RIAM Joins New Era Circuit Of The Americas F1 Viewing Faithful

Riverside International Automotive Museum hosted an opportunity to hear the thoughts and experiences of Tony Settember (center) and Don Nichols (right) as interviewed by RIAM Public Relations director, Thomas Stahler (Left). Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2012)

RIAM Joins New Era Circuit Of The Americas F1 Viewing Faithful

This last weekend, the United States saw the return of Formula One international open wheel racing to the series’ world hopping schedule. The race held at the new purpose built Circuit of the Americas (COTA), 3.427-mile (5.515 km) motor racing circuit south of Austin, Texas, marked the return of F1 racing to the United States after a four-season hiatus.

Recognizing the pent-up demand for viewing and sharing time with like-minded individuals of this inaugural event, the Riverside International Automotive Museum (RIAM) in Riverside, California … located not too far from the site of the famed Riverside International Raceway purpose built road circuit and was set up, in part, to archive and honor the history of this great track … opened its doors and hosted a viewing party.

View Slideshow: RIAM joins new era Circuit of the Americas F1 viewing faithful

During the broadcast of the COTA USGP from Austin, Texas, SPEED Channel’s Bob Varsha mentioned that there were many viewing parties being held throughout the United States and that one of note was the gathering being hosted by the Riverside International Automotive Museum which featured Tony Settember and Don Nichols and had on view many great historic open wheel racing cars created from the Dan Gurney Eagle operation.

On the podium at the Circuit of the Americas, four past champions celebrate the running of the first Formula One race held in the United States in four years – pictured from left to right: Sebastian Vettel, Mario Andretti, Lewis Hamilton, and Fernando Alonso. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks via projection TV from SPEED Channel (2012)

This excerpted and edited from the Bleacher Report –

Formula One: Hamilton Wins USGP, but Circuit of the Americas Is the Real Star
By Craig Christopher (Featured Columnist) on November 19, 2012

Formula One racing has made a triumphant return to the United States after a four-season hiatus, only to find that some things just haven’t changed.

Lewis Hamilton was the last F1 driver to stand atop the podium at a U.S. Grand Prix when he claimed victory at the final Indianapolis race in 2007.He stood atop the podium again in Austin as he held Sebastian Vettel at bay to claim a hard-fought race win.

While the race winner may not have changed, everything else has.

The fans were treated to a great race, with lots of overtaking, some outstanding wheel-to-wheel action, breathtaking pitstops and Ferrari even delivered a little bit of the intrigue and shenanigans that F1 is famous for.

And it all happened on a track deep in the heart of Texas.
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With F1 finding difficulty securing a permanent home since the 20-year tenure at Watkins Glenn, all hope turned to the new Circuit of the Americas in Austin Texas.

It didn’t disappoint.

The circuit is a custom F1 track, designed—as are nearly all new tracks—by German racetrack architect Hermann Tilke. At first glance, it has all of the hallmarks of every other Tilke track—the big runoff areas, the flowing combination of corners, long straights followed by a hairpin—but it worked.
—-
It was a race that F1 had to get right.

With the 2005 Indianapolis debacle still lingering in the American fans’ memory and with no American teams and no American drivers, the product had to deliver on its own terms. It had to bury the perception that F1 is boring and lacking in excitement.

Any lingering doubts were put to rest, despite the dominance of Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton, with action from one end of the field to the other.

Hamilton took the most of a momentary distraction for Vettel, as he got tangled behind a back-marker, making the pivotal pass that Vettel was unable to recover from.

While Hamilton claimed the victory, it was the Circuit of the Americas that was the superstar of the weekend, aided and abetted by a massive crowd of 117,429 fans (via CircuitoftheAmericas.com).

The drivers loved it [all three - Hamilton, Vittle, and Alonzo respectively], and probably would have said so without prompting, even if Mario Andretti didn’t pleadingly fish for praise in yet another pointless podium interview by an ex-driver [and champion].

Hamilton told F1.com:

There are a couple of Grands Prix that are somehow out on their own: there’s Monaco, Silverstone, Montreal, Spa and Monza. Now you can this circuit to that list – it’s already one of the best racetracks in the world, maybe even right up there in the top three.


Then again, he won the race—he would say that.

[Reference Here]

The museum moved many of its 200 mph cars it has on display, set up a 9′X 12′projection screen and tables on the floor, prepared an Italian salad and sandwich lunch, invited a car constructor and some drivers of F1 and sport car racing note for post race interviews and schmoozing … thus turning the museum into a social rumpus-room of F1 joy.

On hand were F1 winning chassis constructor Don Nichols, who created the Shadow cars that raced in F1 – and would spawn the Arrows F1 Team, Formula 5000, and Can-Am in the 1970′s and 1980′s (Alan Jones recorded his first win at the Austrian Grand Prix, a result which also provided a welcome boost to the lesser-funded teams as it was Shadow’s first victory), Shadow Cars team crewman Gene Lentz, F1 driver Tony Settember (1962-1963), with legendary road racers John Morton and Davey Jordan.

