February 26, 2015

This rally driver was totally lost!

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Photo:Peter Märkl/Amotion Photography/Flikr

There is steely determination in Jonathan Hirschi eyes as he waits for his turn to attack  SS1 of this year's Jänner Rallye, the Austrian stop of the European Rally Championship.

Unfortunately, trouble for the Swiss driver starts just a minute into the stage:  perhaps too many "allez" and not enough "droite" in the notes read by the navigator and Hirschi hits a snow bank.  

Things seem a little tense in the cabin after that as the now noseless Peugeot  pops out of the forest and onto a fast open section.

I wish we had audio from inside the car for what happened next.   The conversation between the two must have been quite lively as they made their way out of a snow bank, onto a parking lot, into another snow bank, back into the parking lot, attempt to head into a field in the wrong direction and finally decide to take out (and with them) the parking lot gate.

We are not sure if, then making a 90 degree left turn soon after, the driver decided to bury the car in snow again to make a point.

Hirsute finished sixth overall.

February 24, 2015

McLaren issues statement on Alonso's crash, many are still skeptical.

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Pastor Maldonado crashed in the same place in 2014/

With Fernando Alonso still in the hospital under observation and  talk of his missing the final pre season test,  McLaren's official explanations don't satisfy.


McLaren issued a press release blaming the accident on a sudden gust of wind and categorically denying there was any mechanical or electrical issues with the car.

McLaren should have done this immediately after the accident rather than wait for people to come up with their own explanations.  

Not that the official version completely satisfies all questions, especially since F1 teams are notoriously unreliable when it comes to admitting technical failures.

Sudden gusts of wind are indeed common at the Circuit de Catalunya yet the photographer who took the only know pictures of the crash said that at that moment the wind was not strong.

McLaren said the wind gust blew Alonso onto the Astroturf (in a somewhat similar dynamic to Maldonado's practice accident last season) yet the same photographer claims the McLaren never put a wheel off on the outside.

Others are wondering why there is only one tire skid mark.  Is that an indication of a possible brake by wire issue?

If it was just a "normal testing crash", why did Alonso stay inside the cockpit for 20 minutes and had to be sedated?

If it was not a mechanical issue, why did McLaren stop Button who was scheduled for the afternoon?

The one guy who saw better than anyone was Vettel of course who was right behind.  He saw Alonso just turn into the wall. "It was strange" he said.

Yes,  strange indeed.

I wonder if F1 might consider mandating concrete walls be protected by Safer barriers as NASCAR did for Daytona's inside wall after Kyle Busch's crash.   If a relatively slow speed hit in what might possibly be the safest racing car designed by man can put a racer out of commission then, perhaps, it's time to act.

February 23, 2015

Top Gear is right: Ferrari and McLaren, grow up!

4 comments:
Porsche 918, LaFerrari, Mclaren P1 on Top Gear

Back when Mr. Harris choked on his tortellini and threw his parmigiano out of the pram on Jalopnik,  he neglected to mention Mclaren behaves in essentially the same manner when it comes to how their cars are tested vs their rivals.

All car manufactures do this to one degree or another but Ferrari AND McLaren seem to have taken this behaviour to a new a new level. Top Gear confirms in their latest episode.

Who would be fastest around Top Gear's track, the Porsche 918,  the Mclaren P1 or the La Ferrari (it pisses me off every time I have to write that name,  thanks Luca Montezuma!).

I agree it's wholly irrelevant but I, and I'm sure you, would love to see it right?

If anyone could actually make it happen it would be Top Gear but no,  neither Ferrari nor McLaren would allow it.    Porsche was fine with it as they have nothing to lose,  not the fastest and they can claim they are close at a significant savings.  Win and someone in Woking and Maranello is losing a job.

But Jezza's right, c'mon,  group a pair.  Take the cars to Le Castellet or some properly fast track and have at it already.




February 22, 2015

New Porsche GT3 RS 4.0 specs

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Remember when that die cast model of a yet to be announced Porsche 991 GT3 RS appeared on the internet?   Turns out it was quite accurate.

