Saturday, 30 April 2011

'The point of no confidence is quite near'


The wreckage of Jochen Rindt's car at Barcelona © Getty Images
An excellent insight into the world of F1 as it used to be can be found on the regularly-interesting Letters of Note website. It publishes a hitherto unseen letter from Jochen Rindt to Lotus boss Colin Chapman written shortly after Rindt?s crash at Barcelona which was a result of the wing system on Lotus 49 collapsing at speed.
?Colin. I have been racing F1 for 5 years and I have made one mistake (I rammed Chris Amon in Clermont Ferrand) and I had one accident in Zandvoort due to gear selection failure otherwise I managed to stay out of trouble. This situation changed rapidly since I joined your team. ?Honestly your cars are so quick that we would still be competitive with a few extra pounds used to make the weakest parts stronger, on top of that I think you ought to spend some time checking what your different employes are doing, I sure the wishbones on the F2 car would have looked different. Please give my suggestions some thought, I can only drive a car in which I have some confidence, and I feel the point of no confidence is quite near.?
A little more than a year later Rindt's Lotus suffered mechanical breakdown just before braking into one of the corners. He swerved violently to the left and crashed into a poorly-installed barrier, killing him instantly.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/09/the_point_of_no_confidence_is.php

Bill Brack Ernesto Brambilla Vittorio Brambilla Toni Branca

Classic F1 2011 - Sebastien Buemi

Sebastien Buemi, who has enjoyed a promising start to the new season with the Toro Rosso team, takes his turn in the hot seat in our new-look classic Formula 1 series.

For those unfamiliar with the format, BBC Sport has asked all the F1 drivers for their five favourite grands prix. Those choices will then be serialised before every race this season in order to whet your appetites for the action ahead. Highlights will be shown on this website and the red button on BBC television in the UK.

The first two drivers to reveal their top-five picks were world champion Sebastian Vettel and countryman Michael Schumacher.

Buemi - a 22-year-old Swiss - is next. He may not be as famous as Vettel or Schumacher but he has come up with some interesting choices.

Unlike Vettel and Schumacher before him, Buemi has, for the most part, picked races that he does not feature in - perhaps because he is in only his third season in F1.

Nor has he chosen the incident for which he is perhaps most famous for - the crash during practice for last year's Chinese GP when both wheels came off his car simultaneously.

What he has done is pick four iconic races from F1's recent history, plus an event that resonates particularly with him:

1) The 1989 Japanese Grand Prix, the first of two infamous collisions in title-deciding races at Suzuka between arch-rivals Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost.

This one was at the chicane - Prost turned in on McLaren team-mate Senna when the Brazilian tried to overtake him and the two collided. The Frenchman was out of the race, but Senna rejoined and went on to win, before being controversially disqualified, handing the title to Prost.

2) The 1990 Japanese Grand Prix, the second of two infamous collisions between Prost and Senna at Suzuka. This time, the two men only reached the first corner.

Senna, after being beaten away from pole position by Prost's Ferrari, was determined the Frenchman would not make the corner and barged into the back of his car at 160mph. The incident took both drivers out of the race and left Senna as champion.

3) The 1998 Belgian Grand Prix, a dramatic race from start-to finish, including what Buemi describes as "the biggest pile-up ever" on lap one.

The race is actually infamous for two incidents - the 13-car pile-up at the start that Buemi is referring to and Michael Schumacher's retirement after he had run his Ferrari into the back of David Coulthard's McLaren in appalling visibility.

The Scot was trying to let Schumacher lap him but the German, who could not see very well in the spray, did not realise his rival had slowed down and made contact. Given he was in a title fight with Coulthard's team-mate Mika Hakkinen, Schumacher sensed a conspiracy and charged down the pit lane to remonstrate with Coulthard. The two men had to be physically separated.

The incident left Damon Hill in the lead ahead of Jordan team-mate Ralf Schumacher. After team boss Eddie Jordan instructed Schumacher not to try to race Hill, the two finished one-two for Jordan's first F1 win.

4) The 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix - famous for the nail-biting climax to the world championship, which hung in the balance until the final corner of the final lap.

