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#1
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
Well, maybe. This is *me* we're talking about. ;-)
Despite all my whining I've driven about five races on my night off. The first three were the usual mixed bag of distinctly average experiences... a few moments of tension at the start, then a steady trail of hotlaps with the occasional spinner or lapper to liven things up a little. The Skippy keeps you involved enough in your lapping not to make it too boring though, which is probably why it's easy to get sucked into 'just one more race' when the next one comes around. It beats doing the ironing anyway. The fourth race was a farce. My video locked up twice in warmup for a few seconds, resulting in a crash. I quit and came back, but it happened again in the race despite ripping the side off my case and aiming a fan inside. I don't think that video freeze hurt anyone but myself, but it hurt my SR nastily. I quit & rebooted, then remembered I could rejoin. Tried again and this time, 3 laps down, I was able to finish without further problems. I think, in retrospect, this video freeze might have been caused by Intel's CPU temp monitoring utility which I'd had loaded to keep a record of temps during racing. It was the only unusual thing running on my PC at the time. Anyway, that was a fairly low point in the day. But another hour passed and another race lures me in. Somehow the fact that there's only one every two hours can make it harder to resist than if you had VROC-style choice of quitting one and joining another straight away. You have a cooling-off period after a race, and just enough time before the next to have a drink and forget the bad bits. Ok, so 26 drivers register and iRacing splits us nicely into two races of 13 drivers (maximum is 14). Things got off to a bad start. An Aussie (that time of day is littered with the whingeing, gold-phobic barstewards! ;-) leaves the pits just behind me, and is obviously faster... or at least less fearless than me. I pull over politely to let him past after a few turns. He follows me and I collect a x4 penalty for my manners. Fortunately warmup SR penalties don't count too heavily, and he did at least apologise. I'll live, but it already feels like another of 'those' iRaces. On the grid there's only one driver behind me, just the way I like it. The air is full of G'days & G'lucks & polite European silence. Then we're off, and the guy from behind me is having none of this, "you can't win a race at the first bend" stuff. He's 3-wide and weaving all the way down to T1. And yet everyone survives, thanks mainly to the average driver being a lot more cautious. Before long though there's an incident. I pass a car pointing the wrong way, another going sideways, another pulled to one side behaving -- it seems to me anyway -- a bit sheepishly. I pass them all cleanly, following fairly closely behind another driver. For once I'm hanging onto the guy in front, and forget about the racers I've passed. But within a lap or two my mirror is suddenly full of cars. They're closing fast, but not so fast I need to pull over yet... after all, we're just entering the twisty bit of the track where passing would be suicidal unless I make an obvious mistake. Wrong! I'm lined up nicely for the turn and before I can react, one driver's gone round the outside of me, out-braking me by about a light-year. I slow to prevent an incident, and another driver passes me on the inside, showing total fearlessness. I somehow hold it together, and try to relax again as my heart pounds. But the third driver from the group I'd passed is now in my mirror. Sod this, I pull well over and let him squirrel off after his mates. Well, that was certainly exciting, but it was the wrong kind of excitement. I'm used to a calmer, more conservative type of racing back among those who're less certain of their talent. I suppose it's a compliment of sorts though that they thought I could be taken so predictably. On with the race. Plenty of time to calm down and get into my slow, steady little groove of 1:26es. But now I'm slowly getting closer to the guy in front. We'll call him Alain because, well, because that was his name. Not an Aussie name, and certainly not an Aussie driver. Slower, steady, and lapping about 1s a lap slower than myself. Looks like I've finally -- after gawd knows how many races! -- got a fairly evenly matched opponent. And I was right. For seven *glorious* laps I followed him around Summit Point. There were sections of the track where I could get very close, but they weren't sections where passing was safe for both of us, and I'd get no satisfaction whatsoever from pushing hard and causing someone to have an off. There's no money, trophies or scantily clad women riding on this, just a few lousy iRating points. So I back off where I'm not sure about his braking, and I lean hard where he shows confidence. It is both exciting and rewarding, even though he's slowing me down by about 2s a lap now. But what