Discover how this “five stripe” helmet adornment came about through the stories related by Don Nichols and the Shadow Cars effort to become a part of F1 history – Listen to Audio File linked below. Image Credit: “F1 Biography: Still in the shadows”

Interviewed in the post race festivities by RIAM PR Director, Thomas Stahler were Tony Settember and Don Nichols with a presentation to RIAM by Gene Lentz a donation of memorabilia from Shadow Cars to museum President, Doug Magnon. AUDIO FILE HERE (43 min.)

There’s a saying in Texas. “I wasn’t born here, but I got here as fast as I could.” This is the first proper U.S. race since Watkins Glen and, at last, COTA represents a worthy home for the USGP event.

That could also be said of this Southern California RIAM viewing party event. Here’s hoping the COTA F1 USGP viewing party becomes an annual Southern California tradition. A Grand Prix time was had by all.

… notes from The EDJE

** Article first published as RIAM Joins New Era Circuit Of The Americas F1 Viewing Faithful on Technorati **

Stewart Explodes Chase, Massa & Hamilton Smack Down, Jason Line Clinches Championship

Tony Stewart took everyone to school at Martinsville yesterday while they all beat each other like a UFC cage fight. Vettel wins F1 Indian Grand Prix but Lewis Hamilton and Felipe Massa can’t stop hammering each other. Jason Line became the first in the NHRA to clinch a championship at Las Vegas.

Spa-Francorchamps: Vettel Extends F1 Lead


Sebastian Vettel won the Grand Prix of Belgium Sunday and extended his World Championship points lead. The McLaren and Ferrari teams couldn’t find the pace in the closing stages of the famous race. Lewis Hamilton crashed and was seemingly dazed.

Fernando Alonso: Ferrari’s Spanish Doubloon

It’s easy for most us to sit back and play Monday morning quarterback in motorsports. The teams, the drivers and the politics make any of the top tier forms of auto racing an opinion-editorial dream.

Formula One is the truly the pinnacle of auto racing, not to mention a gold mine for conspiracy theories, industrial espionage and driver mystique. However, every now and again the planets lineup to deliver a special nugget of gold that can’t be ignored. In this case it’s a Spanish doubloon named Fernando Alonso.

Alonso’s career hasn’t been magical but rather sheer talent, hard work and a ferocious attitude as an inveterate competitor. I wouldn’t want to play Chess with the guy for fear of a singing sword being unleashed at a most inconvenient moment. This driver plays for keeps.

Lewis Hamilton, Sebastian Vettel and others are no less worthy competitors, however they don’t carry the cache’ of Alonso as a Ferrari driver. No brand on Earth is more recognizable than Ferrari. The Scuderia Ferrari is much more than a team, it’s an Italian national institution and Alonso’s presence does nothing to diminish that mindset. His style, manner and skill have caught the attention and adoration of the Tifosi as strongly as Michael Schumacher or Gilles Villenueve did in their days with Ferrari.

Alonso has always been one of those drivers that could be referred to as complete. He began his Formula One career at Minardi, a struggling feeder team at best, but consistently took a car that was far from competitive and made it perform beyond its ability. This feat didn’t go unnoticed by the faster teams.

Flavio Briatore, the flamboyant media gift that just keeps on giving, became Alonso’s manager and placed him as the test driver for Renault. This was a move that taught the Spanish youngster the technical side of set-up, how to work with true engineers and the most important thing of all, many miles of seat time.

When Alonso replaced Yarno Trulli at Renault becoming teammate to Giancarlo Fishichella he not only out performed him, he repeatedly went head to head with Michael Schumacher and Kimi Raikkonen without fear. While with his tenure at Renault he captured two back-to-back World Championships at a time when Schumacher was in his prime.

Ferrari knew what they were seeing and, as they do as a matter of process, began the strategies that would ultimately see him reach the Prancing Horse stable.

If we were referring to an artist, you could say that despite winning races and being competitive, his season with McLaren would have to be considered his ‘blue period’. The personal relationship between British driver Lewis Hamilton and Alonso soured quickly. Alonso’s accusations that Hamilton’s engineers were taking the Spaniard’s set-ups and using them for the Briton proved to be true.

Ron Dennis, McLaren’s principle at the time, had invested in Hamilton since the driver was fifteen years old and he had every intention of using whatever means possible to elevate the youngster, even at the expense of Alonso’s future with the team.

Once again, Alonso made a decision that would put him in more fitting surroundings, to Ferrari. Raikkonen was no longer a viable driver as a leader or technical benefit. The Finn’s only desire was to climb into a car and drive. Alonso was more like Schumacher and Jean Todt knew it all too well.

