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Revisting the Blogger Swap Shop

You may remember in August, VivaF1 organised the first ‘Blogger Swap Shop’ to tide F1 bloggers over through the summer break. I wrote a post for VivaF1 and Leigh from the F1 & Motorsport Archive wrote a post here, just two examples among many other great swaps.

If you enjoyed those, good news, now we’re in the off-season there is going to be a whole series of them! Viva are soliciting as many bloggers as possible in the hope of getting a wide selection, so that we can write for as many different people as possible.

Just as last time there are already a mix of sites signed up: commentary blogs, satire blogs, analysis blogs, community blogs and any other flavour you can think of. In August everyone really raised their game and it was quite tough to come up with something, it’ll be interesting to see what happens this time!

Want to join in? Sign up here!

 

On The Limit: Every Second Counts

If you ever need a pick-me-up, or to be reminded why we sometimes put ourselves through the mill in the name of this sport, you just have to watch this video:

Awe, and then some. Simply epic!

Video credit: ‘Every Second Counts’ by Antti, with thanks to Gavin, a.k.a. Rubbergoat, for the link via Twitter/Facebook.

(about time the old series of On The Limit posts were brought back, don’t you think?)

Thursday Thoughts – A Change of Track

Three cheers for the return of Thursday Thoughts! If you missed it last year, this is a series of questions posed over the off-season, a different ‘host blog’ asks each week and invites anyone to respond with an article on their own site. Any blog can take part and commenters without a blog are welcome to write guest posts for any of the blogs. That’s far too many uses of the word ‘blog’.

While the questions are usually F1-centric I do I try my best to expand them to relate to what else is happening in the racing world, perhaps things other championships are doing which they can teach F1 and vice versa, because that’s the remit of this.. site.

Here is the first question of the 2010/2011 off-season as posed by Christine at Sidepodcast:

Which are your worst three circuits, and what would you do to fix them?

My answer:

We all know several of the races on the F1 calendar are very boring and the circuits are largely at fault. We face two choices to fix them:  literally fix them by making changes, or drop them entirely.

It is interesting to note that IndyCar held races at a lot of boring venues in the last few years yet for 2011 several have been dropped in favour of circuits which will hopefully prove to more interesting – some are completely new and some are being revisited for the first time in years, which I think is a fascinating mix, I hope it is the right one. Touring car series are never afraid to mix up the circuit layouts at the venues they visit so that is another option, one already tried spectacularly badly by F1 in Bahrain this year, hopefully that doesn’t put them off trying elsewhere in future.

In March I wrote a post saying people complaining of boring racing need to broaden their minds a bit away from ‘overtake-per-minute changes-of-lead spectacle’, but there’s only so much anyone can take and there really is far too much follow my leader going on in the current era across many forms of racing, so IndyCar must be applauded for taking these steps.

Back to the issue at hand. The first thing to do is to pick the top three worst tracks in F1. This isn’t as easy as it might sound.

2010 featured 19 events and I automatically keep those in bold:  Sakhir, Melbourne, Sepang, Shanghai, Barcelona, Monaco, Istanbul, Montreal, Valencia, Silverstone, Hockenheim, Budapest, Spa-Franchorchamps, Monza, Singapore, Suzuka, Mokpo, Sao Paulo, Abu Dhabi.
Next year it’ll be Nurburgring’s turn in place of Hockenheim and we should see the first Indian GP in New Delhi if all goes to plan.

I’d like to give Korea another shot as I think they’ve learned a heck of a lot there, I expect some modifications and they ought to have a fair crack at the whip. We also must keep India because it hasn’t held a race yet and deserves the opportunity. As for Sepang and Istanbul – I happen like them, I know some don’t but I reckon they aren’t all that bad.

Germany isn’t stellar at either venue but is by no means the worst. I keep but give a a thorough ticking off to Silverstone for producing a bad GP this year on the new layout – the turns are too edgy and technical now, sort it out.

Now we move on to the questionable ones:

I just about keep Budapest because it has been modified extensively over the years. Time was when it was easily the worst GP of the year, it isn’t now and that’s not just because some worse ones have appeared since, they’ve worked hard to fix the problems and let’s give them credit. There’s still work to be done though, they shouldn’t rest easy.

I also just about keep Sakhir on the condition they use the original GP layout. I actually really like that fast section into the hairpin on to the back straight by the support pits and have done for a while now, that’s a great passing place. That said, I reserve the right to replace it later.

