18Races.com

A sim racer's journey to the tracks of the 2008 Formula1 season

Personal Hotlap - Lime Rock Park - 0:54.536

Posted on January 29, 2008 15:21 by ScottDrake

I logged about 100 laps in a GT at Lime Rock Park today and it reminded me how much I like this track. For a sim racer who spends most of his time hotlapping and occasionally racing the AI, it's about the perfect track because it's short and challenging.

Mess up in corner one at LRP and it takes you about a minute to get around and start another lap. At most of the other tracks I run, it's more like two minutes. LRP is also perfect for some spectacular wrecks thanks to the elevation changes and little run-off area. I included a video of one below. What LRP is not as good for is racing. It's a very narrow track with very few passing zones.

LRP also got me to dig into the setup of the car. I think a lot of people spend too much time tinkering with car setups and not enough time in the seat behind the wheel learning to become a faster driver. Setups can take you so far, but only seat time will make you fast.

For LRP, I did change the gearing to improve acceleration at the expense of top-end speed, and put more grip in the car. That helped but probably not as much as just putting in some laps.

Overview

Wreck
(I run with damage off most of the time so I don't have to keep visiting the garage)

Personal Hotlap - Lime Rock Park

Posted on January 28, 2008 13:14 by ScottDrake

I've taken a break from sim racing for the last week or two but got inspired to jump in a GT after watching the 24 Hours of Daytona last weekend. This is the first time I've driven a Porsche in rFactor, but I'm revisiting one of my favorite tracks in Lime Rock Park. 

In the last couple of years, I've driven thousands of laps in formula cars, but less than 100 in GT or prototype cars so it is an adjustment. It's a nice change of pace so I think I'll play around with the Sports Car Challenge mod before jumping back into F1-track analysis early next month. I may post another hotlap or two before I'm done.

Found Video: Comparing rFactor to Real World

Posted on January 16, 2008 13:26 by ScottDrake

Everytime someone drops by my house and sees the steering wheel mounted to the side of my desk, they immediately want to drive. I always put them in a formula trainer with all helpers and it still takes them a while to just keep the car on the track.

I've driven formula trainers at Skip Barber Racing School and the trainers in rFactor are very similar. Obviously no simulator is going to match the real thing, but rFactor is very challenging and luckily is a lot less painful when you make mistakes.

Here are a couple of videos I stumbled upon. Each shows a side-by-side of an F1 car and an rFactor F1 car around a complete lap of a circuit. Not saying these guys are on par with Michael Schumacher, but the realism of at least these two tracks is fairly apparent. And just to note, I still don't drive the F1 cars in rFactor. Just too fast for my skill level.

Found Video: "rFactor(CTDP F1 Mod) Vs Real F1 - Monza Circuit"

 

Found Video: "Comparison ME vs. Michael Schumacher" at Imola

Personal Hotlap - 2:02.706 - Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain Grand Prix

Posted on January 11, 2008 17:05 by ScottDrake

This hotlap is from my third or fourth session at Bahrain. Still working out the line. Can't say I'm a huge fan of this track as the super-slow corners like 1, 8, and 10 leading onto a straight get kind of tedious. I like the 5-6-7 corridor and the braking zone through 9, but everything else in the first 10 turns could be better.

There are some corners at this track where you really need to practice looking as far ahead as possible. Coming out of turn 11, if I'm not looking way up into turn 12, I forget I have to keep turning. Same for turn 15. If I'm not looking way up the straight at least to the end of the curbing, I usually end up on the curbing because the corner goes around a bit farther than you might think.

Overhead View

In-car View

Found Video: "The best rFactor video you're likely to ever see"

Posted on January 11, 2008 11:04 by ScottDrake

Along with how-tos, I'll post some things I stumble upon. This is a video that is a great overview of the various mods available in rFactor. Very well done by a person who also knows how to name a clip.

