Showing posts with label Ferrari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ferrari. Show all posts

Friday, October 24, 2008

Formula One Cars

Formula One Racing is, quite simply, the paramount of karting. It is the professional form of the sport in its entirety. Formula One is an international phenomenon, a media conglomerate that rakes in millions and millions of dollars a year from advertising, sponsorship, and broadcast revenues. Professional drivers with millionaire bank accounts race these majestic kart marvels that are unprecedented, flush with technological luxuries – everything from hard to produce lightweight frames that glide the machine to tires with unsurpassed grooving style that exemplify powerful movement on the circuit.

There is no sport that bests epitomizes the term “global sport” like Formula One racing. Many countries serve as active participants in shaping the professional karting scene – for example, Malaysia is a hot spot for racing (Fernando Alonso, a Spanish-born driver under Team Renault recently won a race there) and Italy plays a vital role in designing and manufacturing first class, top-of-the-line karts. Drivers and racing personalities hail from all parts of the word – you have the charismatic and popular Italian Renault boss Flavio Briatore, the handsome young 23 year old racing prodigy in Fernando Alonso who stars in a Renault Megane commercial with his pet pig, and one of the highest earning sports figures in world history in Michael Schumacher. Rivalries are common in Formula One – adding the edge of excitement with every zip of the curve and nitrous boost of the machine.

In order to better become acquainted with Formula One racing, we must understand its organization. Karting goes way beyond pitting 3 2-cycle engine machines against each other on an oval circuit. Formula One is divided into drivers & their respective teams. Under such trademark car companies like Renault, Ferrari, and Toyota – each driver has an assembling cast of staffers consisting of mechanics, engineers, and designers all working towards one goal: to make that speedster faster using all the resources at their disposal. Headed by team bosses that are adept at creating sponsorship opportunities and assembling the best cast for each team, Formula One employs the finest specialists in the business with backgrounds in computer and automobile – even specialists with aerospace experience! High end, (rare technology reserved for space projects) in some instances, create the fastest and most efficient car possible. According to FI rules, racing teams must design, construct, and built their own karts from scratch. The staff is the pride of each individual team – capable and able to win every 57 lap enduro race from Malaysia to Great Britain.

Formula One cars can be summed up in two words: technological marvels. These sleek, low riding gems ripping through laps at speeds topping 200 mph. consist of more than just a chassis, an engine, and four wheels. For starters, the engine is located behind the cockpit as opposed to standard automobiles. They consist of 10 cylinder engines that produce heat which propel the kart forward. Team engineers are always looking into ways to make their engines more powerful. Currently, 1000 bhp (a scale for horsepower) has not been topped – it is up to the teams to produce an engine which would fare well supporting speed as well as support the chassis. And as we know, there is a snug open cockpit for Jarno Trulli to maneuver his machine in.

Construction of Formula One race cars is unprecedented. The first rule of thumb in designing a bonafide piece of framework is to make it weigh as least as possible. Less kart weight correlates to faster speeds. For this reason, team brains use lightweight material that is hard to construct. The minimum weight of a kart must be 600 kg including the driver. This ensures a level playing field, although teams are allowed to keep their money making construction methods a secret from other teams. Team staff is very highly regarded in the Formula One business. Their technological and dynamical know-how of the machines they build is a valuable asset to any team. And like free agents, they are lured and signed by the likes of companies creating a recruiting war for their services. Of course, there are restrictions for creating karts. You cannot add nitro boosts to your machine or use technology that resembles life in the year 3000. Teams are always looking to bend the rules slightly and coming up ways to beat the competition legally.

Professional kart tires have to have optimum characteristics to ensure smooth driving. For one, tires have to have grooving technology built into them. For the novices, grooves are indented lines in tires that allow for it to slow down considerably on turns and to adapt to the track surface. No matter what the technology, kart tires are simply not adept at withstanding the rigors of asphalt, concrete, and dirt. For this reason, Formula One racers are allotted two pit stops during the course of a 57 lap race to change tires. If you’ve ever watched a Formula One race, team staffers with lightning quick hands have an extremely limited time for which to remove and replace tires in the pit stop – often times not exceeding over 7 seconds! Regulations are placed on tire grooves (a minimum of four) to allow for an even playing field for all racers. Remember enthusiasts, grooves serve more to slow down the kart than to speed it up.

Chassis construction with its illustrious carbon fiber material, tires with indented grooves, team specialists with a knack for speed, and engines which burn heat like calories is the epitome of a Formula One race car. All of these attributes contribute to the performance of the vehicle in racing lap after lap. As a result of all this technology, Formula One cars leave people breathless reaching consistent speeds of 200 mph. on the race track. More impressive is the time needed to go from 0 mph to 100 mph – 5 seconds! Formula One is only moving forward with the advent of new features - like improved horsepower engines, more lightweight materials, new ballasts to add weight to the car, and more. Behind that stylish, mind blowing chassis that pique our interest is that top-class technology that makes Formula One racing so great.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Formula 1 Calendar


The Ferrari F2008 was launched on Sunday at the company's base at Maranello. The debut saw the first public viewing of the car Ferrari pins its hopes on for continued championship glory. Its drivers, World Champion Kimi Raikkonen and championship hopeful Felipe Massa are hoping and expecting a two way fight between themselves for the coveted title. The new F1 challenger is, according to Chief Designer, Aldo Costa, an important step in the development from last year's 2007. The ban on traction control and the introduction of cost saving measures such as the requirement that gearboxes must now last for four race events, along with the introduction of a standard ECU have meant that the designers were limited as to how far they could go. Raikkonen welcomed the return of traction control-free Formula 1 whilst Felipe Massa, not surprisingly, confirmed that he was now ready to take the battle to the current title holder for championship glory.

