Thursday, 31 March 2011

Zagato TZ3 Stradale


The XII Villa D?Este Concours d?Elegance which took place in April 2010 gave way for Zagato to present their TZ3 Corsa, "race car that honors 100 years of races and victories across the whole 20th century." Fast forward to this year’s Pebble Beach Concours and Zagato is back with a production version of the TZ3, except this time, it will drop the Corsa and be called the Zagato TZ3 Stradale. The Stradale will be based on a 2010 Dodge Viper instead of an Alfa Romeo 8C.

The original TZ3 Corsa was originally built for German Alfa Romeo Zagato collector Martin Kapp while he was attending the Zandvoort Tribute. The production version - TZ3 Stradale - was probably thought up just a bit after the Corsa in order to give enthusiasts a tribute vehicle they could drive off of the track. Utilizing Dodge Viper components will allow the Stradale to be much wider and longer than the study, and about 1322 lbs heavier. That added weight will be counteracted with a bigger engine. The 420 HP 4.7-liter V8 engine will be shown the door for the Viper’s 8.4-liter V10 engine that delivers a total of 612 HP.

The new Zagato TZ3 Stradale will make its world debut in August at the Pebble Beach Concours. Zagato has announced that there will be only a few units built and the first cars will arrive in early 2012.

Zagato TZ3 Stradale originally appeared on topspeed.com on Thursday, 31 March 2011 13:00 EST.

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Source: http://www.topspeed.com/cars/dodge/2011-zagato-tz3-stradale-ar107344.html

Juan Manuel Bordeu Slim Borgudd Luki Botha JeanChristophe Boullion

What does the future hold for Marussia Virgin Racing?

After the off-season deal with a Russian sportscar maker, the team returns under the new name Marussia Virgin Racing, and with the MVR-02 completing over 4000kms in pre-season testing, the team are confident for success in the 2011 season.

There is also a change behind the wheel, as Lucas di Grassi is replaced by Belgium youngster Jerome d?Ambrosio after he successfully trailed with the team late in ...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/8qVc0tydp7g/what-does-the-future-hold-for-marussia-virgin-racing

Eugene Chaboud Jay Chamberlain Karun Chandhok Alain de Changy

F1 Constructor: Force India

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/sD00bOjYg9o/f1-constructor-force-india.html

Harry Blanchard Michael Bleekemolen Alex Blignaut Trevor Blokdyk

A great talent awaiting a great car

It is an awful irony that it has taken Robert Kubica's horrific crash in a rally car on Sunday to bring him to the attention of the wider world.

Despite four and a half seasons in Formula 1, the 26-year-old Pole was not exactly a household name. Such is the lot of a grand prix driver who does not find himself in a front-running car.

But Kubica is very different from the other men pounding around in the midfield, to whom the wider TV audience pay only scant attention while focusing on the big names battling it out at the front.

This is a man who is increasingly regarded as one of the very finest racing drivers in the world - someone who, as David Coulthard put it on Monday, can be talked about in the same breath as the likes of Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton and the new world champion Sebastian Vettel.

Kubica has won only one grand prix - a superb drive for BMW Sauber in Canada in 2008 - but there was an ever-growing number of F1 observers awaiting with increasing impatience the time he would get his hands on a competitive car.

The signs have been there for some time, little snapshots that made you sit up and take notice that this was someone out of the ordinary.

In 2006, his pace as BMW Sauber's test driver effectively ended the career of 1997 world champion Jacques Villeneuve - when the Canadian fell out with the team, they needed no encouragement to sack him and replace him with Kubica, knowing that he was not only cheaper, but significantly faster.

In order to see this content you need to have both Javascript enabled and Flash installed. Visit BBC Webwise for full instructions. If you're reading via RSS, you'll need to visit the blog to access this content.


Despite zero experience, Kubica was brilliant in the second half of that year, immediately out-pacing his team-mate Nick Heidfeld, a veteran of more than six seasons, and taking a podium finish in only his third grand prix.

Kubica's driving style - turn in early and on the brakes, demanding a lot from the outside front tyre - meant he was affected badly by the switch to a single tyre supplier, and consequent lower grip levels, in 2007.

But he bounced back with a bang in 2008, driving with stunning consistency and pace to lead the championship after that win in Canada mid-season.

What happened next rankles with Kubica to this day.

BMW's plan was to use 2008 as a building year for a full title assault in 2009, and they stuck to it resolutely, easing off development of their race car just as they had got themselves to the top of the pile, in order to concentrate on their next model.

Their logic was that the car was not really quick enough to win the title against the superior machines of McLaren and Ferrari, that they were only leading the championship because Kubica had been more consistent than his rivals - and that the top teams would eventually get their act together.

Robert Kubica crashes his BMW in the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix

Kubica missed only one race after emerging unhurt from this crash in 2007. Photo: Getty

Kubica didn't see it that way - he saw a team giving up a golden opportunity to win the championship. Even with BMW's decision, he ended up finishing third, in contention until the penultimate race.