With Ferrari's Felipe Massa driving to a dominant victory, McLaren's Lewis Hamilton needed to finish fifth to win the title. But the race did not go well for the Briton, who started the last lap in sixth, having lost fifth place to Toro Rosso's Sebastian Vettel.

In the Ferrari pit, team personnel - including Massa's father - celebrated as their man crossed the line. But then came a dramatic late twist. With rain falling increasingly hard, Hamilton, who was on wet tyres, closed inexorably on the Toyota of Timo Glock, who was struggling on untreaded dry tyres. Hamilton eventually passed the German as they accelerated out of Juncao corner on to the start-finish straight for the final time, prompting delirium at McLaren and despair at Ferrari.

5) The 2009 Chinese Grand Prix, which Buemi has picked for two reasons. Firstly, it was Red Bull's first win, with Vettel leading home team-mate Mark Webber.

Secondly, Buemi, who had made his debut in Australia just two races previously, scored points for the second time in his short career. He had finished seventh on his debut in a race marked by very high attrition. In China, he drove superbly to finish eighth on merit, ahead of Fernando Alonso, Kimi Raikkonen, Robert Kubica and Giancarlo Fisichella.

We have chosen one race to highlight by embedding it in this blog - and we have opted for the 2009 Chinese race. Long highlights are below, with links to shorter highlights underneath. There are also links to long and short highlights of Jenson Button's brilliant victory in last year's Chinese Grand Prix. This year's Chinese race is Sunday, of course.

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.


WATCH SHORT HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 2009 CHINESE GRAND PRIX
WATCH SHORT HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 2010 CHINESE GRAND PRIX
WATCH EXTENDED HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 2010 CHINESE GRAND PRIX

We are also making available the full BBC 'Grand Prix' highlights programme from one of Buemi's other choices - the 1989 Japanese GP. The programme is being broadcast for the first time since the evening of the race 22 years ago - and you can watch it here.

The classic races will be shown on the red button on BBC digital television in the UK from 1400 BST on Wednesday, 13 April until 0830 BST on Saturday, 16 April.

On Freeview, they will be available from 0415-0545 BST and 1915-2315 BST on Thursday, 14 April and 0040-0255 BST and 0435-0655 BST on Friday, 15 April.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/04/classic_f1_2011_-_sebastian_bu.html

Ivor Bueb Sebastien Buemi Luiz Bueno Ian Burgess

Mercedes C63 AMG DTM Safety Car revealed [video]

Mercedes has unveiled the new C63 AMG Safety Car for the 2011 DTM racing season. Details inside

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/M5Kls4tAIHc/mercedes-c63-amg-dtm-safety-car-revealed-video

Mário de Araújo Cabral Frank Armi Chuck Arnold Rene Arnoux

German tuner Lorinser sells an 810 bhp, half-million euro S-Class in China

The Lorinser S70 flagship sedan, based on the S-Class, sold for 4.8 million Yuan Renminbi (€500,000) is said to come with 810 bhp (604 kW / 821 PS).

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/kHdPf8cgDow/german-tuner-lorinser-sells-an-810-bhp-half-million-euro

Red Amick Chris Amon Bob Anderson Conny Andersson

Friday, 29 April 2011

Start as you mean to finish

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2011/03/start-as-you-mean-to-finish.html

David Brabham Gary Brabham Jack Brabham† Bill Brack

My first photo post.

 

My first  photo post. This is of my 40 sedan delivery build. Enjoy.

 

 

 

 

 

Source: http://cs.scaleautomag.com/SCACS/forums/thread/955492.aspx

Phil Cade Alex Caffi John CampbellJones Adrián Campos

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/

Kevin Cogan Peter Collins Bernard Collomb Alberto Colombo

F1 Driver Sebastian Vettel takes win at the first race of the F1 2011 season

Red Bull seems poised for a repeat performance of a fantastic Formula One season in 2010, as F1 driver Sebastian Vettel was first past the chequered flag at the season?s opening race in Melbourne.
Vettel?s race was charmed from the start of the Australian Grand Prix, with the German F1 driver taking a 2.4 second lead [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/formula-f1/~3/-rWuMawP2vQ/

Franco Comotti George Connor George Constantine John Cordts

Thursday, 28 April 2011

Silverstone lifted by new wing

Bernie Ecclestone will not be able to believe his eyes. For years, decades even, Formula 1's impresario has derided Silverstone, criticising one of the sport's most historic venues for being shabby and behind the times, at times effectively calling it a national disgrace.