does that matter? Nearly everyone else is way off in the distance. So coming into the final bend of our seventh lap together I think I've finally got the measure of my opponent. I back off just enough to give him space, yet come out of the turn just behind him. That'll give me the whole straight to slipstream him and out-brake him -- as I know I can -- into T1. But what's this? Nooooooo! You can't over-cook it... please don't lose it... not now! Sadly Alain had pushed a little too hard. Maybe he could smell my anglo-saxon gameplan from across le Channel? Maybe his cat jumped on his monitor? Or maybe he just lost it the way we all do... by simply being human. I contemplate slowing to let him catch up, but that can seem a little insulting, and besides, there's someone else coming up fast now, and we'll be racing for position. I may not be the most competeitive person on the track, but I try not to be too much of an easy target. The rest of the race was fairly uneventful, but I was basking in the warm glow of the best seven laps of racing I've had... well, since about 1999 when I nearly had a heart attack from some very exciting and very close racing in GPL at Monza... I had to quit that race because my hands were shaking from the adrenalin rush. :-) The best part was finding out afterwards that Alain had also enjoyed our encounter, describing me as a 'very fair' racer. Now to some that's probably a huge insult. Who wants to be fair, this is racing, not knitting! But to me it was a huge compliment, and I came --> ..<-- this close to renewing my subscription straight away after that race. If I do so in the next week it won't be because I love iRacing and its many, many flaws. It'll be because despite those flaws, iRacing has reminded me why I still have a wheel attached to the gaming end of my desk, even though it's years since I've used it regularly. Maybe, just maybe, that is enough to justify the ongoing cost and the many frustrations iRacing in its current form has to offer. Andrew McP... boring rec.autos.simulators for well over a decade! |
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#2
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
Andrew,
I have a little utility that will do the temp monitoring for you without any installation to your system to possibly screw it up. PM me in iRacing and I'll get you a link to it. I'm not at my racing machine right now... -Larry "Andrew MacPherson" > wrote in message ddress_disguised... > Well, maybe. This is *me* we're talking about. ;-) > > Despite all my whining I've driven about five races on my night off. The > first three were the usual mixed bag of distinctly average experiences... > a few moments of tension at the start, then a steady trail of hotlaps > with the occasional spinner or lapper to liven things up a little. The > Skippy keeps you involved enough in your lapping not to make it too > boring though, which is probably why it's easy to get sucked into 'just > one more race' when the next one comes around. > > It beats doing the ironing anyway. > > The fourth race was a farce. My video locked up twice in warmup for a few > seconds, resulting in a crash. I quit and came back, but it happened > again in the race despite ripping the side off my case and aiming a fan > inside. I don't think that video freeze hurt anyone but myself, but it > hurt my SR nastily. I quit & rebooted, then remembered I could rejoin. > Tried again and this time, 3 laps down, I was able to finish without > further problems. > > I think, in retrospect, this video freeze might have been caused by > Intel's CPU temp monitoring utility which I'd had loaded to keep a record > of temps during racing. It was the only unusual thing running on my PC at > the time. > > Anyway, that was a fairly low point in the day. But another hour passed > and another race lures me in. Somehow the fact that there's only one > every two hours can make it harder to resist than if you had VROC-style > choice of quitting one and joining another straight away. You have a > cooling-off period after a race, and just enough time before the next to > have a drink and forget the bad bits. > > Ok, so 26 drivers register and iRacing splits us nicely into two races of > 13 drivers (maximum is 14). > > Things got off to a bad start. An Aussie (that time of day is littered > with the whingeing, gold-phobic barstewards! ;-) leaves the pits just > behind me, and is obviously faster... or at least less fearless than me. > I pull over politely to let him past after a few turns. He follows me and > I collect a x4 penalty for my manners. > > Fortunately warmup SR penalties don't count too heavily, and he did at > least apologise. I'll live, but it already feels like another of 'those' > iRaces. > > On the grid there's only one driver behind me, just the way I like it. > The air is full of G'days & G'lucks & polite European silence. Then we're > off, and the guy from behind me is having none of this, "you can't win a > race at the first bend" stuff. He's 3-wide and weaving