BMW's intransigence - matched, it has to be said, by Kubica's stubbornness - fatally damaged the driver's relationship with the team, and is almost certainly one reason behind his generally lacklustre 2009 season, when Heidfeld more or less matched him.

Even then, though, there were flashes of genius from Kubica, and last season, following his move to Renault, the doubters became less and less.

The 2010 Renault was not a great car, and had no business mixing it at the front with the Red Bulls, Ferraris and McLarens.

But Kubica performed miracles to qualify it in the top three at Monaco, Spa and Suzuka, the three tracks where a driver's input is most important, where a great driver can transcend the level of his car.

How good is he?

Among his fellow drivers, there has never been any doubt about Kubica's quality. Hamilton regards him as a future world champion - Kubica was the Englishman's main rival in their karting days as teenagers; Alonso has been quoted referring to him as the best driver in the world.

It is also a little known fact that, when Vettel was an inexperienced BMW test driver in 2007, Kubica was an average of about 0.4secs quicker than him.

At Renault, they adore him - technical director James Allison was effusive in a profile of Kubica my colleague Mark Hughes wrote for this website last season.

Allison, who has also worked with Alonso, described Kubica as "one of those very, very top guys where you know that if the car is not running at the front it's because of the car, not him", adding that he was "incredibly fast, won't make mistakes under pressure and will plough on for lap after lap at a really good pace".

Ferrari, too, have noticed his ability. He came very close to replacing Felipe Massa when the Brazilian suffered a fractured skull in a crash in Hungary in 2009, missing out only because he was too big for the car.

The interest remains. And before Sunday, most in F1 expected Kubica to replace Massa eventually, either at the end of this year or next.

Even a Ferrari drive, you suspect, would not change him. Kubica is totally unaffected by fame, has a complete lack of interest in self-promotion and is unimpressed by the razzmatazz of F1.

It now remains to be seen whether he will ever sit in the Ferrari that appears to have his name on it.

F1 drivers are renowned for their near-miraculous ability to recover from terrible injuries - they are to a man very fit and tremendously determined. And as someone close to him said on Monday, Kubica is also "totally stubborn". He will need all his single-mindedness to fight back after this.

But he has done it before. After breaking his left arm in 13 places when a passenger in a road-car crash early in 2003, doctors said he would be out for between six months and a year. Three months later he made his Formula Three debut and won.

Equally, after surviving virtually unscathed a horrific barrel-roll in the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix, doctors advised him to sit out the US Grand Prix seven days later. He was back for the following event in France, and qualified and finished fourth.

On Monday, the initial prognosis was about as positive as you could expect in the circumstances. Nevertheless, with such serious injuries, it seems likely that Kubica will be out for most of the season and replacing him is going to be impossible for Renault. There are simply not any drivers of comparable quality around.

Renault have two 'third drivers' in Bruno Senna and Romain Grosjean, but both are inexperienced and unproven, just like Kubica's team-mate, the Russian Vitaly Petrov. Will a team with aspirations of winning a couple of races this year feel they can go into a full season with a driver line-up like that?

The other option is to take someone experienced. They could potentially try to buy 2010 Williams driver Nico Hulkenberg out of his reserve driver contract with Force India. And Italian Vitantonio Liuzzi, rejected by Force India this season despite having a contract, is also available.

But the obvious contender is Heidfeld, F1's Mr Consistency, who may not set the world on fire, but can be relied upon to be decently quick and score regular points.

Whoever it is, they have a tough act to follow.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/02/it_is_an_awful_irony.html

Paul Belmondo Tom Belso JeanPierre Beltoise Olivier Beretta

Bronco - Little Mule

"You mean "Pepe"? My little mule?"

This is the Bronco from Romancing the Stone movie (1984). Starting with Revell's rerelease of of the 80 Bronco,


i started by removing the FORD logo from the leading edge of the hood and the horse from the fender (but leaving the 'Bronco' word).

Source: http://cs.scaleautomag.com/SCACS/forums/thread/932286.aspx

Lucien Bianchi Gino Bianco Hans Binder Clemente Biondetti

Awesome Vettel lays down intimidating marker

"I don't think it was an easy race," Sebastian Vettel said after winning the Australian Grand Prix, but it certainly looked that way.

The world champion was never more than nine seconds ahead of Lewis Hamilton's chasing McLaren until the Englishman ran into trouble with a damaged floor on his car midway through the race. But the Red Bull driver always appeared to be in total control.

The German was 2.5 seconds clear after the first lap, when admittedly Hamilton had been compromised by having to hold off Vettel's team-mate Mark Webber at the start, and he pulled out another 0.8secs on lap two.

Although Hamilton pegged him after that, the suspicion must be that Vettel was already in cruise mode, even though he said after the race that he was struggling with tyres in that first stint.