First Impressions of Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain Grand Prix

Posted on January 9, 2008 10:34 by ScottDrake

Before I get into my analysis of this track, getting it downloaded and patched was a bit of work. I ended up using this download:

http://www.f1gaming.de/downloads/rfactor/strecken/CTDP_Bahrain_F1-2005_Track_for_rFactor.rar

Patch 1:
Out of the box, the track surface is very bad in places and causes violent shakes in certain corners. This patch will fix that for the most part.

http://trd3.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=47&Itemid=2

The site is in Spanish. An English translation is available through this link:

http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=es&u=http://trd3.net/index.php%3Foption%3Dcom_content%26task%3Dview%26id%3D47%26Itemid%3D2&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=1&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dhttp://trd3.net/index.php%253Foption%253Dcom_content%2526task%253Dview%2526id%253D47%2526Itemid%253D2%26hl%3Den%26rls%3DGGLJ,GGLJ:2006-41,GGLJ:en

This patch is installed by extracting the rar file and running the included executable.

Patch 2:
I also upgraded the cameras because the default spectator view didn't show much of the track because it was too tight on the car. The link for the upgraded cameras is available on the rFactorCentral.com page http://www.rfactorcentral.com/detail.cfm?ID=Bahrain%20International. It is the Bahrain Alternative Cameras by GTEvo link.

To install this, I extracted the rar file, and copied the file 1Shakir.cam to the C:\Program Files\rFactor\GameData\Locations\Bahrain\Shakir folder. Your install folder might be different. I then renamed the existing Shakir.cam file to Shakir_orig.com, and then renamed 1Shakir.com to Shakir.cam.

Fire up rFactor and you should see the track in the "CTDP F1 Tracks" folder.

On to the post ...

You really get the impression that this is a circuit plopped down in the middle of the desert. Like Sepang, it is a purpose-built track with lots of run-off area. It has some mild elevation changes that are placed in areas that making driving a challenge. The turn-in for corner 7 is very difficult to see due to elevation changes as is the braking point and entry for corner 9. Corner 13 is a high-speed uphill leading quickly into the braking zone for 14. The uphill is blind and landing on the wrong side of the track can really mess you up for entry into 14.

On first impression, you can almost break this track into two primary sectors. The first would include corners 1 through 10, the second corners 11 through 15.

The 1-10 sector looks more technical. It has three very tight right-handers, one of which funnels into a left-hander, a high-speed bus-stop-style section, and the long braking zone going into corner 10.

The 11-15 sector may be as technical due to elevation changes, but it is much faster with longer sweeping corners.

For timing, the sectors for this track are:

Sector 1: Corners 1, 2, 3, 4, ends at entry to corner 5
Sector 2: Corners 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, ends at Vodafone sign between 13 and 14
Sector 3: Corners 14, 15

Attached is a hotlap from the AI, as well as a screen shot of most corners.

AI Hotlap, In Car

AI Hotlap, Overview
Note: I had to use the tracking camera on this because the spectator camera that ships with the track does not show much of the track. I have since downloaded the updated spectator camera.

This lap was completed in 2:02.323 (122.323 seconds).

The gear, RPM, MPH, and time between corners are measured at the point the RPMs begin to increase when exiting a corner. The screen shots are also from the point of acceleration from the corner.

Let's take a look at a lap.

Corners 1, 2, and 3

Image 1: Corner 1 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain 
Grand Prix, Corner 1

Image 2: Corner 2 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain 
Grand Prix, Corner 2

Corner 1 is a tight right-hander leading quickly into corner 2 which is a mild left-hander. Corner 3 is a mild right-hander that is taken under full acceleration.

Corner 1: 1st gear, 3331 RPM, 21 MPH
10.400 seconds from start
23.856 seconds from corner 15
3.767 seconds to corner 2

Corner 2: 3rd gear, 4925 RPM, 65 MPH
14.167 seconds from start
3.767 seconds from corner 1
15.5 seconds to corner 4

Corner 4

Image 3: Corner 4 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain 
Grand Prix, Corner 4

Corner 4 is another tight right-hander.

2nd gear, 4735 RPM, 48 MPH
29.667 seconds from start
15.5 seconds from corner 2
9.3 seconds to corner 6

Corners 5, 6, and 7

Image 4: Corner 6 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain 
Grand Prix, Corner 6

Image 5: Corner 7 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain 
Grand Prix, Corner 7

Corner 5 is a quick left-hander that muddles the braking zone for corner 6. Corner 6 is a quick right-hander leading directly to corner 7 which is a quick left-hander. Almost looks like a high-speed bus stop.