The second of the two likeliest championship contenders, McLaren Mercedes, also launched their car, the MP4-23, at their engine partner's base in Stuttgart, Germany. The Woking squad's CEO, Martin Whitmarsh, referred to the new contender as 'a step forward' in spite of the freeze on the development of some aspects of the car offered by the team as penitence in the wake of the Spygate scandal. Lewis Hamilton was in a confident mood at the launch, which coincided with his twenty-third birthday explaining that he was going into this year's championship with more confidence than he had at the beginning of last year's campaign. If 2007 was 'tentative' for the young Hamilton, Schumacher's record books must be shaking themselves off the shelves at the prospect of a properly confident Lewis in 2008.

Finally, the Honda A Team have not yet confirmed that their drivers for 2007, Takuma Sato and Brit hopeful Anthony Davidson are confirmed for 2008, although a spokesperson has intimated that to sign them up is the intention of the team. Meanwhile, Honda's second team has long since confirmed Jenson Button and Rubens Barrichello as their drivers of choice. Or were they the first team? Oh dear, Honda's in a bit of pickle isn't it?

And so the season's testing and public gesturing begins. 2008 will be a vintage year for every Formula 1 fan, no doubt. Here's hoping that the Whinger Fernando Alonso can keep his complaints to himself, like the double champion that he was, when Nelsinho turns the 'rookie pressure' button to maximum attack.

Monday, March 31, 2008

F 1 2008


The 2008 Formula One season begins on 14 March at Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne. Some of the prominent drivers and personnel have moved to different teams and technical regulations have also been changed. There are two new street-track venues, one in Spain and the other in Singapore featuring the sport's first-ever night race.

Kimi Raikkonen and Ferrari are the world champions, after a gripping, if controversial, 2007 season when the action on the track between the Scuderia and McLaren reached fever pitch. But what are their chances of retaining the titles? Having come so close in his rookie season, can Lewis Hamilton win redemption for McLaren by going one better in 2008?

Raikkonen and Hamilton, together with Fernando Alonso, are regarded as F1's top trio, and Ferrari and McLaren are the top teams. Renault--constructors' champion in 2005 and 2006 but nowhere in 2007, faces the question of whether it can recapture its past form.

On the other hand, as F1 continues to implement rules changes designed to reduce costs and return driving responsibility to the drivers and away from engineers and computers, there is talk of the same two-team dominance and whispers of scandal to come. By most accounts, however, the 2008 show will have a different tint. Continuing the cost-cutting that began several years ago with longer-life engines and a freeze in engine development, each car must now use the same gearbox for four races. This will be of little interest to most spectators, unless a team needs to replace a gearbox sooner and the driver is thus given a five-spot starting-grid penalty.

Meanwhile, Alonso is back on the team with which he won his two championships (2005, 2006). Renault's budget is nowhere near Ferrari's or McLaren's (even after McLaren suffered from the FIA's $100 million fine for last year's industrial espionage debacle), but that was also the case when Alonso won his titles. Team boss Flavio Briatore is a master at running a race team, spending the money when and where necessary but never squandering it.

3 Tips To Watch F1 Live Online Anywhere In The World


As a die-hard formula 1 fan for more than 10 years, I have never missed any F1 races. Therefore, I will be telling you 3 tips so that any F1 fan like you can view F1 races live anywhere in the world. The high speed throttling engine sounds of Ferrari makes me go high! I could almost smell the burning tires of those F1 cars.

The 1st tip is the easiest method where you can just go to youtube and type "F1 2008" or "F1 races" in the search box and you will see a list of F1 video clips appearing. However, since it is free, you may experience time lag due to many people like you watching. Also, due to copyright laws, it may not be there for long depending on your luck.

The 2nd tip is to visit a local pub that broadcast F1 races live, with a group of F1 fans like you and me cheering on your favourite car driver and team. It should be very exciting although you need to pay some money for the beers. Of course, this will be achievable only if the local cable provider does broadcast F1 races.

Maybe you have to work unconventional hours or need to work on your computer during the time which the F1 races is being broadcasted. Fear not because my 3rd tip can help you. The fact is that you can actually watch F1 live online on your computer or laptop by just installing a special software which you will be able to receive crystal clear, high quality live video streaming of all the F1 races all year round. It's cheap and you don't pay a bomb for that; and yes, it works on a laptop too. I have been using it to watch 2007 F1 races to my hearts content and you can do it too.

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