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Blog EntryFeb 16, '12 11:52 AM
for everyone

MARTINSVILLE, Va. - Roush Fenway Racing teammates Carl Edwards
and Matt Kenseth couldn't have asked for a better scenario than
rain washing out qualifying for today's race at Martinsville
Speedway.

Johnny Claes David Clapham Jim Clark† Kevin Cogan Peter Collins Bernard Collomb


Blog EntryFeb 16, '12 9:52 AM
for everyone

This is a buikd im doing for the UK's hot rodding forum, there's been a comp for the past few years. www.rodsnsods.co.uk

I had planned to save this kit for when I could detail it and had planned to do it sixties style, with radirs, chrome and stunning paint. But I recently lost my job, needed an unstarted kit for the comp an couldn't resist. It's going to be box stock.

I first did the front and rear axels using gamesworkshop paints and dry brushing. I was going for the "scavenged and cleaned up" look,

I now have the engine done, but for some reason Revell left the front of the gearbox open, so I need to fill that.

I originally had the headers chrome but it lookd rubbish, so i painted them, again with gamesworkshop paints, dry brushing again. I was aiming to get them to look like they had just been fabricated. I need to touch up the block above them from when I pulled them of to strip the chrome. I also drilled the ends out. The carbs, linkage and fuel lines and the block were all painted with games-workshop paints, using washes, and drybrushint to add some detail. The rocker covers came from the parts box.

The body needed some attention around the cowl so I filled and block sanded it. After a coat of primer it still needs some work.

The chassis and wheels are in paint, wheels look ok, I'm gonna flat the chassis down onc its cured over 24hrs. 

The deadline for this build is March, and the English weather isn't helping lol as I can only spray outside :P

 

Raul Boesel Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant Felice Bonetto Jo Bonnier Roberto Bonomi


Blog EntryFeb 16, '12 7:52 AM
for everyone
Interesting things are happening at Blackbushe Aerodrome in England. The former WWII airbase is situated alongside the old main A30 road to the west of Camberley, not far to the north of Farnborough. This now houses a number of small aviation companies but is often used for filming movies, TV shows and advertising. The crew [...]

Elie Bayol Don Beauman Karl Gunther Bechem Jean Behra Derek Bell Stefan Bellof




Blog EntryFeb 16, '12 1:52 AM
for everyone

The Mercedes pit crew prepare for Michael Schumacher in Singapore © Getty Images
Away from the world of multi-million-pound car development laboratories and drivers whose small change takes care of the Monte Carlo harbour fees, another drama will play out in Singapore this week. The Independent's David Tremayne joins F1's unsung heroes.
These are not select millionaires but up to 16 ordinary, yet gifted, guys; team mechanics who have worked their way up the system and often migrate from team to team, are paid real-world wages of between £30,000 and £50,000 a year, are drilled to perfection – and whose split-second synchronisation brings their teams huge rewards.

Erwin Bauer Zsolt Baumgartner Elie Bayol Don Beauman Karl Gunther Bechem Jean Behra


The models on the shelf in hobby shops only keeps my attention for so long. Nothing wrong with 'um, I just like variety and scarcity when it "POPS" up. I've always got my eye out for something new when surfing the web. I found this accidently, and "snagged" it right away, on  a "Buy it now". Never seen it before, and may never see it again - Window of opportunity Thumbs Up.

Very nicely made with some nice chrome accents. Some of the body trim came painted, so BMF will come in real handy. Came as a "top down 'vert with a boot. but even before I bought it, I knew it would need an up-top. The top that I picked fits pretty close. Just needs a little "Massaging" at the rear, and she'll look just fine.

Found some new paints and colors, so I'm using plastic picnic spoons to see how the paint works, and how some of the colors look together. That's why the last pic.

Anyway this'll show up periodically as I work on it, between some home re-decorating and re-modeling Cool.

Just mocked up right now in some white primer. Original color wasn't too great. Will keep the wires and the whites. The wires were pretty plain, but a little "TLC" brought 'um to life.

Gerhard Berger Eric Bernard Enrique Bernoldi Enrico Bertaggia Tony Bettenhausen Mike Beuttler


Blog EntryFeb 15, '12 9:52 PM
for everyone

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - SunTrust Racing, the runner-up in last
year's Grand-Am championship, was knocked out of the Rolex 24 at
Daytona less than an hour into the twice-around-the-clock
event.

Skip Barber Paolo Barilla Rubens Barrichello Michael Bartels Edgar Barth Giorgio Bassi



Blog EntryFeb 15, '12 5:52 PM
for everyone
F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone has spoken of his belief that the 2012 Bahrain GP will go ahead as planned. Check out the gallery of Petra Ecclestone! Despite a return to violence in the area, Ecclestone believes that the race will take place on 22nd April 2012. He said: “I don’t think it’s anything serious at all. [...]