It was probably not a coincidence that the margin between the two men on that second lap was pretty much exactly the same as it had been in qualifying. That's how much faster the Red Bull appeared to be in Melbourne, at least in Vettel's hands.

There was a sharp intake of breath along the pit lane in Albert Park when the sheer speed of the car was finally unleashed in final practice on Saturday morning and nothing that happened after that did anything to diminish that impression.

Following Vettel's pace in qualifying, his fastest race lap was nearly half a second quicker than Hamilton's. On that evidence, McLaren and the rest have some work to do if they are to stop Red Bull running away with the championship.

That said, it is unwise to read too much into the results of the first race of the season - particularly in Melbourne - and it remains to be seen whether Red Bull's advantage will be as big at other circuits this season.

Albert Park can be a bit like that. If a driver and team get everything just so in conditions that leave others struggling a bit - exactly what appeared to happen in Saturday's cool weather - it is possible to eke out a quite extraordinary advantage.

The mind immediately turns to 1997, when Jacques Villeneuve was on pole position in Australia by 1.8 seconds from his Williams team-mate Heinz-Harald Frentzen. Michael Schumacher's Ferrari was third on the grid that weekend, 2.1 seconds slower than Villeneuve - and yet the title battle went to the last race of the season between the Canadian and the German.

The common denominator between that Williams and this year's Red Bull is Adrian Newey, then Williams's chief designer, now Red Bull's chief technical officer and for some time F1's pre-eminent genius - and I do not use that word lightly.

In order to see this content you need to have both Javascript enabled and Flash installed. Visit BBC Webwise for full instructions. If you're reading via RSS, you'll need to visit the blog to access this content.


Like the Williams FW17, the Red Bull RB7 is the third iteration of a car-design concept. This is what Newey is like - he does not always nail the key to unlocking a set of regulations but when he does, as he has with this generation of Red Bulls, he just keeps chipping away, refining the concept, and the others find it very difficult to catch up.

Further evidence of Newey's uncompromising approach to design emerged after the race on Sunday, when Red Bull team principal Christian Horner revealed that the team had decided not to use their Kers power-boost system after Friday.

The fact that Red Bull's drivers did not use Kers in qualifying led to tongues wagging in the F1 paddock on Saturday, when there was speculation they had a mini-Kers system that would be used only at the start.

The truth was more mundane. Red Bull have been struggling with Kers reliability all winter and the team decided it was more trouble than it was worth in Melbourne.

Red Bull's problems with Kers have been created by Newey's absolute determination to make the car as fast as possible - and to trade off performance as little as he can.

"Adrian being Adrian would not compromise the car around the system," Horner told BBC Sport, "so the systems had to fit into his aero shape."

This has led to problems with reliability - not for the first time with a Newey design honed to the nth degree. In this case, the car is so tightly packaged that the team are finding it hard to manage the heat the Kers system generates.

Red Bull say they are working hard to get the system on to the car for the next race. But Vettel's performance in Melbourne may well reignite the debate that has been raging in F1 since Kers was first introduced to the sport in 2009.

That is as follows - putting Kers on a car makes it about 0.3secs a lap quicker. But, under the current regulations, can a car optimised without it - or in the case of Red Bull, designed with fewer compromises than normal - actually be made to be quicker? There is no definitive answer to that question for now; perhaps one will emerge over this season.

There were many more subjects about which the same could be said.

Most striking of all, perhaps, is what on earth happened to Webber in the second Red Bull? He and the team both shared the general mystification about the massive gap between the Australian and Vettel.

Fernando Alonso's post-qualifying prediction that Ferrari would be stronger in the race was proved right with a fighting drive back to fourth from a terrible first lap, during which he was briefly down in 10th. There was nothing fake about Ferrari's pace in pre-season testing - what can they achieve when they have a smooth weekend?

Alonso just missed a podium thanks to a superb drive from Renault's Vitaly Petrov in a car that is genuinely quick. It immediately made you wonder what the injured Robert Kubica could have achieved in that car.

There will be no quick answer to that one as the Pole continues his recovery from the terrible injuries he received in his rallying crash last month. But even with Petrov in it the car is a contender. The Russian's experienced team-mate Nick Heidfeld will surely bounce back from a poor start. Can Renault keep up with the breathless pace of development at the front?

The much-talked-about moveable rear wing, or drag-reduction system as it is officially known, seemed to work pretty well - in that it made overtaking possible but not too easy, although the debate about whether it is a step too far in terms of artificiality will doubtless continue.

If Sauber's Mexican rookie Sergio Perez continues in the manner he has started - notwithstanding the team's disqualification for a technical infringement - how long before the rumour mill starts wondering about this member of Ferrari's driver academy replacing Felipe Massa as Alonso's team-mate?

All these and more will keep people guessing for much longer than the two weeks before the Malaysian Grand Prix.