Later we learned the new über-GT3 would have a 4 liter engine and 500ish horsepower with a Magnesium roof and composite front wings.


Now, what purports to be the spec sheet for the new car was "leaked" on the internet.

Here are the main details:

4.0l, 500hp, 460 Nm.

PDK only.

Torque vectoring and "sport tuned" rear wheel steering.

9.5 x 20" and 12/5 x 21" wheels

Wider than GT3 body.

CF reinforced plastic hood and fenders, Magnesium alloy roof.

and amusing for what is, in the end,  a street car:

“PIT SPEED” in the centre console switch panel for local speed restriction at the push of a button, e.g. in the pit lane of a race circuit

Sale date in Europe March 2015.  Time to sell that kidney.

Alonso in heavy testing crash.

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It's tempting to start thinking of Fernando as a tragic figure, a supremely talented driver that will just not catch any breaks.   McLaren Honda is behind while Ferrari is instead showing promise now a heavy crash in practice.

It happened today at the Circuit de Catalunia in Barcelona.   Alonso lost control of his Mclaren-Honda coming out of turn 4.  From the pictures it's hard to tell what the dynamic of the accident might be but the car does not look severely damaged.

However Alonso was in the car for 10 minutes before medical personnel extracted him.  Reports say that Alonso complained of dizziness and was then loaded onto a stretcher and taken to the hospital for observation.


His manager, Luis Garcia Abad tweeted:

 "Fernando está bien y consciente. Muchas gracias por vuestro interés. Fernando is OK and conscious. Thank you !"

Hopefully, nothing too serious.

You can see the whole photo sequence over at MARCA

February 21, 2015

Aston DB10 and Jaguar C-X75 Bond filming a chase scene in Rome.

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James Bond's Aston Martin DB10 filming in Rome


Spectre, the next James Bond film will include a chase scene on the banks of the Tiber.  The latest Bond car, the Aston Marting DB10 was photographed there along with the Jaguar C-X75 and a more "pedestrian" V12 Vantage.

Presumably,  the magic of editing will make the chase scene look a bit more exciting than it did on home video but, last time the Bond production was playing with cars in Italy,  an Aston Martin DBS did end up in Lake Garda!

Safety boats are probably a good idea.

February 20, 2015

Is Mercedes injecting hydrogen or is someone just blowing gas?

3 comments:
With everyone busy worrying about split turbos, was Mercedes an order of magnitude more diabolically clever?



If you are a regular reader you know enough not to get too excited about pre-season form so, rather than speculate on the future, it's fun to explore "conspiracy" theories while we wait for the season to begin in Australia.

F1 teams are in the middle of the second pre-season testing session in Barcelona and, despite the headlines, most experts agree Mercedes still holds the edge.  Reliability and long runs may not make for fancy titles but that's what wins races.

That only fueled  some corners of the F1 internet in formulating a "theory du jour" seeking to explain this overwhelming superiority and it makes for an entertaining read.   Frst brought up by F1AnalisiTecnica.com and later picked up by Autosprint, it contains just enough, as Steven Colbert would say, "truthiness" to make it tantalizing.

Let me try to lay out this latest theory of where those extra  50 to 70 Mercedes hp might come from.



AutoMotorSport Photo.
The Evidence

Mercedes engines, while never officially tested of course, were thought to produce  50 to 70 more horsepower than their rivals in 2014.   That means that using the same amount of fuel they were able to show an efficiency improvement of 7 to 8%.    That extra efficiency allowed the Germans more flexibility in fuel and aero loads but has been difficult to explain how this might be attained through conventional means.

The problem.

One way to produce more power is to burn more gasoline but, as you know, there is a strict limit of 100kg of fuel and a maximum instantaneous fuel flow limit of 100kg/hr.  You might have more "powerful" fuel but that too is strictly regulated.