That leaves four: Valencia, Abu Dhabi, Shanghai and Barcelona. I’m going to cheat and bend the rules to suggest fixes for all of them. Here are my three and a bit worst tracks, in order:

3a. I’m actually going to surprise everyone and retain Abu Dhabi. It is a fantastic location, ‘day into night’ always looks great at any race track anywhere in the world and it works really well in this setting, and it is the best race ‘facility’ (cough, ugh, hate that term) in F1 if not the world. What needs changing is the track and looking at the map and thinking of the space available after watching on TV the other day, this can be done relatively easily with lots of small adjustments rather than one big fix.

– The tight chicane (turns 5 and 6) before the hairpin needs either to be removed completely or reprofiled to sit 100-200m earlier and be less tight. This will allow cars to get a decent level of speed into the hairpin and open up passing opportunities. They say they don’t want speed there because there’s no run-off, which is a severe lack of planning if ever there was some. So move the hairpin 20m down the track to create run-off.
– After the long straight there’s a tight left corner which immediately switches back into a turn to the right (turn 9), I can see they were trying to generate side-by-side racing here but the corners are far too tight, there is only one racing line and therefore no overtaking. The entire preceding “long straight into hairpin” concept is completely wasted by this little corner. Open it out to allow for two or three lines, if that means removing the switchback then so be it.
– Follow along and after another long straight is another little fiddly bit at turns 11-12-13. Turn 13 doesn’t need to exist, just link 12 to 14 directly. I’m not sure what can be done for the rest of the way because of the lack of room with the hotel buildings, but just continue along the same theme of opening up the racetrack and removing the technical corners which get in the way of overtaking opportunities.

3. Barcelona. I actually like the Spanish GP as an event, it looks to have a great atmosphere (occasional racists notwithstanding) near to what I’m assured is a fantastic city. The problem is again with the track. There’s one good passing place, the end of the back straight. I thought they’d ruined it when they changed that corner but it has worked really well, lots of overtaking attempts certainly in the GP2 races if not always the F1. What they have ruined is the final corner, needlessly mickey mouse and apparently to calm the MotoGP fraternity – I have to ask, the old circuit is still there, can the F1 cars not use that? I’ve also had a bit of a bugbear about turns 1 and 2, nearly every race starts with someone in the gravel there and I can see it could be turned into a better potential overtaking spot with some work. As of right now the corner is too fast and too narrow for passing by anyone other than the most committed. But there is a much wider problem because the races were boring here long before the chicane was put in. I don’t have any fixes other than to say “no testing at venues known to be holding a Grand Prix in the next calendar year”. The teams and drivers know this place intimately. I reluctantly drop this event, and perhaps replace it with a race at Motorland Aragon.

2. Shanghai. I don’t know what to suggest for the track itself. The one positive about it – it is really enjoyable to drive on sim racing games. As a race? Forget it. My recollections of Shanghai are that when this is a wet or damp race it is enjoyable, when it is dry it is really boring. We can’t guarantee wet races and anyway, what circuit isn’t enjoyable when it is wet or damp? The place is a hassle for everyone in F1 to get to, including visas and travel arrangements. If you’re trying to sell the place to the world you want to make it easy for everyone. I think after six years we’ve had enough now, let’s drop this one. In any case I’m not particularly comfortable holding an event like this in a country like this.

1. Valencia. The most boring circuit to emerge in years until the Bahrain extension came along, but there’s hope. Look at the map. This track is salvageable simply due to the little connection between turns 13 and 25. That long section looping around it doesn’t need to be there. Unfortunately that section is a bit more interesting than the long drag through the dockyard but there’s not much can be done about that. Connect up that link, use the short layout for a year or two, see if it helps the racing and if not.. goodbye. Perhaps this could free up some lap distance to be used to branch off at another point on the track, but only if the number of corners doesn’t exceed 18 in a 5km racetrack. If none of these fairly drastic changes works, bin the event. Sure the beach looks nice, sorry that’s not enough.

That’s my over-long answer, sorry about the number of words I got carried away. Do check out the other responses which are linked within the comments of the question post.

2010 Belgian GP – Friday Pt.2

Continued from Part 1. Apologies for the long gap between posts in this series, I was moving house. I know not everyone likes the format of “we did this, then we did this” so I’ll try and shake it up a bit, but ultimately I think it is unavoidable.