all the way down > to T1. And yet everyone survives, thanks mainly to the average driver > being a lot more cautious. > > Before long though there's an incident. I pass a car pointing the wrong > way, another going sideways, another pulled to one side behaving -- it > seems to me anyway -- a bit sheepishly. I pass them all cleanly, > following fairly closely behind another driver. > > For once I'm hanging onto the guy in front, and forget about the racers > I've passed. But within a lap or two my mirror is suddenly full of cars. > They're closing fast, but not so fast I need to pull over yet... after > all, we're just entering the twisty bit of the track where passing would > be suicidal unless I make an obvious mistake. > > Wrong! I'm lined up nicely for the turn and before I can react, one > driver's gone round the outside of me, out-braking me by about a > light-year. I slow to prevent an incident, and another driver passes me > on the inside, showing total fearlessness. I somehow hold it together, > and try to relax again as my heart pounds. > > But the third driver from the group I'd passed is now in my mirror. Sod > this, I pull well over and let him squirrel off after his mates. > > Well, that was certainly exciting, but it was the wrong kind of > excitement. I'm used to a calmer, more conservative type of racing back > among those who're less certain of their talent. I suppose it's a > compliment of sorts though that they thought I could be taken so > predictably. > > On with the race. Plenty of time to calm down and get into my slow, > steady little groove of 1:26es. But now I'm slowly getting closer to the > guy in front. We'll call him Alain because, well, because that was his > name. Not an Aussie name, and certainly not an Aussie driver. Slower, > steady, and lapping about 1s a lap slower than myself. > > Looks like I've finally -- after gawd knows how many races! -- got a > fairly evenly matched opponent. And I was right. > > For seven *glorious* laps I followed him around Summit Point. There were > sections of the track where I could get very close, but they weren't > sections where passing was safe for both of us, and I'd get no > satisfaction whatsoever from pushing hard and causing someone to have an > off. There's no money, trophies or scantily clad women riding on this, > just a few lousy iRating points. So I back off where I'm not sure about > his braking, and I lean hard where he shows confidence. It is both > exciting and rewarding, even though he's slowing me down by about 2s a > lap now. > > But what does that matter? Nearly everyone else is way off in the > distance. So coming into the final bend of our seventh lap together I > think I've finally got the measure of my opponent. I back off just enough > to give him space, yet come out of the turn just behind him. That'll give > me the whole straight to slipstream him and out-brake him -- as I know I > can -- into T1. > > But what's this? Nooooooo! You can't over-cook it... please don't lose > it... not now! > > Sadly Alain had pushed a little too hard. Maybe he could smell my > anglo-saxon gameplan from across le Channel? Maybe his cat jumped on his > monitor? Or maybe he just lost it the way we all do... by simply being > human. > > I contemplate slowing to let him catch up, but that can seem a little > insulting, and besides, there's someone else coming up fast now, and > we'll be racing for position. I may not be the most competeitive person > on the track, but I try not to be too much of an easy target. > > The rest of the race was fairly uneventful, but I was basking in the warm > glow of the best seven laps of racing I've had... well, since about 1999 > when I nearly had a heart attack from some very exciting and very close > racing in GPL at Monza... I had to quit that race because my hands were > shaking from the adrenalin rush. :-) > > The best part was finding out afterwards that Alain had also enjoyed our > encounter, describing me as a 'very fair' racer. > > Now to some that's probably a huge insult. Who wants to be fair, this is > racing, not knitting! But to me it was a huge compliment, and I came --> > .<-- this close to renewing my subscription straight away after that > race. > > If I do so in the next week it won't be because I love iRacing and its > many, many flaws. It'll be because despite those flaws, iRacing has > reminded me why I still have a wheel attached to the gaming end of my > desk, even though it's years since I've used it regularly. > > Maybe, just maybe, that is enough to justify the ongoing cost and the > many frustrations iRacing in its current form has to offer. > > Andrew McP... boring rec.autos.simulators for well over a decade! |
#3
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
Andrew,