No longer.

The full scale of the track's ambition to upgrade itself into a cutting edge 21st century facility to rival any on the grand prix calendar became clear on Monday, when Silverstone's managing director Richard Phillips gave a tour of the spectacular new pit complex. It was something of a culture shock.

While Ecclestone's criticisms of Silverstone were always exaggerated for effect, it is fair to say that in certain ways the circuit was a touch outmoded. Inevitably, perhaps, for a place that has grown organically over the years from its initial role as a World War II airfield, it has long felt a little cobbled together and rough around the edges.

Silverstone

The Silverstone Wing towers over the Northamptonshire track (Photo: Getty)

But the new pit complex, while still a building site, changes all that. Designed by the same architects as the London 2012 Olympic Stadium, the massive new structure bears comparison with those at some of the state-funded new generation of tracks in places such as Bahrain and China.

There may be no gleaming white hotel lit up with multicoloured LEDs such as in Abu Dhabi, but Silverstone's new 'Wing' is impressive nonetheless.

Whether you deem it attractive will be a personal opinion. Its angular roof, with an upturned 'blade' at one end, was intended to evoke a sensation of movement and speed, although the building reminded me a little of an aircraft carrier. But imposing it certainly is.

Three stories high and 390m long, it has cost �27m - a tiny fraction of the money poured into places such as Shanghai and Abu Dhabi, which have a dual role of also being monuments to their governments' global ambition.

There is no shortage of ambition at Silverstone, but it is a more modest one - to keep the British Grand Prix and host it in a facility of which F1 can be proud.

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner joined the media on the tour, and was undoubtedly impressed, even if as a member of the British Racing Drivers' Club which owns Silverstone he was hardly unbiased.

"It's fantastic," he said. "It puts Silverstone right up with the best in the world. It's quite staggering, the scale of what's been built here.

"It gives the circuit a whole new scale and dimension. Silverstone has come in for criticism compared to rivals, certainly in some of the emerging markets, and this is phenomenal.

"It's great for British motorsport. It makes Silverstone a first-class facility. There have never been any question marks about the track itself. It is one of the last remaining serious challenges - Silverstone, Spa and Suzuka are the type of circuits the drivers revel in. And with the facilities now in place it makes it comparable with any other circuit in the world."

The redevelopment of the track followed negotiations with Ecclestone that led 18 months ago to a 17-year contract that should keep the grand prix at Silverstone until 2027.

Replacing the ageing old pit building was a non-negotiable part of the deal from Ecclestone's point of view. But Silverstone argued that it needed a long-term contract, previously unavailable, to give it the stability and security to commit to such a mammoth project. The 17-year deal complete with commitment to rebuild the facility was the result.

The first stage was a new track layout, which made its debut at last year's British Grand Prix. This new building, complete with new pit lane and paddock, is the final step, although a new visitor centre is also planned in the future.

Silverstone

Christian Horner and Silverstone managing director Richard Phillips praised the new developments

It needed to be impressive - but it also needed to be cost-effective. Silverstone does not have the luxury of open-ended government finance to fund its development and, as Phillips put it, the new building must "pay for itself".

Much emphasis was put on the number of kitchens, and the building's ability to host up to 4,000 guests for hospitality events, the income from which is needed to balance the books in the face of the �300m Silverstone needs to find to fund the full duration of the F1 contract.

On Monday, the place was very much unfinished. Huge areas of what will be grass were churned up mud. Hard hats were required to go into the building. The pit lane was still being built. But already it is possible to see what a spectacular venue it could become.

Clearly, a lot of thought has gone into it.

The new pits are between Club and Abbey corners, at the other end of the track from the old pits. The architects have used the contours of the land to create an interesting situation where the pit-lane entry is above the level of the track, but the exit is below it, in a fashion not dissimilar to Abu Dhabi, but without the tunnel.