The cost of buying out Raikkonen to get to Alonso was immense, but necessary. Ferrari had a long- term plan and Alonso was the last piece of the puzzle. Massa was quick and a hard fighter but he lacked an ability that Alonso possesses. Alonso stated firmly that he was worth one half second to any team. Certainly a bold statement, but true. His days at Minardi had taught him to take his equipment just slightly beyond what it was purportedly capable of handling.

The future for Fernando Alonso is set. He has become the undisputed team leader at Ferrari and is consistently scoring points for the Italian team that early in the 2011 season found itself in an engineering nightmare. Exhaust blown diffusers, rule changes, no testing, battling against a nearly perfectly balanced car in the Red Bull RB7 and its apparent domination.

The 2012 season will usher in another era, the teams all go to a new formula. They won’t abandon lessons learned in past years, there’s no such thing as a totally clean slate in auto racing, however the new V6 turbocharged engine formula coupled with a complete ban on all blown diffusers give the Spanish driver his next opportunity, a third World Championship.

Grand Prix of Hungary-An Amazing Display of True Grand Prix Masters

To those on the outside looking in at the beautiful and sometimes mysterious world of Formula One Grand Prix racing, it sometimes takes a ‘Battle Royale’ for the casual fan of Motorsports to actually appreciate what is happening.

The Grand Prix of Hungary brought out the UFC fighters of the auto-racing world. Those said fighters operate at speeds and reaction times that we as mere mortals can never replicate. That’s why we watch such displays as we saw yesterday in Hungary with a sense of awe. Jenson Button, the winner for McLaren, was brilliant.

By far this race showed just how close the top teams are in performance to one another. McLaren, Red Bull and the iconic Scuderia Ferrari showed that they all are brilliant, all are fearless and all very human. All four top finishers are World Champions.

Mistakes were made in the tires selections during pit-stops as the team engineers did their utmost to play weathermen with rain showers and unforeseen mechanical issues. What’s the big story here? Sebastian Vettel, with Red Bull, will win the World Championship, but he is clearly rattled. Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain made passes on this young genius that no one thought were possible. Hamilton freely admits that he takes the car beyond what the engineers say it can do. Chalk one up for humans and take a star away from artificial intelligence.

In Grand Prix racing the cars start the race from a dead stop, all in a double row with acceleration that is almost incomprehensible to the normal driver. When the starting lights go out these cars go from a dead stop to 62 MPH in 1.9 seconds.

When the Hugarian race began, Lewis Hamilton, a master of the standing start, arrived at the first turn with Sebastian Vettel along side. What ensued was nothing short of two F-22 Raptors fighting for the same air space. Vettel ultimately slid off the track just long enough for Hamilton to rocket off in what appeared to be the drive of his life. Things change quickly in a Formula One race and change they did.

On lap 47 rain showers hit causing the teams to scramble for an answer. Would the rain blow over or would they need to come in for intermediate rain tires? Several teams chose the latter which was their undoing – the rain quit as quickly as it came. Those who were on the intermediate tires had to come back in and change to either the super soft or the prime tires, an extra pit stop, which was proved to be costly to Hamilton. Hamilton spun in the chicane but re-entered the track directly across the bow of Paul di Resta, of Scotland, triggering a penalty against the British World Champion.

While this battle raged on Jenson Button, in his 200th Grand Prix, took the lead ahead of Sebastian Vettel. Button is widely known for being incredibly smooth in his driving style and therefore easier on his tires than most. Once Button had the lead Vettel tried his utmost to get to him but to no avail. Jenson Button won one the most exciting Formula One races in recent memory. Coming second was Sebastian Vettel of Germany and then the fearless Spaniard, Fernando Alonso, in his Ferrari.

Formula One is one of those sports that to Americans is still perplexing to some degree, however, in 2012 the United States Grand Prix will return to Austin, Texas-a seemingly unlikely city -but the start of a trend that the manufacturers who own the teams or supply the technology desperately want to have on their International schedule. In fact, they want two. Maybe the United States is important after all.