I love Iracing, I signed up for a year, I was on the bunch of 1st invitees... Ok, I loved it, (*LOVED*) past tense well sorta, I still like it. Right now it is like that last soon to "ex" relations hip kind of feeling, or Love and hate relationship. But so much like you I feel more that I have good races and more bad. BUT I'm finding certain nights, the races go with several racers seem to have the mindset, lets race, hard but clean and understand the CONCEPTS of RACING which in real life means without being killed, hopefully. That part is hard to impart into a sim... But some nights there are those Terrorists I call them, the ones just fast enough <for a lap or 2> to cause a crap load of angst when you race them, bullying into turn one then off the track mid corner.... But right now my 2nd biggest thing is the people that must be shutting off mirrors, and not glancing at the F3 Screen, not even once in a while, and shut off the voice communications. I'm talking about Oval racing, were I'm am not usually the lapper, but I see this as well in roads... Being a pay to race service, I find it hard to not get pretty opinionated about the following: lappers that wont make an effort to hold a line, and to let themselves be lapped. You mention the "pull over" mentality, and I applaud it, but it does bring to My mind how I think that guy felt, that followed you when you "pulled over" to stop/slow out of the way, and "plowed into you"... Here's how I have seen or done it. I'm following you or say someone like you, lets say, since I am sure I haven't actually raced you yet... I'm coming up on you and decide I can move over, and pass you soon, if I do this and this... So, I think about it, then just as I set off to do it, you pull over and stop/slow down. Whoa! To me, just keep yer line, and pace, and we can get along fine. I suspect others think so as well. Now that was just my thoughts, hoping that it might enlighten you on the "overtaking car's" thoughts in that situation, sometimes. Well if I haven't made you mad... here is what has me so mad some nights that I wish I could get my money back (lol).. PS: and yeah in real life when dipwads do this type of crap, unless they are independently wealthy or drive for like some nascar team, they get time to reflect on their actions while spending the rest of the night rebuilding the car, if not the next week, or heaven forbid after they exit the hospital. This week, one night, I had 3 races that I ran ahead of 2nd place by over 2 seconds, in legends (both advanced and rookie versions) and in each, I got wrecked by some azzclown that was given 3 laps (since I had time between 2nd I tried to wait...) 2 times I get wiped out people who cant just do 2 things.... 1 slow up so they can control his/her own destiny, and stay in the lane they are in. Be predictable, that is being courteous. trust me losing 1 to .5 seconds for one lap is less miserable (on 15-17 second lap sized tracks even) than being wrecked. 2, when the clown spins, they seem to think EVERYONE else needs to stop, while that car gets to violently turn itself around, ACROSS all 3 lanes of traffic plus the aprons, in front of the lead pack or even just fellow competitors 2A, OR THE WORST OFFENDERS, they spin but refuse to HOLD the brakes tight, giving them that spin plus moving target (like a misdirection play). No, we get the spinout that you have to dodge, PLUS they back the car across all lanes of traffic. HEY NOW, It isn't that they got knocked out by the impact, nor has the game simulated brake failure, !!!!nope it is BLATANT DipSh*tty-ness!!!! I can usually handle dodging a single car spin, at least not be "****ed as all get out" at that person, if I don't manage to miss them and get taken out of a race, even while leading, that IS, when the car that spun does the right thing! they SIT FR#KING STILL as possible. IMHO I'm one of those people that hate "restrictions" on things but Gawd Darn it. there are night that im seriously considering evangelizing that there needs to be a day of training or something for too many, followed by some test, oral or written.... before they are allowed to race... Ah, nice to vent a little.... Plowboy "Andrew MacPherson" > wrote in message ddress_disguised... > Well, maybe. This is *me* we're talking about. ;-) > > Despite all my whining I've driven about five races on my night off. The > first three were the usual mixed bag of distinctly average experiences... > a few moments of tension at the start, then a steady trail of hotlaps > with the occasional spinner or lapper to liven things up a little. The > Skippy keeps you involved enough in your lapping not to make it too > boring though, which is probably why it's easy to get sucked into 'just > one more race' when the next one comes around. > > It beats doing the ironing anyway. > > The fourth race was a farce. My video locked up twice in warmup for a few > seconds, resulting in a crash. I quit and came back, but it happened > again in the race despite ripping the side off my case and aiming a fan > inside. I don't think that video freeze hurt anyone but myself, but it > hurt my SR nastily. I quit & rebooted, then remembered I could rejoin. > Tried again and this time, 3 laps down, I was able to finish without > further problems. > > I think, in