Team personnel will walk to the pit wall from the garages down paths between areas of lawn in what for some will be an echo of the old Silverstone 'village green' F1 paddock, which was replaced by a characterless asphalt one in the mid-1990s.

For spectators, there will be a new viewing area towards the end of the lap, complete with giant TV screens, which Phillips hopes will become Silverstone's version of 'Henman Hill' at Wimbledon.

And the redevelopment will have an intriguing impact on the racing.

Moving the pits means Copse will no longer be the first corner, but does create the enticing prospect of a full field of cars streaming together into the brilliant new flat-out Abbey right-hand kink, which last season immediately entered the track's list of great corners.

On the old layout, after Copse, the cars veered through high-speed bends at Becketts and Stowe and did not reach an overtaking point until Vale - more than halfway around the lap. Now, a quick left-hander, which is barely a corner, is quickly followed by the slow Loop hairpin, by which point the field will still be bunched together. As Horner put it, with raised eyebrows belying the understatement, it should be "fairly exciting".

And that seems a pretty fair summation of the future for Silverstone. Frustrated by short-term contracts and the constant threat of the race being taken away, this much-needed new development has been a long time coming. But now it's here, it seems the track can look forward to many successful years of Formula 1.

"It takes a lot to impress Bernie," Horner said, "but I think he will be pleased with what he sees here. He's given it a bit of flak in recent years and if that is what has provoked this, it's been well worth it."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/04/silverstone.html

Marco Apicella Mário de Araújo Cabral Frank Armi Chuck Arnold

My review of the first three races of 2011

Two wins for Sebastian Vettel in the flying Red Bull, a superb recovery from pre-season problems for McLaren culminating in a stunning victory for Lewis Hamilton in China, Ferrari struggling, impressive pace from Renault and debutant Paul di Resta, and signs of a resurgence for Mercedes.

Watch my review of the start of the 2011 Formula 1 season.

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.


IF YOU ARE OUTSIDE THE UK, YOU CAN WATCH THE VIDEO HERE

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/murraywalker/2011/04/my_review_of_the_first_three_r.html

Giulio Cabianca Phil Cade Alex Caffi John CampbellJones

Feature: Talking a Good Game

As ever Fancast is here to bring you the best remarks from the Shanghai International circuit as the F1 bandwagon pulls up at the . As continue to run their generous mission to stop anyone else wasting all their energy in ...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/QMQwWpwhBrs/talking-a-good-game-2

Marco Apicella Mário de Araújo Cabral Frank Armi Chuck Arnold

Classic F1 2011 - Michael Schumacher

Michael Schumacher has chosen his five greatest all-time grands prix for the second edition of this year's new-look classic Formula 1 feature.

To those unfamiliar with the concept, BBC Sport has asked all the F1 drivers to name their five favourite races, and we will select one of them ahead of each grand prix this season to whet your appetites for the action to come.

World champion Sebastian Vettel started the ball rolling with his selection prior to the Australian Grand Prix, and now it is his friend and countryman's turn.

The drivers are free to choose whether they pick races from their own career, or those from the wider history of F1 that have resonated with them. And like Vettel, Schumacher has selected only races from his time in the sport.

Whereas the Red Bull driver made his F1 debut only in 2007, Schumacher's career dates back to 1991 and the 42-year-old has raided the memory banks to come up with what he considers, for different reasons, key highlights of that time.

Not all of them are races in which he starred. Some of them are intended to highlight his admiration for rivals. Some fulfil both aims.

In chronological order, and in his own words, this is Schumacher's list:

"The 1991 Spanish Grand Prix.

"This was one of the first few races of my career, but that's not why I remember it. It's for the wheel-to-wheel battle down the pit straight between Ayrton Senna and Nigel Mansell, when they came within inches of touching. It was two great drivers pushing each other to the edge, but with the respect to leave each other just enough room. It's one of the coolest moments I've seen in F1."

"The 1993 European Grand Prix.