Corner 5: braking

Corner 6: 4th gear, 5479 RPM, 91 MPH
38.967 seconds from start
9.3 seconds from corner 4
2.2 seconds to corner 7

Corner 7: 4th gear, 5851 RPM, 97 MPH
41.167 seconds from start
2.2 seconds from corner 6
7.066 seconds to corner 8

Corner 8

Image 6: Corner 5 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain 
Grand Prix, Corner 8

Corner 8 is another tight right-hander.

2nd gear, 4166 RPM, 45 MPH
48.233 seconds from start
7.066 seconds from corner 7
13.067 seconds to corner 10

Corners 9 and 10

Image 7: Corner 10 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, 
Bahrain Grand Prix, Corner 10

Corner 9 is a sweeping left-hander leading directly into corner 10 which is a tight left-hander.

Corner 9: appears to be a braking zone leading into corner 10.

Corner 10: 2nd gear, 3993 RPM, 41 MPH
61.3 seconds from start
13.067 seconds from corner 8
15.6 seconds to corner 11

Corners 11, 12, and 13

Image 8: Corner 11 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, 
Bahrain Grand Prix, Corner 11

Corner 11 is a moderate-speed left hander leading into a long corridor with corners 12 and 13. Corner 12 looks to be an acceleration zone while corner 13 may be more measured but acceleration appears to continue before landing at the top of a hill and into the braking zone for corner 14.

Corner 11: 3rd gear, 5383 RPM, 72 MPH
76.9 seconds from start
15.6 seconds from corner 10
15.5 seconds to corner 14

Corner 12: accelerating

Corner 13: accelerating

Corner 14

Image 9: Corner 14 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, 
Bahrain Grand Prix, Corner 14

Corner 14 is another fairly high-speed right-hander leading onto the second-longest straight on the track.

3rd gear, 4836 RPM, 62 MPH
92.4 seconds from start
15.5 seconds from corner 11
16.467 seconds to corner 15

Corner 15

Image 10: Corner 15 Midpoint
rFactor, Sim Racing, Bahrain International Circuit, 
Bahrain Grand Prix, Corner 15

Corner 15 is another right-hander and leads onto the front straight. A bit tighter than 14 but nowhere near as tight as 1, 4, or 8.

2nd gear, 5320 RPM, 57 MPH
108.867 seconds from start
16.467 seconds from corner 14
23.856 seconds to corner 1
13.456 seconds to start/finish line

Personal Hotlap - 2:05.611 - Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix

Posted on January 4, 2008 16:50 by ScottDrake

This hotlap is from my third session at Sepang. Getting better with the line and with braking at an appropriate time. Still working out the line. I've got some work to do on the back corridor including corners 5-8. Those are extremely important for fast lap times because they are high speed.

The other thing I'm discovering is the curbing at this track is rough. You can put two wheels on it with no problem, but don't drop a wheel off the other side on most corners or it will wreck you.

Still like this track.

Overhead View

In-car View

Personal Hotlap - 2:06.957 - Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix

Posted on January 3, 2008 12:48 by ScottDrake

This hotlap is from my second session at Sepang. I'm not dissatisfied with it, but it illustrates some classic mistakes that are hard habits to break. The primary mistake I'm making is focusing on entry speed instead of exit speed. In a lot of the corners, you will see me shoot past the racing line and the car I'm chasing start to pull away when exiting the corner. At this stage of my learning, I need to be focusing on the line and exit speed, not on how late I can brake.

But it's a start.

Overhead View

In-car View

First Impressions of Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix

Posted on January 3, 2008 10:26 by ScottDrake

I like this track. It's challenging in different ways than Albert Park. Being a purpose-built track, it's wider and generally has a lot more of a runoff area. It has a decent amount of vertical change which adds more challenge to finding the right balance of the car while driving. It has a lot of corners that are long, sweeping, and fast which you will find more challenging.

I don't like how the AI enters and exits the pit lane. On entry, it is in the racing line and then veers wildly to the pit lane crossing the outer lane of traffic. Not sure how it will react if another car is out there. On entry to the track, it again veers wildly back into the racing line. I have yet to be hit by one, but I have seen other AI cars get hit by one re-entering the track.

I drove about 60 laps today and rode along with the AI for another 20 or so. I've gotten up to speed pretty quickly on this track after my initial analysis. I'm still finding it hard to put together complete laps, but I feel like I'm further along after this many laps than I was with Albert Park.

Attached is a hotlap from the AI, as well as a screen shot of each corner.

