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Messages - rooshooter

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1411
Thursday Nights fun racing / Re: Christmas Cobra Fun Runs
« on: December 28, 2018, 06:40:29 AM »
Shit. >:(
A week off work and I totally forgot what day it was.
Only joining the server for a "drunk" session and I saw the track had changed made me realise. :-[
Sorry guys. :'(
You were missed Bacchulum, we thought you may have had overheating problems again, see you next week :).

1413
Racing general / Re: F1 2019
« on: December 22, 2018, 12:05:50 PM »
F1 2018 summary from ARSE forum.


1414
Mod Cars / Re: 1960s Formula Ford
« on: December 21, 2018, 04:36:18 PM »
quote from RD forum:



    Tony Dean
    Tony Dean

    Version: 1.0

        What can I say but thank you, thank you, thank you. I am fortunate that I actually bought one of these new back in the 60s and raced it for a couple of seasons with moderate success. This is exactly how I remember the car, it's awesome. I just want to drive it and drive it. Well done on an excellent mod. Any chance of a Merlyn or Royale or even a titan to keep it company. I have fond memories of these cars also. Again thank you


1415
Thursday Nights fun racing / Re: Christmas Cobra Fun Runs
« on: December 21, 2018, 10:23:07 AM »
Sorry for the early drop out.
My PC rebooted to a motherboard/BIOS screen saying I had a CPU overheat. :o
Didn't know how to fix that, so I just turned it off and let it cool down.
Hopefully this isn't an on going issue. :'(
Just check that your Fan/CPU cooler is not blocked with dust.

1416
Mod Cars / 1960s Formula Ford
« on: December 20, 2018, 06:52:41 AM »

1417
Merry Christmas all and a huge thankyou to Wally and Phil for their untiring work in keeping the Tuesday and Thursday servers running :).
We are very lucky to have such a diverse bunch of people here at XGN, which make this a great place to be a simracing/racing/historic racing/computer building/sim hardware/software etc etc fan, there is always somebody with some specialist knowledge willing to help with a problem or give some advice 8).

1418
Thursday Nights fun racing / Re: Christmas Cobra Fun Runs
« on: December 20, 2018, 06:27:47 AM »
I will not make it tonight sadly, but I think there could be some randoms jump on to make it interesting! It has been a very popular combo for people to try their skills.

1419
Mod Tracks / Re: New track from AC reboot
« on: December 19, 2018, 06:51:46 AM »

#5415

    https://actrackrebootproject.wixsite.com/ac-track-re-boot/oesterreichring1979

    Oesterreichring Grand Prix Circuit 1979 Version 1.0

    - 1979 GP Circuit - 2 Layouts - Chicane & No Chicane
    - Mirrored Trees Fixed and correct shading applied
    - Grass and terrain blended better
    - New road surface detail shader's tweaked
    - Dynamic groove added
    - Crowds updated
    - Shader's tweaked across the board
    - Added Physics mesh - With added bumps on inside corner runoffs (Textures tweaked to reflect the bumps)
    - Working start lights
    - Performance tweaks - Dip is pretty good for offline racing now
     


1420
Thursday Nights fun racing / Re: S16 R7 - Usce - 13/12/2018
« on: December 14, 2018, 08:50:21 AM »
Classic Phil, brilliant  ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D.

1421
Hardware & Reviews / Re: System upgrade - 8700k & mobo
« on: December 13, 2018, 04:33:17 PM »
I've been trying to follow and learn something from this thread but it's now just turned into gobble-de-gook. :o :-X
It reminds me I only know the car bit of sim-racing, not the computer bit (hence my attempt to learn).
This may help Bacchulum, from 2010 but still relevant.

https://www.overclockers.com/3-step-guide-overclock-core-i3-i5-i7/

1422
Thursday Nights fun racing / Re: Christmas Cobra Fun Runs
« on: December 13, 2018, 08:28:27 AM »
A larger than life character that had such a positive effect on all of us, the nicest bloke I never got to meet.

1423
Thursday Nights fun racing / Re: S16 R7 - Usce - 13/12/2018
« on: December 13, 2018, 08:19:06 AM »
I'll be late tonight, maybe a bit after 8:00pm (eastern).
I've been practising early - I'm ready  8)
I see someone was determined to break the 1 min 8 sec barrier, good time Wally :o

1424
Racing general / F1 2019
« on: December 12, 2018, 11:50:49 AM »


Quite aside from the doubts of the watching world, we can be reasonably sure that part of Daniel Ricciardo’s mind is still not entirely sure he’s done the right thing in leaving Red Bull for Renault.