"Not one of my greatest races - I spun out in the pouring rain. I've picked this because of Ayrton. My time racing against him was too short. He was a great talent, and I always have been impressed by his driving, and this race showed exactly why."

"The 1998 Hungarian Grand Prix.

"This race sums up the great relationship I had - and still have - with Ross Brawn. We were behind the McLarens of Mika Hakkinen and David Coulthard for the first part of the race and Ross decided that the only chance of beating them was to switch to a three-stop strategy - one stop more than them. It was a brilliant plan but it wasn't easy. I still remember the radio message from Ross that I had to make up something like 25 seconds in 19 laps."

"The 2000 Belgian Grand Prix.

"I enjoyed many great battles with Mika Hakkinen, who was very fast and a very tough competitor, and this was one of the best. I got into the lead when it was wet early on, but as it dried up Mika had a big pace advantage and he caught up easily. I managed to fend him off for one lap, but on the next he pulled off a great move to pass me as we went either side of Ricardo Zonta's BAR."

"The 2000 Japanese Grand Prix.

"This is probably both the toughest and most beautiful race of my career. Mika and I were flat out all the way, really on the edge every lap on a great drivers' circuit with the world championship at stake. And the race was really tricky because of changing conditions in the drizzle. I managed to get out ahead after my final pit stop and won. What makes it all the more special was that it was my first world title for Ferrari - this race certainly is my personal number one."

As with Vettel, we have chosen one race to highlight in this blog - and how we could choose any other than Schumacher's number one?

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.


In addition, we have decided to make available the full BBC 'Grand Prix' highlights programme of the time from one of his other choices - the 1991 Spanish Grand Prix. You can watch it here.

You can also enjoy highlights of last year's Malaysian Grand Prix in both short and extended form.

The classic races will also be available on the red button on digital television in the UK. On satellite and cable they will be broadcast from 1900 BST on Tuesday 5 April until 0845 on Friday 8 April. On Freeview, they will be shown from 2215 on Tuesday until 0645 on Wednesday, on Thursday from 0415-0645 and again from 1915-2045.

A final word. In my last blog, I said that we would feature Schumacher's team-mate Nico Rosberg this time around. We were not able to do so because of unforeseen problems. His choices will appear later in the season.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/04/michael_schumachers_classic_f1.html

Larry Crockett Tony Crook Art Cross Geoff Crossley

Wednesday, 27 April 2011

1968 Dodge Hemi Dart Is Completed!

My new project is the Revell '68 Hemi Dart with a new storyline featuring McNally, Boston PI.  The story is called "Childhood Friends" and is only to show what is driving this WIP.

The Build

Revell's '68 Dodge Hemi Dart.  This will represent a street driven Dart with the Hemi and a stock looking body. 

My paint is Model Master Hemi Orange Lacquer.

I am considering using a 6-Pack hood scoop, but I might just stick with the Hemi scoop.

The Story

1975-

The two teenagers found the old Dart at a used car lot.  They both saw the potential in the old car, what it could be and what it would look like.  One of them didn't have the money to buy the car, but the other did and they both would work on the car together.  The old Dart would have a big block engine, mag wheels, and a 4-speed transmission.  And a bright paint job!  The car was going to be a fast and colorful car and quite the chick magnet.  Johnny Hallis and his childhood friend, McNally would share everything involving this car.  It was their dream ride...

2011-

Portable lighting lit the crime scene brightly and was accented by the blue flash from the surrounding squad cars.  Det. Sgt. Adam Troy was writing down notes when a patrol officer called his name from the tapeline.  He looks over to see McNally standing at the line and waves him through.  "Do you know this person?  He has your card in his pocket."  McNally kneels down to look at the victim's face.  "Yes, it's Johnny Hallis.  I grew up with him."

McNally will return... 