AI Hotlap, In Car

AI Hotlap, Overview

This lap was completed in 2:04.709 (124.163 seconds).

The gear, RPM, MPH, and time between corners are measured at the point the RPMs begin to increase when exiting a corner. The screen shots are also from the point of acceleration from the corner.

Let’s take a look at a lap.

Corner 1

Corner 1 is a tight hairpin leading quickly into a left-hander.

2nd gear, 4679 RPM, 47 MPH
13.667 seconds from start
22.163 seconds from corner 15
5.396 seconds to corner 2

Image 1: Corner 1 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 1

Corner 2

Corner 2 is a slightly downhill left-hander immediately after the turn 1 hairpin.

2nd gear, 4333 RPM, 43 MPH
18.733 seconds from start
5.066 seconds from corner 1
17.767 seconds to corner 4

Image 2: Corner 2 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 2

Corner 3

Corner 3 is a sweeping right-hander that is taken full out.

Corner 4

Corner 4 is an uphill right hander.

3rd gear, 4604 RPM, 60 MPH
36.500 seconds from start
17.767 seconds from turn 2
9.8 seconds to turn 5

Image 3: Corner 4 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 4

Corner 5

Corner 5 is the first of two high-speed corners along this corridor.

5th gear, 5525 RPM, 109 MPH
46.300 seconds from start
9.8 seconds from turn 4
4 seconds to turn 6

Image 4: Corner 5 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 5

Corner 6

5th gear, 5488 RPM, 107 MPH
50.300 seconds from start
4 seconds from turn 5
7.5 seconds to turn 7

Image 5: Corner 6 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 6

Corners 7 and 8

Corner 7 is a flat, fairly high-speed right hander that leads almost immediately into the Corner 8 which is also a right-hander.

Corner 7: 4th gear, 5645 RPM, 93 MPH
57.800 seconds from start
7.5 seconds from turn 6
12.867 seconds to turn 9

Corner 8: 4th gear, measured acceleration

Image 6: Corner 7 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 7

Corner 9

Corner 9 is one of the bigger breaking zones outside of the hairpins. It is a tight, uphill, left-hander.

2nd gear, 4438 RPM, 45 MPH
70.667 seconds from start
12.867 seconds from turn 7
9.033 seconds to turn 11

Image 7: Corner 9 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 9

Corner 10

Corner 10 is a right-hander that trickles into corner 11.

Corner 11

Corner 11 is a fairly high-speed right-hander that falls away and leads to a short downhill shoot.

3rd gear, 5349 RPM, 70 MPH
79.700 seconds from start
9.033 seconds from turn 9
8.267 seconds to turn 12

Image 8: Corner 11 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 11

Corner 12

Quick left-hander.

5th gear, 5728 RPM, 113 MPH
87.967 seconds from start
8.267 seconds from turn 11
7.133 seconds to turn 14

Image 9: Corner 12 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 12

Corners 13 and 14

Continue acceleration from corner 12 into corner 13 before beginning braking for corner 14. Corner 14 is a long sweeping right-hander that is at least two corners built into one. It falls away and seems to go on forever before opening up to one of the two straight-aways enclosing the main grandstands.

Corner 14: 3rd gear, 4535 RPM, 59 MPH
95.100 seconds from start
7.133 seconds from turn 12
20.783 seconds to turn 15

Image 10: Corner 14 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 14

Corner 15

Corner 15 is the second hairpin and leads back onto the front straightaway.

2nd gear, 4908 RPM, 50 MPH
115.833 seconds from start
20.783 seconds from turn 14
22.163 seconds to turn 1

Image 11: Corner 15 Midpoint

rFactor, Sepang International Circuit, Malaysian Grand Prix, Corner 15

Personal Hotlap 1:54:926 - Albert Park Grand Prix Circuit, Australian Grand Prix

Posted on December 2, 2007 23:05 by ScottDrake

This is probably my final hotlap for a while at Melbourne as I'm ready to move onto the next track. My goal all along was to break 1:55 and I did it with this 1:54:926. There's probably another second or two on the track if I can put all the corners together. Sometime in the future, I'll revisit this track.

Future tracks will likely have more personal hotlaps posted. I was working on this track for a couple of weeks before I decided to start this blog. It's taken me a couple of weeks to get the site to this point. In the future, I'll be posting more about the tracks as I learn them, not after my analysis is complete.

Overhead View

In-car View