The theory

To achieve a more efficient burn, Mercedes is injecting small quantities of hydrogen into the combustion chamber.  Hydrogen injection is known to improve burn velocity and to allow an engine to run leaner  and reduce emission to boot.
Scientific research on the benefits of hydrogen injection was started in the 1970s at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and continues to this day,

Wow, win-win?

Not so fast,  F1 technical regulations forbid injecting stuff other than fuel and air into the combustion chambers.   Article 5.14.2 states:

"Other than engine sump breather gases, exhaust gas recirculation, and fuel for the normal purpose of combustion in the engine, the spraying of any substance into the engine intake air is forbidden"

Hang on, spot  potential loopholes?

That's right, "Other then engine sump breather gasses" is one.

What is not as regulated and is a seldom discussed area of great development in F1 is lubricants.  Companies like Petronas have invested huge sums in advanced research related to F1.  The theory is that they have figured out how to produce lubricants that, via a process of catalytic reforming,  produce hydrogen that is then injected with the fuel.

If not via the lubricants, the other possibility cited is that Mercedes is extracting hydrogen from gasoline.  It's not sci-fi, in fact Mercedes holds a patent for a similar process which you can read here.



So, that's it then?

Ah, no.   The theory is based on several very large assumptions which we discussed with an F1 engineer friend of ours.

The first is that all cars have a comparable aero efficiency.   This is simply not the case,
there is no such thing as a method of comparing drag,  Red Bulls are way more draggy than others for example so any calculations based on top speeds is potentially flawed.

Also there is the assumption that Mercedes is able to produce enough enough hydrogen to make a difference over a whole race and without a substantial weight penalty.

Occam's razor

The third assumption is that Ferrari and Renault did not simply blow their calculations in 2014,  that they did not just underestimate the importance of certain parameters in the Power Unit equation.   Ferrari certainly underestimated the role of the energy store when they sacrificed it in the name of reliability and an aero efficiency.

This would explain why Renault and Ferrari both pushed for more flexibility in engine innovation, they realized their basic premise was flawed.

The idea of hydrogen is intriguing,  cool technology.

Is Mercedes using it in their F1 cars?  Not likely.

But who knows, maybe Toto called this guy!





February 19, 2015

Porsche Turbo S, Ferrari FF or Audi RS6: Which is fastest on snow?

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Honestly, who cares, does it matter? Enjoy the slidy bits!

Manu, who made this clip says:

"I made this video in a private test track, It doesn't show which car is faster but just some laptimes made by me. All cars had Pirelli Sottozero.
This ice track is http://www.snowice.it/

February 18, 2015

Mclaren P1 GTR: because 1000 hp is the new 750 hp!

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Remember when the batshit crazy, track day world championship conquering Zonda R came out and 750 hp  (ok 750 ps for sticklers) seemed like an insane amount of power for a mere mortal?

Fast forward a few years and now, 750 hp Mustangs and Challengers are out there for the taking.   750 clearly is way too pedestrian a figure for hyper track toys.

Enter Mclaren's answer to Ferrari's FXX program, the P1 GTR!

F1 drivers to be limited to one helmet design per season: your thoughts?

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You can blame herr Vettel most for the trend: Seb has used 60 different design in his 10 year career and Ecclestone does not like it, he sees it as a contributing factor to viewer confusion.

Do you agree, or do you find it vaguely insulting?  

OK, the worst offender changed an average of 6 helmets per season but is that really what confuses viewers?  

Helmet painting, after all, came about when drivers broke the mold and started choosing their own individual designs, much like the fighting knight of past.    Is it right to limit their rights to self expression (and additional earning potential) ?

all of Vettel's 2013's helmets


February 16, 2015

Ferrari's on a roll?: Scalabroni on the SF15-T front suspension.

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Last season, we really enjoyed Peter Windsor's videos with Enrique Scalabroni drawing and explaining F1 tech details,  we're lucky he's he's doing more.

In this latest one, Scalabroni explains the effects a high front roll center had on the 2014 (and earlier) Ferrari. Looking back on it, it explains a lot.