In the immediate aftermath, he will almost certainly be surrendering significant performance. Regardless of Renault’s long-term prospects, it would be an immense achievement if it could make up what was often a lap’s-worth of performance on Red Bull from one year to the next. But on the other hand it gets Daniel out of further direct comparison with Max Verstappen, who is only going to improve his all-round game further and who will become ever-further embedded within the team. It was always going to be difficult to counter that and for Ricciardo to retain his number one credentials rather than fall into a support driver role. That’s something for which he is not wired up.

Things might just go from bad to worse for the big retainer star

But Ricciardo’s new frame of reference, Nico Hülkenberg, is hardly going to be a pushover. Hulk’s fresh off a season in which he emerged ahead - in both qualifying and race - of Carlos Sainz. These comparisons shouldn’t be given absolute authority regarding the respective levels of team-mates because there are so many variables. It was telling, for example, not long after Sainz first joined Renault at the tail end of 2017 that Hülkenberg, having had a chance to study the telemetry, was saying privately that he was confident he would prevail over Sainz because the Spaniard’s driving style, which was very different to his own, would not be suited to the traits of the cars that Enstone was producing and developing.

Sainz was saying much the same in Abu Dhabi a couple of weeks ago prior to his final race for the team – that there was a trait in the car that gave it an inherent imbalance when he tried driving it the way he naturally wanted to, that its rear instability often prevented him squeezing the last couple of tenths from himself.

Related:

    "Renault is trying to fly first-class but paying cattle-class rates"
    MPH: Vettel, Leclerc and Ferrari’s power struggle
    Kevin Magnussen: Robust, ruthless and uncompromising

Sainz is a driver very much at ease with oversteer and who spends some of his free time driving rally cars on loose surfaces around the Sainz family’s private track. At Toro Rosso he was frequently to be seen in the practices rescuing the car from wild angles, just establishing the limits, prior to tidying it all up for qualifying, where he was nip and tuck as quick as Max Verstappen.

So why this need for rear stability? The Toro Rosso was a more forgiving car in which he felt comfortable committing to high entry speeds, in the knowledge that he could lean against the initial shallow understeer, which would then give the building oversteer a nice progressive feel. The Renault had a higher grip level but was more edgy, in part as a consequence of its difficulty in combining the relatively softly-sprung rear end a high-rake car requires with good rear ride height and suspension control.
 

 

Hülkenberg, a driver who revels in reflex saves, using less initial steering lock, earlier braking, using the brakes to help more with weight transfer, was more at ease with the general instability of the car. Of course a driver can adapt once he understands – and Sainz did. But those last few grams of speed are always going to come easier and more consistently when you are not consciously going against your natural instincts, which are determined by the way the driver is wired up physiologically.   

In other words, it’s more than feasible that a car with different traits would see the picture between the two drivers reversed. Hence why team-mate comparisons should always be treated with a healthy fudge factor.

Ricciardo, though, drives in a very similar style to Sainz. There’s a lovely flowing momentum to the way he carries the speed and controls the slide – but that’s in a Red Bull that combines heaps of rear grip with a beautifully benign handling balance. Who’s to say that he’s doing this to a higher level than Sainz or Hülkenberg, two drivers who’ve never found themselves in a car as good as a Red Bull (although the rookie Sainz lapped a Red Bull faster than Sebastian Vettel in a Silverstone test 2014)?

How Renault progresses with its general car traits between RS18 and RS19 will likely play a huge part in determining how Ricciardo stacks up against Hülkenberg. If the new car still has the ghost of the RS18’s traits inbuilt, things might just go from bad to worse for the big retainer star.

He’s a remarkable competitor and good enough to work through such difficulties – but he can be under no illusions that he’s automatically going to establish himself as the team’s number one.

1425
Thursday Nights fun racing / Re: Thursdays next season ideas
« on: December 11, 2018, 03:22:03 PM »
Need a few members to run these for quality assurance.  :-*
Please let me know if anything isn't working.  :-[
With the testing I did they all were ok, the only problem I had was I have so many Cobras on my HD ,I was not sure I was testing the ones you wanted tested :-\.

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