But there is no doubt about the biggest question of all. Hamilton said afterwards that he was confident McLaren could catch Red Bull. Is he right? On the evidence of Melbourne, the season could depend on it.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/03/can_anyone_catch_red_bull.html

Anthony Davidson Jimmy Davies Colin Davis Jimmy Daywalt

How far should motor sport go to chase TV ratings? | Debates and polls

Has F1 embraced too many gimmicks to entice casual motor sport fans?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/U9qfYaLVQdU/

John CampbellJones Adrián Campos John Cannon Eitel Cantoni

F1 Constructor: Force India

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/sD00bOjYg9o/f1-constructor-force-india.html

David Clapham Jim Clark† Kevin Cogan Peter Collins

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

Double Ringer

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/r2TG0ByXQG4/double-ringer.html

Jimmy Bryan Clemar Bucci Ronnie Bucknum Ivor Bueb

Marussia Virgin Racing Launch Their 2011 Car

Marussia Virgin Racing have launched their car to take on the 2011 world championship in a lavish London ceremony. The Marussia name now preceeds Virgin following a major tie up with the Russian sportscar manufacturer and the team at the end of 2010. �It has led to the new car being designated as the MVR-02. [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/02/07/marussia-virgin-racing-launch-their-2011-car/

Luiz Bueno Ian Burgess Luciano Burti Roberto Bussinello

Awesome Vettel lays down intimidating marker

"I don't think it was an easy race," Sebastian Vettel said after winning the Australian Grand Prix, but it certainly looked that way.

The world champion was never more than nine seconds ahead of Lewis Hamilton's chasing McLaren until the Englishman ran into trouble with a damaged floor on his car midway through the race. But the Red Bull driver always appeared to be in total control.

The German was 2.5 seconds clear after the first lap, when admittedly Hamilton had been compromised by having to hold off Vettel's team-mate Mark Webber at the start, and he pulled out another 0.8secs on lap two.

Although Hamilton pegged him after that, the suspicion must be that Vettel was already in cruise mode, even though he said after the race that he was struggling with tyres in that first stint.

It was probably not a coincidence that the margin between the two men on that second lap was pretty much exactly the same as it had been in qualifying. That's how much faster the Red Bull appeared to be in Melbourne, at least in Vettel's hands.

There was a sharp intake of breath along the pit lane in Albert Park when the sheer speed of the car was finally unleashed in final practice on Saturday morning and nothing that happened after that did anything to diminish that impression.

Following Vettel's pace in qualifying, his fastest race lap was nearly half a second quicker than Hamilton's. On that evidence, McLaren and the rest have some work to do if they are to stop Red Bull running away with the championship.

That said, it is unwise to read too much into the results of the first race of the season - particularly in Melbourne - and it remains to be seen whether Red Bull's advantage will be as big at other circuits this season.

Albert Park can be a bit like that. If a driver and team get everything just so in conditions that leave others struggling a bit - exactly what appeared to happen in Saturday's cool weather - it is possible to eke out a quite extraordinary advantage.

The mind immediately turns to 1997, when Jacques Villeneuve was on pole position in Australia by 1.8 seconds from his Williams team-mate Heinz-Harald Frentzen. Michael Schumacher's Ferrari was third on the grid that weekend, 2.1 seconds slower than Villeneuve - and yet the title battle went to the last race of the season between the Canadian and the German.

The common denominator between that Williams and this year's Red Bull is Adrian Newey, then Williams's chief designer, now Red Bull's chief technical officer and for some time F1's pre-eminent genius - and I do not use that word lightly.

In order to see this content you need to have both Javascript enabled and Flash installed. Visit BBC Webwise for full instructions. If you're reading via RSS, you'll need to visit the blog to access this content.


Like the Williams FW17, the Red Bull RB7 is the third iteration of a car-design concept. This is what Newey is like - he does not always nail the key to unlocking a set of regulations but when he does, as he has with this generation of Red Bulls, he just keeps chipping away, refining the concept, and the others find it very difficult to catch up.

Further evidence of Newey's uncompromising approach to design emerged after the race on Sunday, when Red Bull team principal Christian Horner revealed that the team had decided not to use their Kers power-boost system after Friday.

The fact that Red Bull's drivers did not use Kers in qualifying led to tongues wagging in the F1 paddock on Saturday, when there was speculation they had a mini-Kers system that would be used only at the start.

The truth was more mundane. Red Bull have been struggling with Kers reliability all winter and the team decided it was more trouble than it was worth in Melbourne.

Red Bull's problems with Kers have been created by Newey's absolute determination to make the car as fast as possible - and to trade off performance as little as he can.

"Adrian being Adrian would not compromise the car around the system," Horner told BBC Sport, "so the systems had to fit into his aero shape."

This has led to problems with reliability - not for the first time with a Newey design honed to the nth degree. In this case, the car is so tightly packaged that the team are finding it hard to manage the heat the Kers system generates.

