquet, but now it's Barrichello, Massa and...Piquet jr
Yet Rubens had balls, he didn't lift and went through, he might want to thank Schumacher for giving him the chance to show he's got what it takes..

But he can't win, the final insult was that both Schumacher and Ross Brawn after the race said "This is Formula 1, what's the problem? There was enough room, otherwise he would not have gotten through..." Score on for the grouchy old man making Rubens once again look like a complainer.

Of course the FIA didn't see it that way, probably the safe way to go.
Videos after the jump








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Porsche wins the 24 Hour of Spa



BMS Scuderia Italia, a team perhaps better know for running Ferraris in the past was the winner of the 2010 24 hours of Spa. Heartbreak for BMW who led for the over 23 hours with the three Dirk car of Müller, Werner and Adorf when a halfshaft failure forced the car first off road and then into the pits for repair and to third place on the podium.

2010 Total 24 Hour of Spa results
Check out the photo gallery by Hugo Garritsen

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