retrospect, this video freeze might have been caused by > Intel's CPU temp monitoring utility which I'd had loaded to keep a record > of temps during racing. It was the only unusual thing running on my PC at > the time. > > Anyway, that was a fairly low point in the day. But another hour passed > and another race lures me in. Somehow the fact that there's only one > every two hours can make it harder to resist than if you had VROC-style > choice of quitting one and joining another straight away. You have a > cooling-off period after a race, and just enough time before the next to > have a drink and forget the bad bits. > > Ok, so 26 drivers register and iRacing splits us nicely into two races of > 13 drivers (maximum is 14). > > Things got off to a bad start. An Aussie (that time of day is littered > with the whingeing, gold-phobic barstewards! ;-) leaves the pits just > behind me, and is obviously faster... or at least less fearless than me. > I pull over politely to let him past after a few turns. He follows me and > I collect a x4 penalty for my manners. > > Fortunately warmup SR penalties don't count too heavily, and he did at > least apologise. I'll live, but it already feels like another of 'those' > iRaces. > > On the grid there's only one driver behind me, just the way I like it. > The air is full of G'days & G'lucks & polite European silence. Then we're > off, and the guy from behind me is having none of this, "you can't win a > race at the first bend" stuff. He's 3-wide and weaving all the way down > to T1. And yet everyone survives, thanks mainly to the average driver > being a lot more cautious. > > Before long though there's an incident. I pass a car pointing the wrong > way, another going sideways, another pulled to one side behaving -- it > seems to me anyway -- a bit sheepishly. I pass them all cleanly, > following fairly closely behind another driver. > > For once I'm hanging onto the guy in front, and forget about the racers > I've passed. But within a lap or two my mirror is suddenly full of cars. > They're closing fast, but not so fast I need to pull over yet... after > all, we're just entering the twisty bit of the track where passing would > be suicidal unless I make an obvious mistake. > > Wrong! I'm lined up nicely for the turn and before I can react, one > driver's gone round the outside of me, out-braking me by about a > light-year. I slow to prevent an incident, and another driver passes me > on the inside, showing total fearlessness. I somehow hold it together, > and try to relax again as my heart pounds. > > But the third driver from the group I'd passed is now in my mirror. Sod > this, I pull well over and let him squirrel off after his mates. > > Well, that was certainly exciting, but it was the wrong kind of > excitement. I'm used to a calmer, more conservative type of racing back > among those who're less certain of their talent. I suppose it's a > compliment of sorts though that they thought I could be taken so > predictably. > > On with the race. Plenty of time to calm down and get into my slow, > steady little groove of 1:26es. But now I'm slowly getting closer to the > guy in front. We'll call him Alain because, well, because that was his > name. Not an Aussie name, and certainly not an Aussie driver. Slower, > steady, and lapping about 1s a lap slower than myself. > > Looks like I've finally -- after gawd knows how many races! -- got a > fairly evenly matched opponent. And I was right. > > For seven *glorious* laps I followed him around Summit Point. There were > sections of the track where I could get very close, but they weren't > sections where passing was safe for both of us, and I'd get no > satisfaction whatsoever from pushing hard and causing someone to have an > off. There's no money, trophies or scantily clad women riding on this, > just a few lousy iRating points. So I back off where I'm not sure about > his braking, and I lean hard where he shows confidence. It is both > exciting and rewarding, even though he's slowing me down by about 2s a > lap now. > > But what does that matter? Nearly everyone else is way off in the > distance. So coming into the final bend of our seventh lap together I > think I've finally got the measure of my opponent. I back off just enough > to give him space, yet come out of the turn just behind him. That'll give > me the whole straight to slipstream him and out-brake him -- as I know I > can -- into T1. > > But what's this? Nooooooo! You can't over-cook it... please don't lose > it... not now! > > Sadly Alain had pushed a little too hard. Maybe he could smell my > anglo-saxon gameplan from across le Channel? Maybe his cat jumped on his > monitor? Or maybe he just lost it the way we all do... by simply being > human. > > I contemplate slowing to let him catch up, but that can seem a little > insulting, and besides, there's someone else coming up fast now, and > we'll be racing for position. I may not be the most competeitive person > on the track, but I try not to be too much of an easy target. > > The rest of the race was fairly uneventful, but I was basking in the warm > glow of the best seven laps of racing I've had... well, since about 1999 > when I nearly had a heart attack from some very exciting and very close > racing in GPL at Monza... I had to quit that race because my hands were > shaking from the adrenalin rush. :-) > > The best part was finding out afterwards that Alain had also enjoyed our > encounter, describing me as a 'very fair' racer. > > Now to some that's probably a huge insult. Who wants to be fair, this is > racing, not knitting! But to me it was a huge compliment, and I came --> > .