This year's car addresses the issue while maintaining some of the aero advantages of having suspension arms less in the way of the airflow.

What it does not explain is why Ferrari stuck with the older arrangement for so long, perhaps it suited Alonso?

February 14, 2015

Friday the 13th rally jump fail

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Friday the 13th was not very kind to Per Erik Brynildsen  who stuffed his Ford Fiesta straight into a snowbank on SS5... ouch.



Friday the 13th was not kind to Sebastian Ogier either, His wipers failed then while fixing then he forgot to properly close his his bonnet which then flew open, breaking the windshield. Later then he slid off the road. He lost 40 seconds to Andreas Mikkelsen. Don't get too hopeful though, Today he's already within 5 seconds.

Today is big jump day at Colin's Crest. If you had WRC+ you could watch it live!



and this clip is just awesome at giving you the sense of speed..

February 13, 2015

The Italian Job: Daniel Ricciardo in an Alfa Romeo T33!

6 comments:

Helmut Marko raced this Alfa Romeo T33 in the 1972 Targa Florio and Daniel Ricciardo's family roots are Sicilian so that explains the photo shoot for Red Bulletin which you should definitively go read.

Couple of things:
  • Red Bull would bring fog machines,,,
  • At 5'11, Daniel barely fits in the car.
  • it's impossible for Ricciardo to come across as anything but a cool guy.



Here are pictures from the actual 1972 Targa Florio.

Here's Vettel ripping in a Ferrari FXX K.

1 comment:


The car is simply spectacular.  Sebastian seem to be having a good time (catch him go "broom broom" with his mouth as he downshifts?) and concludes the lap with an Italo-German utterance which might or might not translate into "Mamma mia this thing goes like a rocketship" but ...

Dear Ferrari,  can we talk about the person responsible for editing your clips?   When you have the best sounding engines in the world, with possibly the most exciting car of the moment driven by a four time F1 Champion and you still feel the need to add bad canned music well,  then we would suggest someone at the Scuderia needs to be put out to pasture!

Pure Sound next time please!

Meanwhile, in Sweden...

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Perhaps WRC should consider a special ballast reward for anyone named Sebastien...


February 12, 2015

Animals and race tracks don't mix, revisited.

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It's never popular when you criticize track safety, people got mad when we pointed out shocking safety lapses at Le Mans for example and people got upset when, at the start of the Bathurst 12 Hr,  I pointed out on twitter that there is no excuse for animals crossing a race track.

In fact, there are a couple other seemingly obvious yet easily improvable safety issues at Mount Panorama, the unprotected concrete walls at the top of the course screaming for some Tecpro barriers come to mind but, lets just stick to animals.

All too often, criticism of safety is met with a refrains along the lines of "that's the way it is, you can't do anything about it" and "racing is supposed to be dangerous".

Bathurst 12 hour organizers have been trying to do  something about the kangaroo issue.   Last year they proposed culling the skippies but that met with the displeasure of animal lovers and those who think 180 pound marsupials are a quaint feature of the Mount Panorama circuit.  Safe to say most of those complaining are not racers.

This year's plan involved snipers,  because involving high powered rifles on a circuit where fans strategically  bury beer  to circumvent a 24 per person limit, well,  what could possibly go wrong?

Most tracks have fencing.  A novel idea, I know and one that is usually unpopular with organizers because it costs money.    Curiously though organizers are usually not shy about fences when it comes to keeping non paying fans from getting a glimpse of the action.

Fences have the added advantage of keeping cars out of the woods and any flying bits out of the spectator stands and it's fair to the kangaroos.

I'm going to go out on a limb and say Anthony Gilbertson is in the "build a fence camp" after smashing into a kangaroo at 220 km/h. with his BMW in the opening phases of this year's Bathurst 12 Hour.

It's not pretty,

(hat tip to Dominic Carey for finding the clip)

February 10, 2015

Yes, Daniel Ricciardo beat Hamilton's Top Gear time but...

27 comments:
...did you notice his mirrors changed position from corner to corner during the record lap?