Red Bull say they are working hard to get the system on to the car for the next race. But Vettel's performance in Melbourne may well reignite the debate that has been raging in F1 since Kers was first introduced to the sport in 2009.

That is as follows - putting Kers on a car makes it about 0.3secs a lap quicker. But, under the current regulations, can a car optimised without it - or in the case of Red Bull, designed with fewer compromises than normal - actually be made to be quicker? There is no definitive answer to that question for now; perhaps one will emerge over this season.

There were many more subjects about which the same could be said.

Most striking of all, perhaps, is what on earth happened to Webber in the second Red Bull? He and the team both shared the general mystification about the massive gap between the Australian and Vettel.

Fernando Alonso's post-qualifying prediction that Ferrari would be stronger in the race was proved right with a fighting drive back to fourth from a terrible first lap, during which he was briefly down in 10th. There was nothing fake about Ferrari's pace in pre-season testing - what can they achieve when they have a smooth weekend?

Alonso just missed a podium thanks to a superb drive from Renault's Vitaly Petrov in a car that is genuinely quick. It immediately made you wonder what the injured Robert Kubica could have achieved in that car.

There will be no quick answer to that one as the Pole continues his recovery from the terrible injuries he received in his rallying crash last month. But even with Petrov in it the car is a contender. The Russian's experienced team-mate Nick Heidfeld will surely bounce back from a poor start. Can Renault keep up with the breathless pace of development at the front?

The much-talked-about moveable rear wing, or drag-reduction system as it is officially known, seemed to work pretty well - in that it made overtaking possible but not too easy, although the debate about whether it is a step too far in terms of artificiality will doubtless continue.

If Sauber's Mexican rookie Sergio Perez continues in the manner he has started - notwithstanding the team's disqualification for a technical infringement - how long before the rumour mill starts wondering about this member of Ferrari's driver academy replacing Felipe Massa as Alonso's team-mate?

All these and more will keep people guessing for much longer than the two weeks before the Malaysian Grand Prix.

But there is no doubt about the biggest question of all. Hamilton said afterwards that he was confident McLaren could catch Red Bull. Is he right? On the evidence of Melbourne, the season could depend on it.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/03/can_anyone_catch_red_bull.html

Michael Andretti Keith Andrews Elio de Angelis Marco Apicella

Hispania F111 Launch pictures ( 8th of February)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/Gh_-2_XSc30/hispania-f111-launch-pictures-8th-of.html

Bill Cantrell Ivan Capelli Piero Carini Duane Carter

Mercedes-Benz Zetros 6X6 truck - for the Mongolian outback

Luxury RV amenities available in Mercedes-Benz truck sold to two businessmen in Mongolia for off-road excursions.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/Ej7XuZoPDKY/mercedes-benz-zetros-6x6-truck---for-the-mongolian-outback

Luciano Burti Roberto Bussinello Jenson Button Tommy Byrne

TRUCKS: Raikkonen Gone Mad?

Kimi Raikkonen is the 2007 Formula One champion...

Source: http://nascar.speedtv.com/article/trucks-kimi-raikkonen-gone-nascar-mad/

Fred Agabashian Kurt Ahrens Jr Christijan Albers Michele Alboreto

Gearing up for new F1 season

Since that sweltering Sunday sunset in Abu Dhabi almost three months ago where we saw a man who looked about 12 years old being crowned the composed, confident, champion of the world, it's been a case of counting down the days until I can dust off the passport and embark on season three as the BBC's F1 presenter.

And this time, as we take the first steps of the few thousand miles we will be travelling to bring the 2011 F1 season to you, I need your help.

Read on to find out how.

The last three months have been a mix of highs and lows for me. Hosting Sports Personality, but being struck down by a vicious flu bug the following day. Going for a New Year's Day walk with my wife Harriet but inadvertently pulling her into the River Thames up to our waists (don't ask!), and just spending time at home, despite locking myself out of the house on three separate occasions!

And now, the wait for us all is almost over. I'm currently penning this blog in bed, Sunday Love Songs is on the radio, (what an old romantic eh ;-) and it's 13 February...one month to the day and I will be swapping Radio 2 for team radios, my home for hotel rooms, the middle of Richmond for the Middle East.

Sebastian Vettel

Vettel won the 2010 title in the final race of the season at Abu Dhabi. Picture: Getty images

I remember when I first met Martin Brundle, it was winter 2008 and we were at our first meeting ahead of the 2009 season and I asked him what he was doing with the winter. His reply was 'seeing the dentist, going to the doctor, cutting that grass...all the things I can't do during the season' and now I know how he feels.

Mind you, and I mustn't say this too loudly for fear of offending my lovely wife and all the friends I've enjoyed catching up with, I can hardly wait for that first flight to Bahrain.

Flights to grand prix races are usually 80% full of F1 faces from Bernie and team principals at the front with the drivers, to press officers, engineers, and a few fans too who can hardly believe their luck that they've also booked on to the same flight we've all chosen.