JeanChristophe Boullion Sebastien Bourdais Thierry Boutsen Johnny Boyd David Brabham Gary Brabham



Former World Champion Damon Hill has heaped the praise on former rival Michael Schumacher. Hill is full of admiration for the German, saying that he deserves incredible credit for still competing at the highest level of Formula 1. He said: “It’s unbelievable he’s still going, whilst I’ve been retired for 12 years.” “He’s an extraordinary [...]

Michael Bartels Edgar Barth Giorgio Bassi Erwin Bauer Zsolt Baumgartner Elie Bayol


Blog EntryFeb 15, '12 11:52 AM
for everyone

Hi there.  I've been trolling around, grabbing snippets of info here and there, reading some of the posts that interest me for awhile now.  Figured I might as well introduce myself.  My name is Lee, and I'm addicted to modeling.  Not he runway and high heels kind, the plastic car/truck/racer type. 

When I was a kid, I built cars box stock and was lucky if I painted them.  When I was 16-17, I started putting more detail into my builds.  The last model I remember building was a Testors 1:16th scale Lambo.  I wired the engine, painted it, put all kinds of detail into it.  That was just over 20 years ago. 

Here I am now, nearly 40 and have been back into the hobby for about 3 years now.  My wife was kind enough to allow me to take over one of the smaller rooms in the house to turn into my 'Man Cave", where I can retreat to after a stressful day at the office.  My first build, to get me back into things, was actually a sci-fi piece, a Mk-1 Colonial Viper from Battlestar Galactica.  That hooked me.  I then completed an AMT '57 Stepside pickup that was donated to a very good friend of mine, Kevin, who was the one I blame for getting me back into the hobby.  Although it was the first car/truck I built in nearly 2 decades, I decided to chop the front and make it a flip nose.  Turned out pretty good.  My current project is a Revell '70 Ford Torino.  Aside from wiring the engine and making new front springs/shocks for it, it is pretty much box stock.

My future builds include the MPC 1:16th General Lee, which appears to be a challenge given some of the body modifications and inaccurate/left out details (Back seat anyone?), and I'm going to try my hand at a Funny Car.  I have a small collection of kits and hope to be acquiring even more.

Drop me a line, say hi, or feel free to strike up a conversation.  I'm always open to chatting.  Now.. Where did that hobby knife get to?

 

Eric Bernard Enrique Bernoldi Enrico Bertaggia Tony Bettenhausen Mike Beuttler Birabongse Bhanubandh


Blog EntryFeb 15, '12 9:52 AM
for everyone

Sebastian Vettel's second world championship title was as remarkable for its control as much as the blinding speed of the German and his Red Bull.

Vettel based his season on a strategy of taking pole position, blitzing the first two laps and from then on going only as fast as he needed to.

The plan generally worked to perfection - Vettel took 11 wins and 15 poles from 19 grands prix - but it left you wondering just how fast he and the Red Bull could have gone.

In Brazil, I asked him if, with the title already in the bag, he had ever been tempted to just go for it, to really push the car and himself to the absolute limits. He replied that he had done just that in Korea and India, the scenes of two of his most dominant wins. "We were able to explore and sometimes take a little bit more risk," Vettel told me.

Despite Vettel's domination in 2011, there were very few of the runaway wins normally seen when one car is superior to the rest. Quite often, the races looked competitive, with Vettel tantalisingly close to - but frustratingly just out of reach of - his leading rivals.

Vettel and team boss Christian Horner often insisted the Red Bull had less of an advantage over McLaren and Ferrari in 2011 than in 2010. Yet Vettel won only five races and recorded 10 poles in 2010 on his way to winning the championship for the first time.

Let's examine the two seasons in a little more detail.

In 2010, Vettel's advantage in qualifying over team-mate Mark Webber was only 0.053 seconds when averaged out over the season. In 2011, it was 0.414. Likewise, Vettel's average advantage over the fastest driver not in a Red Bull was 0.077secs in 2010. In 2011, it was 0.317. That is a massive percentage gain from year to year.

There are reasons why Webber was so far adrift of his team-mate. Unlike Vettel, he struggled with the new Pirelli tyres, which affected both his pace in qualifying and his tyre wear in races.

The Australian is also physically bigger than Vettel so was occasionally at a disadvantage with the car's weight distribution, which again impacted on both his pace and tyre wear.

Sebastian Vettel leads the field at the first corner of the Australian Grand Prix

Turn One, race one; Vettel already has a big lead as the rest squabble. The story of 2011. Photo: Getty

The DRS overtaking aid, which gave drivers within one second of a car in front a boost in straight-line speed, also influenced matters.