Bacharach

OK,  for sure an obsessed F1 driver on a quest for the fastest time would ask to fold those big elephant ear mirrors and,  if you believe Top Gear when they said Daniel did three identical  laps,  it matters little that they composited the lap.

That leaves only one, incapable,  shocking  conclusion:
Aerodynamics have no effect whatsoever on a Suzuki Liana!

Meanwhile, Lewis Hamilton Fan clubs around the world have already started #Mirrorgate.

Gambon



Ubaldo Sgarzi: Homage to a Gentleman.

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Photo via Kidston

In late January, Ubaldo Sgarzi was remembered at his funeral service in Bologna.

Sgarzi was Ferruccio Lamborghini trusted man from the beginning , coming to the then brand new company in 1964 from a background in racing management.    At Lamborghini he became worldwide sales director and did more than anyone to keep the brand alive during the very difficult years of financial hardship, sometimes resorting to very Italian, unorthodox methods to keep customers happy and funds sufficient to keep the doors open.

Nobody officially represented the current Lamborghini management at the service but there were a number of notable Lamborghini historical figures: Dallara, Marmiroli, Stanzani and one Horacio Pagani who had started at Lamborghini as an apprentice.

Sgarzi did what was necessary to keep Lamborghini afloat but was always the gentleman. As it happened Sgarzi had a connection with one of our readers, a then 16 year old Californian kid who became possibly the youngest Ferrari and Lamborghini salesman in the world.  

Byron de Soto  shared his story.



Homage to a Gentleman, whose hand I never got to shake…



In the mid 1980's I,  a very persistent sixteen year old from Northern California, was offered an apprenticeship at the Lamborghini Factory in Italy by Mr. Ubaldo Sgarzi.

Sgarzi was Lamborghini’s World Wide Sales Manager from 1964 through 1994, the man who kept the factory alive during some of the darkest years in the 1970’s.

De Soto looking very Miami Vice!
As an young and avid automotive enthusiast, I came to know Ubaldo via air-mail correspondence with the Lamborghini Factory.  Starting in 1983; I started writing requesting vehicle specifications, brochures, press items, etc. to fill my insatiable appetite for “informazione automobilistica”. Back in the snail mail days, it took longer but letters  postmarked from Italy did come, written by Ubaldo Sgarzi who was always generous and friendly in his replies.


In the summer of that year, I secured a job at a local authorized Ferrari & Lamborghini Dealer as an errand boy: no one at the dealership at the time knew much about Lamborghini’s but I had been obsessive about every little spec and detain so when a customer had a question a salesperson couldn’t answer, it was “go get the kid in the back!”

In early 1984, the Dealer gave up its Lamborghini franchise but I still maintained my communications with Ubaldo: letters and phone-calls in my then sketchy, self taught Italian.  Sgarzi was unfailingly patient a kind.

Later that year I received my vehicle sales license (in California you could get your sales license at the age of 15-1/2 at the time,  the same age you could get your driver’s permit!).  I became the world’s youngest salesman for Ferrari – working weekends, after school and on summer vacations.

Knowing all significant Lamborghini employees started as apprentices, I asked Ubaldo in early 1985 if I could work at the Factory.  He replied that if the dealer  where I worked could validate my background / character  in a formal letter, he would see what he could do.

My manager sent Ubaldo said letter, and on June 6th, 1985, we received the reply: I was offered an apprenticeship.

Here was a man who put his trust and support behind an unknown American 16-year-old kid, half a world away but my family, much to my protests, could not agree to letting their only son, a minor, move off to the other side of the world “with strangers; without finishing high-school or college”.


With this news, Ubaldo understood, and kept “the offer open for when you complete your studies and you are ready to come over”…

We kept in frequent touch for the next 7 years: letters (changing from English to Italian), phone calls, and invitations to Lamborghini Celebration Day events, which I was never able to attend due to school schedules and lack of funds.