RACE RESULTS

The Hungarian Grand Prix

The Hungaroring, Hungary;

70 laps; 306.663km;

Weather: Mixed conditions.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time

1. Button McLaren-Mercedes 1h43:42.337

2. Vettel Red Bull-Renault + 3.588

3. Alonso Ferrari + 19.819

4. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 48.338

5. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 49.742

6. Massa Ferrari + 1:17.176

7. Di Resta Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap

8. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap

9. Rosberg Mercedes + 1 lap

10. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap

11. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 1 lap

12. Petrov Renault + 1 lap

13. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 2 laps

14. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 2 laps

15. Perez Sauber-Ferrari + 2 laps

16. Maldonado Williams-Cosworth + 2 laps

17. Glock Virgin-Cosworth + 4 laps

18. Ricciardo HRT-Cosworth + 4 laps

19. D’Ambrosio Virgin-Cosworth + 5 laps

20. Liuzzi HRT-Cosworth + 5 laps

Fastest lap: Massa, 1:23.415

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap

Kovalainen Lotus-Renault 56

Schumacher Mercedes 27

Heidfeld Renault 24

Trulli Lotus-Renault 18

World Championship standings, round 11:

Drivers: Constructors:

1. Vettel 234 1. Red Bull-Renault 383

2. Webber 149 2. McLaren-Mercedes 280

3. Hamilton 146 3. Ferrari 215

4. Alonso 145 4. Mercedes 80

5. Button 134 5. Renault 66

6. Massa 70 6. Sauber-Ferrari 35

7. Rosberg 48 7. Force India-Mercedes 26

8. Heidfeld 34 8. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 22

9. Schumacher 32 9. Williams-Cosworth 4

10. Petrov 32

11. Kobayashi 27

12. Sutil 18

13. Buemi 12

14. Alguersuari 10

15. Di Resta 8

16. Perez 8

17. Barrichello 4       

 

Hungarian GP: Ferrari Says Major Changes


Coming off of the cold temperatures of Germany, the Formula One circus heads to Budapest. The temperatures hotter, the track tighter and the unknown changes Ferrari and others have coming should make this an interesting race.

Hamilton and Alonso Take Out Red Bulls-Vettel Shattered

Lewis Hamilton stunned the Red Bull team of Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber with a blistering pace and an unexpected win that saw him battling Alonso for the lead in the German Grand Prix at the Nurburgring yesterday. No one thought that after McLaren’s Jenson Button and Hamilton had mediocre qualifying, for McLaren, Hamilton would charge forward to the lead and take the win. The British superstar put on a commanding performance in a race that no one knew what the outcome might be due to the reversal of the off throttle blown diffuser rule.

Two things stand out as possibilities for the performance against the German Red Bull squad. The first is that both Ferrari and McLaren had developed their versions of the diffuser more effectively than did Red Bull, but the second factor may have been track temperature, the ‘obvious’ deciding factor. Obvious meaning that no one but the teams and God know what their engine mappings were, yes they had to stay within the guidelines put forth by the FIA, but they still may have been on the high side of performance chancing reliability.

The one mistake that seemed to plague several teams was getting heat into the tires quickly. Virtually the entire field ran their first stints on the soft tire that Pirelli brought to the party. The rules state that you must use both the soft compound and the prime, or harder, compound tires during the course of the event. The threat of rain hung over the entire race forcing the teams to use the soft tires, thus compelling the front runners to manage the soft compounds as best they could given that the tire degradation on the soft tire is notoriously aggressive. They were hedging their bets for rain. However, when you have colder temperatures and need heat in the tires having an aggressive style is more beneficial in getting them to work, but not necessarily make them last.

Alonso’s pit stops were flawless as was Hamilton’s. On the last stint Hamilton stopped first, under a second ahead of Alonso. Ferrari decided that Alonso should pit right after Hamilton rather than matting the throttle and gaining a tenth on the pitting Hamilton. The result? Hamilton came out just barely ahead of Alonso, who on the harder compound didn’t have that extra time to get the heat into his fresh rubber. Needless to say the Ferrari was twitchy just behind Hamilton.

Sebastian Vettel had an unusually rough day mired in fourth after an uncharacteristic spin. Vitaly Petrov in his Renault showed his ability but his immaturity as well becoming the Milka Duno of the race. If anything could be hit, pushed into the grass or moved over on, Vitaly became the winner of that dubious prize. Button experienced problems from the morning warm-up to the race that prompted him to say that it was a totally different car. He fought hard in mid-pack but finally retired with hydraulic problems. One has to wonder if those problems were manifesting themselves early but at such a low level the sensors didn’t pick them up until it was too late.

What is clearly evident is that despite Vettel’s commanding lead in the World Championship contest, the Red Bull gang may have to become more aggressive in the latter half of the season. It’s moved into the realm of the unknown. Why? The variables in this race meet were Biblical: The driver, the weather temperatures, the strategy of seemingly eminent rain, the unknown engine mapping, the blown diffuser progress of McLaren and Ferrari, the tire strategy and the Russian talent turned serial killer Vitaly Petrov.

The bottom line is that it was one helluva race filled with drama, confusion and the making of new enemies, as if you need that in Formula One. The next race at the Hungaroring in Budapest should provide more track surface heat, that seems to benefit the Red Bulls, but you can’t really make a prediction given the conditions of yesterday. It’s now back to back before the summer break and after Budapest this weekend they gear up for Spa, Belgium. Hell yeah.

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