Les Combes.

This wasn’t as impressive a viewing position as I’d hoped. The cars were too slow but this may have been due to them being Formula BMWs in the wet, but mainly you are so far away from the action it dilutes any sense of speed. Perhaps F1 cars in the dry are different. Perhaps I’d had enough of the incessant rain by now.

Photos:
Formula BMWs at Les Combes, and the view back down the straight through the fence;

With a lull in track action I continued around the track to Rivage corner – you exit a gate at Les Combes then enter another just yards away having to scan your ticket twice, it all seemed a bit unnecessary to me, can’t they put in a path? Anyway this is where all the drunks hang out, it seemed like people had been drinking since morning and weren’t planning to stop yet – I ordered a coffee and was greeted with sarcastic jibes from the others at the counter and the servers too! Charming. Unlike some I actually wanted to remember the day and the experience of F1 cars on a live track, at these ticket prices not all of us can go every year.

No rain for a while now, the sun was even trying to break through although the track was very much still wet. It was turning into a really pleasant afternoon. I’m turning into such an old man. Looking towards Pouhon with yet more stunning views in the backdrop, the pits surrounded by the forest with the mist hanging in the air. Not a bad way to get back to nature.

Here are a few pictures from this location because it is a great place to be close to F1 cars, although I wouldn’t watch the race from here. Just the one big block of pictures in this post, don’t run away!

Photos:
Great views at the top; Looking back up to the drunken happy fans; Mark Webber;

I also got a few videos at Rivage because it is a great spot to be up close to the cars, here is one of them:

A couple of lesser quality videos from the same spot are here and here until they surely get removed by copyright claim one day.

My main camera died at this point [cue cheers from the readers], I think the water got into it or the batteries died – I wasn’t impressed and had to switch to my phone so the photo quality is awful.

During the session I wandered down to Pouhon to meet Gavin and Guille who’d come over earlier in the day. They’d found shelter from the rain showers under a concrete toilet block of all things, there was a section under it which was a bit like castle ramparts, you could stand sheltered from the wind and most of the rain and still have a high up view of the track. And no before you ask, it wasn’t disgusting, the building was fully plumbed!

Pouhon corner itself was a tad underwhelming I thought, again like Les Combes this could have been down to the wet/damp track slowing the cars. Not much in the way of overtaking or of the out-and-out spectacle of speed. What you do get is a great appreciation of the way these cars take a corner so quickly particularly when Yamamoto is coming through with the back of his car constantly moving from side to side like it is about to throw him off the track – his was the only car that did this. The Red Bulls and McLarens were very much ‘planted’ through here but to be honest most of the cars were. Even the Lotus and Virgin cars didn’t look slow.

,

Photos:
Pouhon;

Again I was struck by how gorgeous this setting is. Look at all the trees and just the general ambience of the place. I love it. I started to get a little envious of the guys standing near me on General Admission tickets – we found unlike many Grands Prix it isn’t necessary to get a grandstand seat here.

GP2 qualifying was up next so we stuck around to watch it – cue yet another massive downpour! It had been dry for much of F1 Fp2 and even a dry line started to appear on the circuit, unfortunately for the GP2 guys the heavens opened practically as the green flag flew.

Here’s a bit of video of the very wet GP2 qualifying session.

And that was it, track sessions over apart from some GP3 and Porsche Supercup but we elected to skip those practice sessions to get home, get warm, and get dry. It isn’t possible to overstate just how wet I got that day and I think every single one of the others was just as soaked through.

Photo:
Returning from Pouhon to meet up with the others we passed under Eau Rouge as the clouds closed in;

We were all agreed that despite the conditions we all loved Spa-Franchorchamps and our first day at the circuit ‘proper’, whether we walked around or stayed in the stands it was excellent. There was a lot of grumbling about the weather and the cold from practically everyone (myself very much included) and it wasn’t comfortable in the slightest, yet writing this a few months later all that truly remains in the memory is an enjoyable day trackside at one of the greatest racing venues in the world.

Even so, the chance to dry off in the warm cabin with lots of takeaway pizzas was very welcome indeed. Indeed the clothes I wore on this day were still damp on Monday when we came to pack up and leave.

Come back soon for my recap of Saturday at the Belgian GP!