California. Right under the Hollywood sign.ringo wrote:The problem is which state and which glamour spot.
AWESOME video woohoo...Really enjoyed it! =D> =D> =D>woohoo wrote:Having not been at the track in real life; wouldn't the F1 cars bottom out on the corkscrew ?
not related but still Laguna Seca:
Maybe they would have to run like 4x4's, just like Heidfeld did in the BMW Sauber at the Nurburgring.woohoo wrote:Having not been at the track in real life; wouldn't the F1 cars bottom out on the corkscrew ?
not related but still Laguna Seca:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3y0tbdpcFc[youtube]
As far as tracks layout goes do you prefer Bahrain or Abu-Dhabi?Giblet wrote:I liked Abu-Dhabi. If we have one Mid East track, I want that one to stay. As crazy as it is, it is an F1 circus, and it has a lot for the fans. The track wasn't incredible, but it is changeable. They seem to really want that venue to work, nobody builds the largest indoor theme park in the entire world, unless they are semi-serious.
It would be good to convince a rich country that although it would be nice to have a race in another desert community, maybe pitching the money out here to American soil and building a bespoke venue here, near an airport, or even with it's own airport, using the runway as part of the course.
The fact that the tracks are near empty after a few years of OK attendance should be a clue. if you like F1, and want to back financially, the US might be a better long term market.
JUST GET SOMEONE ELSE OTHER THAN TILKE FOR THE SAKE OF PETE.
Did it cross your mind that a track layout typically is much dictated by budget, available elevation changes, operator requirements, safety requirements, FOM requirements and that there is not much left for the designer's input? The latest non Tilke circuit is Singapore. Do you like that layout any better than lets say Istanbul?Giblet wrote:JUST GET SOMEONE ELSE OTHER THAN TILKE FOR THE SAKE OF PETE.
So why not let me design the track? That would be a lot cheaper.WhiteBlue wrote:Did it cross your mind that a track layout typically is much dictated by budget, available elevation changes, operator requirements, safety requirements, FOM requirements and that there is not much left for the designer's input?