Source: http://cs.scaleautomag.com/SCACS/forums/thread/951578.aspx

John Cannon Eitel Cantoni Bill Cantrell Ivan Capelli

Robert Kubica Hospitalised Following Rally Accident

UPDATE ON KUBICA’s CONDITION: �http://wp.me/p3uiu-11K Renault Lotus F1 driver Robert Kubica has been airlifted to hospital following a car accident while competing on a rally. The incident, described as a high speed accident, left the Pole injured and he had to be airlifted to hospital. �His co-driver Jakub Gerber was uninjured in the incident. While [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/02/06/robert-kubica-hospitalised-following-rally-accident/

Jim Crawford Ray Crawford Alberto Crespo Antonio Creus

a galaxie of stars .....................done and ready

I am beginning a new build, I'll lift a tip of the vale to what I am up to. Here we go.....

 

Source: http://cs.scaleautomag.com/SCACS/forums/thread/935226.aspx

Sebastien Buemi Luiz Bueno Ian Burgess Luciano Burti

HELP! My diecast collection just fell off my wall

Hi folks,

It's been a while since I posted here and a catastrophe just occured!  My collection of 1:18 scale diecast cars, which were in a acrylic case somehow pulled off the wall and fell on the floor.  Three of my best cars, Olds Cutlass (2 Indy pace cars & one hugger orange) were just smashed to pieces!  All three suffered front suspension damage, two of them (convertibles) had windshield posts, side mirrors etc. broken off.

These were not cheap models (all in the case were $100+), which I considered investments.  So I'd like to have them repaired - to restore their value.  Does anyone know if Lane has a repair service?  If not, does anyone know, of a professional repair service?

Thanks!

Rich

Source: http://cs.scaleautomag.com/SCACS/forums/thread/953007.aspx

Bill Cheesbourg Eddie Cheever Andrea Chiesa Ettore Chimeri

Classic F1 2011 - Michael Schumacher

Michael Schumacher has chosen his five greatest all-time grands prix for the second edition of this year's new-look classic Formula 1 feature.

To those unfamiliar with the concept, BBC Sport has asked all the F1 drivers to name their five favourite races, and we will select one of them ahead of each grand prix this season to whet your appetites for the action to come.

World champion Sebastian Vettel started the ball rolling with his selection prior to the Australian Grand Prix, and now it is his friend and countryman's turn.

The drivers are free to choose whether they pick races from their own career, or those from the wider history of F1 that have resonated with them. And like Vettel, Schumacher has selected only races from his time in the sport.

Whereas the Red Bull driver made his F1 debut only in 2007, Schumacher's career dates back to 1991 and the 42-year-old has raided the memory banks to come up with what he considers, for different reasons, key highlights of that time.

Not all of them are races in which he starred. Some of them are intended to highlight his admiration for rivals. Some fulfil both aims.

In chronological order, and in his own words, this is Schumacher's list:

"The 1991 Spanish Grand Prix.

"This was one of the first few races of my career, but that's not why I remember it. It's for the wheel-to-wheel battle down the pit straight between Ayrton Senna and Nigel Mansell, when they came within inches of touching. It was two great drivers pushing each other to the edge, but with the respect to leave each other just enough room. It's one of the coolest moments I've seen in F1."

"The 1993 European Grand Prix.

"Not one of my greatest races - I spun out in the pouring rain. I've picked this because of Ayrton. My time racing against him was too short. He was a great talent, and I always have been impressed by his driving, and this race showed exactly why."

"The 1998 Hungarian Grand Prix.

"This race sums up the great relationship I had - and still have - with Ross Brawn. We were behind the McLarens of Mika Hakkinen and David Coulthard for the first part of the race and Ross decided that the only chance of beating them was to switch to a three-stop strategy - one stop more than them. It was a brilliant plan but it wasn't easy. I still remember the radio message from Ross that I had to make up something like 25 seconds in 19 laps."

"The 2000 Belgian Grand Prix.

"I enjoyed many great battles with Mika Hakkinen, who was very fast and a very tough competitor, and this was one of the best. I got into the lead when it was wet early on, but as it dried up Mika had a big pace advantage and he caught up easily. I managed to fend him off for one lap, but on the next he pulled off a great move to pass me as we went either side of Ricardo Zonta's BAR."

"The 2000 Japanese Grand Prix.