<-- this close to renewing my subscription straight away after that > race. > > If I do so in the next week it won't be because I love iRacing and its > many, many flaws. It'll be because despite those flaws, iRacing has > reminded me why I still have a wheel attached to the gaming end of my > desk, even though it's years since I've used it regularly. > > Maybe, just maybe, that is enough to justify the ongoing cost and the > many frustrations iRacing in its current form has to offer. > > Andrew McP... boring rec.autos.simulators for well over a decade! |
#4
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
I've only had two real issues in RC's, one of which you mention. It doesn't
happen often, but it IS frustrating when it does. For me Road America was the worst for this. 1. Passing slower cars. I don't hold up fast drivers. I let them by. I hold my line on the left (for right-handers) so they can move inside and pass, just like it should be. But there are some fast drivers that don't know how to pass at all. They should expect the slower driver to stay left (in this example), because it's the proper thing to do, and they should move to the right lane and do the pass. What I'm seeing is some of the fast guys driving deep into the same line as the slower driver, braking way later (part of the skill thing), and ramming the slower driver in the rear. It just doesn't make sense. To me this is bullying and it really ****es me off. You don't have to bully me to pass me. If you are faster, I AM going to let you by. If it's the last 1/2 lap and it's for position, I may make you work a bit harder. If I'm a lap down to the car behind, it doesn't matter so I still let them by easily. I make myself an easy pass, you don't need to force the issue 2. The track re-entry thing. It is the still-on-track drivers responsibility to be alert and deal with this as best possible. It is the off-track drivers responsiblity to re-enter the track without placing the on-track cars in harms way. No more to be said here. I got a healthy dose of both, (two of each) in my RA race and I was not amused. Luckily I have only seen this happen once (this badly) so far. I think I ended up in a server full of aliens and I was way out of my league on this one. That does not change the basic facts about courteous passing/re-entry. -Larry "PlowBoy," > wrote in message ... > Andrew, > > I love Iracing, I signed up for a year, I was on the bunch of 1st > invitees... Ok, I loved it, (*LOVED*) past tense well sorta, I still like > it. Right now it is like that last soon to "ex" relations hip kind of > feeling, or Love and hate relationship. But so much like you I feel more > that I have good races and more bad. BUT I'm finding certain nights, the > races go with several racers seem to have the mindset, lets race, hard but > clean and understand the CONCEPTS of RACING which in real life means > without being killed, hopefully. That part is hard to impart into a > sim... > > But some nights there are those Terrorists I call them, the ones just fast > enough <for a lap or 2> to cause a crap load of angst when you race them, > bullying into turn one then off the track mid corner.... But right now my > 2nd biggest thing is the people that must be shutting off mirrors, and not > glancing at the F3 Screen, not even once in a while, and shut off the > voice communications. I'm talking about Oval racing, were I'm am not > usually the lapper, but I see this as well in roads... Being a pay to > race service, I find it hard to not get pretty opinionated about the > following: > > lappers that wont make an effort to hold a line, and to let themselves be > lapped. > > You mention the "pull over" mentality, and I applaud it, but it does bring > to My mind how I think that guy felt, that followed you when you "pulled > over" to stop/slow out of the way, and "plowed into you"... Here's how > I have seen or done it. I'm following you or say someone like you, lets > say, since I am sure I haven't actually raced you yet... I'm coming up on > you and decide I can move over, and pass you soon, if I do this and > this... So, I think about it, then just as I set off to do it, you pull > over and stop/slow down. Whoa! To me, just keep yer line, and pace, and > we can get along fine. I suspect others think so as well. > > Now that was just my thoughts, hoping that it might enlighten you on the > "overtaking