The two flights that seem to create the best atmosphere are the last flight home as we all breathe a collective sigh of relief that we've survived another season, and the first, as everyone quietly hopes that this is their season.

And this year, there is a palpable air of excitement. And I place a huge amount of credit for that at the door of 'social media'.

In seasons gone by there would be very little news from testing unless you looked at specialist websites. There was no way for drivers to converse directly with their fans. 'Trending topics' were the kinds of thing you read about in Smash Hits magazine.

These days we have drivers tweeting how their car feels the moment they hop out of the cockpit, teams uploading snaps of their speed directly to the internet, thousands of fans using hashtags to discuss the latest news from Valencia or Jerez, and far from giving us F1 overkill, it merely seems to heighten expectations as Formula 1 unsurprisingly grasps a technological development and makes the most of it.

In the past week alone #robertkubica, #bbcf1, #jerez and #formulaone have been among the most talked about topics on Twitter, most team launches were simulcast online this year, and you may have already topped up Bernie's wallet with the 2011 F1 timing app.

When the BBC got the F1 contract one thing I was really keen to do was bring the F1 fans closer to the sport that ever before. Yes, walking into a garage, touching the cars, unscripted chats with the team members and having a certain effervescent Irishman grabbing anyone he likes in a headlock is the kind of revolutionary approach you all seem to enjoy, but I think blogs, websites, apps and tweets have done just as much.

So, one month to go before we see the 24 new cars roll out into the blazing Bahrain sun. A month until Schumi looks to prove 2010 was just an anomaly, one month until we have three British drivers on the grid with Paul di Resta joining the elite.

So Paul will line up in the Middle East, sadly though, Kubica won't. I heard about Robert's accident while in Wales waiting to host live football and at first it didn't seem too serious. However, as news started to emerge it became clear it had been a very unfortunate, freak accident and his racing future would be in some doubt.

However, almost immediately social media was on the scene as people updated us from the hospital and from within the team. I was really moved by how quickly messages of support started to appear online and I know that Renault will have passed on all your good wishes.

Well this year, for the Bahrain GP in particular I want to use social media to help get the whole of the country watching the first race of the season...and that is where you come in.

The BBC's F1 following is incredible and the viewing figures since the sport returned to what I consider its natural home have been record breaking.

However, F1 is the kind of sport where the more you know the more you want to know. I still get tweets, emails or people stopping me in the frozen food aisle saying 'isn't it just cars going round in circles?'

Well of course it is, but there is the unseen drama of the tactics, the split-second decision making, the mind-boggling physics that keeps the car on the track...and then there is the actual racing.

I honestly can't believe that with the stunning locations, incredible driving talent, danger, bravery and political manouverings on and off the track that the whole country isn't sitting down at 1210 to watch the racing.

So, here's what I'd love you to do. I want you to bring a friend to BBC F1.

Essentially all this means is that you pick a mate or even better a bunch of mates who you know don't normally watch F1. Maybe offer to make Sunday lunch, or host an F1 party. Get them in front of the TV and let us do the rest.

With a Kers boost button and new rear wings to aid overtaking, a brand new tyre manufacturer coming onboard that could result in multiple-pitstops in the first few races, 12 teams and five world champions on the grid, is there a better time to bring a friend to BBC F1?

I'll be tweeting about my campaign too, so feel free to add the #bringafriendtobbcf1 hashtag to your tweets, tweet me and let me know what you are organising for 13 March and let's see what we can achieve together.

Time to induct a whole new legion of potential F1 fans. We know the sport we love is amazing. Are you ready to spread the word?

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/jakehumphrey/2011/02/gearing_up_for_the_new_f1_seas.html

Alberto Crespo Antonio Creus Larry Crockett Tony Crook

NASCAR - Camping World Truck - Kroger 250 Preview

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/03/29/1090437/nascar-camping-world-truck-kroger.html

Gary Brabham Jack Brabham† Bill Brack Ernesto Brambilla

Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Rewind: Saving best for last

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/03/27/1087122/rewind-saving-best-for-last.html

Erik Comas Franco Comotti George Connor George Constantine

Q&A with the Russians

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2010/12/qa-with-the-russians.html

Johnny Boyd David Brabham Gary Brabham Jack Brabham†

Tony Fernandes' electric shock

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2010/12/tony-fernandes-electric-shock.html

Thierry Boutsen Johnny Boyd David Brabham Gary Brabham

Robert Kubica Could Be Ruled Out For At Least A Year Following Accident

Polish racing driver Robert Kubica will spend at least one whole year recovering from a rally crash he suffered this morning, according to his surgeon. Kubica, who races for Renault Lotus crashed the Skoda Fabia rally car this morning and was airlifted to hospital suffering serious injuries. He has spent many hours in surgery, with [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/02/06/robert-kubica-cold-be-ruled-out-for-at-least-a-year-following-accident/