"This is probably both the toughest and most beautiful race of my career. Mika and I were flat out all the way, really on the edge every lap on a great drivers' circuit with the world championship at stake. And the race was really tricky because of changing conditions in the drizzle. I managed to get out ahead after my final pit stop and won. What makes it all the more special was that it was my first world title for Ferrari - this race certainly is my personal number one."

As with Vettel, we have chosen one race to highlight in this blog - and how we could choose any other than Schumacher's number one?

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.


In addition, we have decided to make available the full BBC 'Grand Prix' highlights programme of the time from one of his other choices - the 1991 Spanish Grand Prix. You can watch it here.

You can also enjoy highlights of last year's Malaysian Grand Prix in both short and extended form.

The classic races will also be available on the red button on digital television in the UK. On satellite and cable they will be broadcast from 1900 BST on Tuesday 5 April until 0845 on Friday 8 April. On Freeview, they will be shown from 2215 on Tuesday until 0645 on Wednesday, on Thursday from 0415-0645 and again from 1915-2045.

A final word. In my last blog, I said that we would feature Schumacher's team-mate Nico Rosberg this time around. We were not able to do so because of unforeseen problems. His choices will appear later in the season.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/04/michael_schumachers_classic_f1.html

Art Cross Geoff Crossley Chuck Daigh Yannick Dalmas

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

2012 Mercedes Benz ML spied in silver with AMG styling package

Next-generation Mercedes-Benz M-Class is sporting an AMG styling package and is set to debut at the Frankfurt motor show in September.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/WP87aOEKdIg/2012-mercedes-benz-ml-spied-in-silver-with-amg-styling

Franco Comotti George Connor George Constantine John Cordts

2012 Mercedes Benz ML spied in silver with AMG styling package

Next-generation Mercedes-Benz M-Class is sporting an AMG styling package and is set to debut at the Frankfurt motor show in September.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/WP87aOEKdIg/2012-mercedes-benz-ml-spied-in-silver-with-amg-styling

Paul Belmondo Tom Belso JeanPierre Beltoise Olivier Beretta

2012 Chevrolet Corvette new details leaked

ZR1 and Z06 editions get their own performance packages with goodies such as cup wheels and ride control systems.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/THl5oaEQjPs/2012-chevrolet-corvette-new-details-leaked

Jaime Alguersuari Philippe Alliot Cliff Allison Fernando Alonso

Karthikeyan Makes Surprise F1 Return With HRT

Narain Karthikeyan has made a surprise return to Formula One after being announced as one of Hispania HRT’s drivers for the 2011 season. The Indian driver was unveiled as the first racer to be working with the Spanish based squad, who look likely to enter into a second season of racing despite on-going financial concerns. [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/01/07/karthikeyan-makes-surprise-f1-return-with-hrt/

Harry Blanchard Michael Bleekemolen Alex Blignaut Trevor Blokdyk

Monday, 25 April 2011

Bristol Motors bought by Frazer-Nash

Bristol Motors has announced they have been purchased by Kamkorp Autokraft which is a subsidiary of Frazer-Nash.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/lE6WYO6XCGY/bristol-motors-bought-by-frazer-nash

Antonio Creus Larry Crockett Tony Crook Art Cross

Kubica leaves hospital 11 weeks after crash

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/04/24/1152129/kubica-leaves-hospital-11-weeks.html

Johnny Boyd David Brabham Gary Brabham Jack Brabham†

Corvette Z06 hits 333 km/h on German autobahn [video]

Video shows the import Z06 hitting the 333 km/h mark (207 mph) on roads made for domestic muscle like the M5.

Source: http://feeds.worldcarfans.com/~r/worldcarfans/Jxfz/~3/ryqHmlKzNDc/corvette-z06-hits-333-kmh-on-german-autobahn-video

Ian Ashley Gerry Ashmore Bill Aston Richard Attwood

Stability key for Biffle at Roush

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/04/21/1146921/stability-key-for-biffle-at-roush.html

Georges Berger Gerhard Berger Eric Bernard Enrique Bernoldi

Why F1 steering wheels have over 20 buttons ? and what they all do | F1 technology

Find out what all those buttons actually do.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/L5Vz7r-Hrg0/

Bernard Collomb Alberto Colombo Erik Comas Franco Comotti