But it is the tyres which were key. Asked to produce ones that spiced up racing, Pirelli came up with rubber that wore out rapidly, forcing a greater number of pit stops and resulting in more unpredictable races.

It is also worth looking at Red Bull's race strategy in 2011. The team may have had a car whose aerodynamic superiority made it the fastest by far, but it lacked a little straight-line speed compared to the McLarens and Ferraris. On top of that, I understand Vettel thought some of his rivals were perhaps better at wheel-to-wheel racing.

As a result, Red Bull's strategy was based on Vettel taking pole position, then opening up enough of a gap by lap three to prevent anyone from being close enough to make use of the DRS system, which couldn't be used for the first two laps. After that, he would measure his pace to those behind, producing a super-fast lap or two if he needed to.

Such a strategy did have its risks. If Vettel found himself in the pack during a race, he would have problems overtaking as the car was set up for lap time not straight-line speed. In other words, an error in qualifying or at the start could mess up an entire race.

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Red Bull were caught out a couple of times, notably when Ferrari's Fernando Alonso rocketed to the front on the run down to the first corner in Spain and Italy.

In both cases, Vettel managed to get past again. In Spain, he did it by pit-stop strategy, although it took two attempts, while in Monza he achieved it a brave overtaking move around the outside of the flat-out Curva Grande.

Had it been a McLaren that passed Vettel - a car that was faster than the Ferrari over the lap and down the straights - he might have been sat behind for the entire race.

But team boss Horner was adamant the strategy that Red Bull employed was the right one. "As a team, you have to attack the events," he said. "If you are conservative, sometimes you can pay a penalty. If Vettel was in a situation where he needed a big overtake, yes, a gamble was taken. But it was a calculated risk."

So how dominant was the Red Bull, really?

It had a clear performance advantage in at least nine of the races, of which Vettel won eight - Australia, Turkey, Valencia, Belgium, Italy, Singapore, Korea and India. The other one was Brazil, where he hit trouble.

That leaves five races at which it was not possible to ascertain whether Vettel's was the fastest race car, although it almost certainly was in most of them. They were Malaysia and Monaco, which he won, and China, Canada and Abu Dhabi, which he did not. And the remaining five races where it definitely was not, out of which he won only in Spain.

The first obvious conclusion is that the Red Bull's pace advantage was restricted by the tyres. On many occasions, Vettel could have gone faster but chose not to because he was concerned about over-using the tyres.

At the same time, Red Bull insiders insist Vettel was not always in the fastest car. There were weekends, they say, when they did not think the car was quick enough yet Vettel still managed to put it on pole. Equally, there were times when Vettel was having to drive on the edge to break the DRS and to hold his advantage at the head of the field.

The Pirellis required something new of the driver - an exquisite feel for the limits of the tyres, the intelligence to drive measured races at exactly the pace the tyres and car could cope with and the consistency to do it at every race.

How many drivers could do that?

Jenson Button had a great season for McLaren, finishing second behind Vettel in the standings. The 2009 world champion treats his tyres delicately and, at his best, is as good as anyone. However, his form tends to fluctuate depending on outside circumstances, while he is not the best qualifier.

As for Hamilton, his speed and feel are at least equal to Vettel's but the 2008 world champion struggled in 2011, making too many errors and perhaps not fully grasping the demands of the new F1.

Then there is Alonso. The double world champion boasts speed, consistency, adaptability and mental strength. However, the Ferrari was nowhere near fast enough this year and it's rare that the Spaniard transcends the car's abilities in qualifying, although he nearly always does in races.

That is why, in 2011, Vettel was generally in a league of his own, even on the occasions when his car was not.

Jorge Daponte Anthony Davidson Jimmy Davies Colin Davis Jimmy Daywalt JeanDenis Deletraz


Blog EntryFeb 15, '12 7:52 AM
for everyone

Help!  I purchased a built-up 1/25 AMT 1932 Ford 5-window Coupe off of Ebay, and when it arrived, it was in worse shape than I expected.  I got most of the built-up cleanly torn apart, but my attempts to "save" the body ended poorly.  As you can see in the photo below, the driver's side door is damaged beyond repair.

So, does anyone have an old 1/25 AMT 1932 Ford 5-window Coupe body in their parts box, that they'd trade to me?  It only has to have a good driver's-side to it, as I can perform some surgery to cut a good driver's side and put it into my body. 

I have a fairly extensive parts box to trade from.  Thanks!

Ivan Capelli Piero Carini Duane Carter Eugenio Castellotti Johnny Cecotto Andrea de Cesaris





AVONDALE - Matt Kenseth had no idea his pole-winning run at Phoenix International Raceway could benefit his championship-contending teammate.

Mike Beuttler Birabongse Bhanubandh Lucien Bianchi Gino Bianco Hans Binder Clemente Biondetti