Alberto Ascari Peter Ashdown Ian Ashley Gerry Ashmore

Bernie Ecclestone - No plans to put the brakes on


© Getty Images
In an exclusive interview with the Guardian as his 80th birthday approaches, F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone speak out about a variety of subjects, from the future of the sport to Margaret Thatcher, Hitler, Saddam Hussein, democracy, football and what continues to drive him.
The way I feel at the moment, why stop? I do it because I enjoy it. And yesterday is gone. I don't care what happened yesterday. What else would I do? People retire to die. I don't get any individual pleasure because we don't win races or titles in this job. I'm like most business people. You look back at the end of the year and you see what you've achieved by working out how much money the company has made. That's it.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/10/bernie_ecclestone_no_plans_to.php

Jaime Alguersuari Philippe Alliot Cliff Allison Fernando Alonso

Saubers out?

The FIA has announced that the two Saubers have been excluded from the results of the Australian GP because the rear wings were found to be in breach of Article 3.10.1 and 3.10.2 of the Technical Regulations, which relate to the radius of the curvature of the three rear wing elements. As far as we [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2011/03/27/saubers-out/

Derek Bell Stefan Bellof Paul Belmondo Tom Belso

Pirelli to change colours to differentiate tyres in 2011

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/iW2fhYHXXjo/pirelli-to-change-colours-to.html

Jaime Alguersuari Philippe Alliot Cliff Allison Fernando Alonso

1937 ford " Weedster" speedster WIP update 3/28

I started this project as a forum build for another site, but wanted to share it here as well.

 The idea i had was to build a low sleek roadster, or "speedster"  ultra modern style 37 ford convertible. I started with a stock Revell body and decided to section it 1/8" to get a sleeker appearance. Since I had never sectioned a body this was uncharted territory for me.  I started by taping the body where I wanted to make my cut, then shot some gray primer on the taped line of the body. Once that dried, I used a razor saw and made the cuts on the body. I had to seperate the front half form the rear half, as I will have to splice in a piece of styrene or old body to make up the length the top half of the body now will be.So far I'm pretty pleased with the progress

I also added a rear section from a tbird kit to give it that "speedster" look.

Source: http://cs.scaleautomag.com/SCACS/forums/thread/947670.aspx

Raul Boesel Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant Felice Bonetto

Monday, 28 March 2011

?No performance advantage,? says Sauber?s James Key

Sauber’s James Key says that the team would have gained no performance advantage from the rear infringement that led to both cars being disqualified in Australia. Sauber has announced its intention to appeal the decision. Key said: ?This is a … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2011/03/27/no-performance-advantage-says-saubers-james-key/

Rene Arnoux Peter Arundell Alberto Ascari Peter Ashdown

Buick Regal T-Type

Has anyone built a T-Type? My boss has 2 of them, and I was thinking of building one for him. I have a grand national model to start with, but I'm not sure of the differences between them.

Source: http://cs.scaleautomag.com/SCACS/forums/thread/948997.aspx

Antonio Creus Larry Crockett Tony Crook Art Cross

2012 Mercedes M-Class stretches its legs in Germany

Our spies have managed to catch the redesigned M-Class undergoing testing in southern Germany. See the pictures inside.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/HQKZqM81R4M/2012-mercedes-m-class-stretches-its-legs-in-germany

Bill Aston Richard Attwood Manny Ayulo Luca Badoer

McLaren MP4-26 Launch pictures ( 4th of February)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/PKSGf3lrBNs/mclaren-mp4-26-launch-pictures-4th-of.html

Jimmy Bryan Clemar Bucci Ronnie Bucknum Ivor Bueb

NASCAR: Kyle Busch closes on Phoenix sweep

Kyle Busch closes on Phoenix sweep By Diego Mejia Sunday, February 27th 2011, 07:28 GMT Kyle Busch could make further NASCAR history this weekend by completing a full sweep of victories in its top-level championships at Phoenix in a single weekend, having already dominated in the Trucks and Natiowide Series races at the one-mile oval. Related posts:
  1. Kyle Busch goes wire-to-wire in N’wide Phoenix win AVONDALE, Ariz. -- Kyle Busch became the first driver in...
  2. Kyle Busch rolls to 8th Nationwide win of season CLERMONT, Ind. -- Carl Edwards and Brad Keselowski kept it...
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Source: http://doxcar.com/nascar-kyle-busch-closes-on-phoenix-sweep/

Eugenio Castellotti Johnny Cecotto Andrea de Cesaris Francois Cevert

F1 Teams and Drivers for 2011 Season

The Formula One is almost here again, and motorsport enthusiasts around the world are already sweating from the anticipation of another lightning fast, exciting season. The F1 2011 season is slated to begin officially on the 13th of March, with the Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix.
The defending F1 Driver’s Champion in 2011 is Sebastian Vettel, [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/formula-f1/~3/vhqQ2_KnnTk/