Yet, Ubaldo was always supportive, kind (providing me press-kits, new brochures for new models), and ever interested in my studies, encouraging my progress, the occasional, friendly “hello”, just for good measure; giving me insight to the business and ever the gentleman.

During these high-school and then college days, I studied and honed my automotive body and suspension designs (the core of what was to be the basis of my apprenticeship): sending samples to Ubaldo which he found “carini”… some of the reply letters received were signed by both Ubaldo and the great Giulio Alfieri.

As I came to finish college – with the intent of then finally moving on to Lamborghini -- so came the collapse of the world economy in the early 90’s and with it the automotive collector’s market. Car values dropped exponentially, along with any profit to be made in selling vintage Ferraris with customers not willing to pay for the then new “Luxury Tax” presented by the first Bush's Administration.

In this financial crisis, times were tough at Lamborghini too  and they were laying off staff. in 1992 Ubaldo let me know that even with my University studies concluded, he could no longer provide me the apprenticeship: I was crestfallen.

In California, the dealer I worked for sold its franchise back to Ferrari N.A.and became independent, but sales were too weak/infrequent to support my college loans/bills to pay: it was a matter of pure survival I had to leave.   So, I got into the IT world, leveraging my lesser hobby of tinkering with computers along with my business experience gained at Ferrari – principles and skills beyond the years of my equally young, recent-grad peers…



With the world markets as they were, Chrysler sold Lamborghini to the Indonesian Suharto/Mega-Tech group in 1993; Ubaldo had had enough and retired in 1994.

In these pre-internet days, I then lost contact with Ubaldo, not knowing he had moved on to work for one of Lamborghini’s former employees (once an apprentice himself): Horacio Pagani.

Balboni and De Soto
With IT came more money,  more predicable paychecks (no longer on the roller-coaster of sales commissions) so finally in 2000, I had the means for my first trip to Italy.  It was to be a significant two week automotive dream:  visits to the Ferrari Factory, the Lamborghini Factory where I met Valentino Balboni in person for the first time and was the first American to experience the then brand-new Diablo 6.0.  I visited the museum of my idol Tazio Nuvolari, in Mantova and the San Marino Grand Prix where I watched Michael Schumacher’s amazing victory.

But the key to this visit was missed: I tried to find Ubaldo and arrange to meet him in person but our timing was not to be.

Over the following years, more global responsibilities with my IT work, getting married, buying a house, having dogs, and finally getting into serious driving (tracking my BMW) put a crimp on my keeping in touch with my Ferrari and Lamborghini friends – a fault on my part.

My latest effort to re-connect with Sgarzi, going through some of my Pagani contacts, was in September, 2014…but it did not work out.

January 28, 2015: Ubaldo at the age of 82, has passed on.  After getting the news, I spent the day going through all of our correspondence some of which I'm happy to share here,  still wishing I could shake his hand and offer my long overdue, sincere thanks in person.

February 8, 2015

Bathurst 12 hour comes down to two final laps.

4 comments:



12 hours of racing at Mount Panorama came down to just one lap where the Nismo Athlete Global Team Nissan GTR literally stomped the competition.

The GTR had a massive top speed advantage all throughout the race and on the final restart, with less than eight minutes on the clock, Katsumasa Chio delivered, moving from third to the lead of the 2015 Liqui-Moly Bathurst 12 Hour.

In a race that seemed to be led mostly by the safety car, the final sprint was preceded by yet another restart which saw some fantastic racing between the Bentley of Matt Bell and the Audi R8 of Laurins Vanthoor, the race pole sitter and new holder of the lap record at Mt. Panorama.

It looked promising for the big Bentley but then a Porsche spun and got beached so it was back to yet another  full course caution.  At Bathurst they don't do local yellows so the stage was set for Nissan to do its Godzilla thing which it did, with ease.

A great result for Nissan in a year that will mark its return to major endurance racing at Le Mans in June with the innovative Nismo GTR LMP1 front wheel drive car.

Here are the final two restarts.

http://www.racecar-engineering.com/news/nissan-lmp1-revealed/

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