Alberto Colombo Erik Comas Franco Comotti George Connor

Ferrari Launch Their 2011 Car The F150

Ferrari have become the first team to launch their 2011 Formula One car – named the F150. Thw F150 name comes from the fact it is 150 years since Italian unification, the flag bearer for the nation decided it was important to increase exposure of the major event in the country’s long history. �The cars [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/ferrari-launch-their-2011-car-the-f150/

Clemente Biondetti Pablo Birger Art Bisch Harry Blanchard

2011 Australian Grand Prix in pictures | F1 pictures

Pictures from the 2011 Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/YjXncJ9IWAA/

Adolf Brudes Martin Brundle Gianmaria Bruni Jimmy Bryan

Sunday, 27 March 2011

Schumacher on Mercedes: "It will work out"

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2011/03/schumacher-on-mercedes-it-will-work-out.html

Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant Felice Bonetto Jo Bonnier

Formula One Goes High Definition

This week FOM, the Formula One Management company run by Bernie Ecclestone, has announced it will be providing native High Definition Formula One coverage for the very first time. �This heralds the entrance of the sport into the super clear broadcast territory. High Definition television has been available for some time now in the United [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/01/13/formula-one-goes-high-definition/

George Amick Red Amick Chris Amon Bob Anderson

Marussia Virgin Racing Launch Their 2011 Car

Marussia Virgin Racing have launched their car to take on the 2011 world championship in a lavish London ceremony. The Marussia name now preceeds Virgin following a major tie up with the Russian sportscar manufacturer and the team at the end of 2010. �It has led to the new car being designated as the MVR-02. [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/02/07/marussia-virgin-racing-launch-their-2011-car/

Alberto Ascari Peter Ashdown Ian Ashley Gerry Ashmore

Jeff Gordon wins at Phoenix to snap 66-race drought

Jeff Gordon Ends Drought Jeff Gordon snaps 66-race winless streak by taking the Subway Fresh Fit 500 at PhoenixJeff Gordon Ends Drought AVONDALE, Ariz. -- Just before peeling off what he called a lame burnout near the finish line, Jeff Gordon screamed into his radio, the emotion pouring out with his voice. [+] Enlarge Jared C. Related posts:
  1. Jeff Gordon wins the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Phoenix International Raceway Jeff Gordon Ends Drought Jeff Gordon snaps 66-race winless...
  2. NASCAR’s Jeff Gordon gets new spotter starting at Pocono CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Jeff Gordon will have a new spotter...
  3. Jeff Gordon wins pole at Charlotte Motor Speedway; Jimmie Johnson to start 10th CONCORD, N.C. -- Jeff Gordon's long winless streak is well...
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Source: http://doxcar.com/jeff-gordon-wins-at-phoenix-to-snap-66-race-drought/

Paul Belmondo Tom Belso JeanPierre Beltoise Olivier Beretta

F1: Final Winter Test begins, Pirelli gets more Rubber...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/rgpghJoNPXQ/f1-final-winter-test-begins-pirelli.html

Alex Caffi John CampbellJones Adrián Campos John Cannon

SVS Codatronca Monza coming to Top Marques Monaco

Spada Vetture Sport has announced plans to introduce the new Codatronca Monza at Top Marques Monaco.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/4FP7kte818M/svs-codatronca-monza-coming-to-top-marques-monaco

Luki Botha JeanChristophe Boullion Sebastien Bourdais Thierry Boutsen

BMW secret prototypes come from a place called Plant Zero [video]

Video shows how BMW prototypes are born and tested at a facility in Munich. A secret prototype appears in the video with the image blurred so that we cannot make out what it its.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/_0Z9wOowukk/bmw-secret-prototypes-come-from-a-place-called-plant-zero

Mauro Baldi Bobby Ball Marcel Balsa Lorenzo Bandini

Mercedes E-Class Convertible by MEC Design


There are certain vehicles that we know are just going to be widely received amongst tuners everywhere. These are the cars that will have more tuning packages than anyone will ever need. The Mercedes E-Class Cabrio wouldn’t be on our top ten list of these cars. However, the luxury sedan has seen packages from Binz, Prior Design, BD Motor, and now, MEC Design. MEC Design’s package for the E-Class is based on the E350 CDI model and only gives way for some small exterior changes.

The package starts off with a 35mm lowering of the springs and a new set of 20" MEC Design mecxtremeIII wheels wrapped in 235/30 + 10.5�20 with 285/25 ZR 20 tires. A new rear diffuser and a new exhaust system with a four pipe rear muffler have also been added, and some light body work can be added on the rear axle if the customer so chooses.

Overall, not a great package, but will make a conservative E-Class owner very happy.

Mercedes E-Class Convertible by MEC Design originally appeared on topspeed.com on Friday, 25 March 2011 17:00 EST.

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Source: http://www.topspeed.com/cars/mercedes/2011-mercedes-e-class-convertible-by-mec-design-ar107048.html

Frank Armi Chuck Arnold Rene Arnoux Peter Arundell