car's" thoughts in that situation, sometimes. > > Well if I haven't made you mad... here is what has me so mad some nights > that I wish I could get my money back (lol).. PS: and yeah in real life > when dipwads do this type of crap, unless they are independently wealthy > or drive for like some nascar team, they get time to reflect on their > actions while spending the rest of the night rebuilding the car, if not > the next week, or heaven forbid after they exit the hospital. > > This week, one night, I had 3 races that I ran ahead of 2nd place by over > 2 seconds, in legends (both advanced and rookie versions) and in each, I > got wrecked by some azzclown that was given 3 laps (since I had time > between 2nd I tried to wait...) 2 times I get wiped out people who cant > just do 2 things.... > > 1 slow up so they can control his/her own destiny, and stay in the lane > they are in. Be predictable, that is being courteous. trust me losing 1 > to .5 seconds for one lap is less miserable (on 15-17 second lap sized > tracks even) than being wrecked. > > 2, when the clown spins, they seem to think EVERYONE else needs to stop, > while that car gets to violently turn itself around, ACROSS all 3 lanes of > traffic plus the aprons, in front of the lead pack or even just fellow > competitors > > 2A, OR THE WORST OFFENDERS, they spin but refuse to HOLD the brakes tight, > giving them that spin plus moving target (like a misdirection play). No, > we get the spinout that you have to dodge, PLUS they back the car across > all lanes of traffic. HEY NOW, It isn't that they got knocked out by the > impact, nor has the game simulated brake failure, !!!!nope it is BLATANT > DipSh*tty-ness!!!! > > I can usually handle dodging a single car spin, at least not be "****ed as > all get out" at that person, if I don't manage to miss them and get taken > out of a race, even while leading, that IS, when the car that spun does > the right thing! they SIT FR#KING STILL as possible. > > IMHO I'm one of those people that hate "restrictions" on things but Gawd > Darn it. there are night that im seriously considering evangelizing that > there needs to be a day of training or something for too many, followed by > some test, oral or written.... before they are allowed to race... > > Ah, nice to vent a little.... > > Plowboy > > > > > > "Andrew MacPherson" > wrote in message > ddress_disguised... >> Well, maybe. This is *me* we're talking about. ;-) >> >> Despite all my whining I've driven about five races on my night off. The >> first three were the usual mixed bag of distinctly average experiences... >> a few moments of tension at the start, then a steady trail of hotlaps >> with the occasional spinner or lapper to liven things up a little. The >> Skippy keeps you involved enough in your lapping not to make it too >> boring though, which is probably why it's easy to get sucked into 'just >> one more race' when the next one comes around. >> >> It beats doing the ironing anyway. >> >> The fourth race was a farce. My video locked up twice in warmup for a few >> seconds, resulting in a crash. I quit and came back, but it happened >> again in the race despite ripping the side off my case and aiming a fan >> inside. I don't think that video freeze hurt anyone but myself, but it >> hurt my SR nastily. I quit & rebooted, then remembered I could rejoin. >> Tried again and this time, 3 laps down, I was able to finish without >> further problems. >> >> I think, in retrospect, this video freeze might have been caused by >> Intel's CPU temp monitoring utility which I'd had loaded to keep a record >> of temps during racing. It was the only unusual thing running on my PC at >> the time. >> >> Anyway, that was a fairly low point in the day. But another hour passed >> and another race lures me in. Somehow the fact that there's only one >> every two hours can make it harder to resist than if you had VROC-style >> choice of quitting one and joining another straight away. You have a >> cooling-off period after a race, and just enough time before the next to >> have a drink and forget the bad bits. >> >> Ok, so 26 drivers register and iRacing splits us nicely into two races of >> 13 drivers (maximum is 14). >> >> Things got off to a bad start. An Aussie (that time of day is littered >> with the whingeing, gold-phobic barstewards! ;-) leaves the pits just >> behind me, and is obviously faster... or at least less fearless than me. >> I pull over politely to let him past after a few turns. He follows me and >> I collect a x4 penalty for my manners. >> >> Fortunately warmup SR penalties don't count too heavily, and he did at >> least apologise. I'll live, but it already feels like another of 'those' >> iRaces. >> >> On the grid there's only one driver behind me, just the way I like it. >> The air is full of G'days & G'lucks & polite European silence. Then we're >> off, and the guy from behind me is having none of this, "you can't win a >> race at the first bend" stuff. He's 3-wide and weaving all the way down >> to T1. And yet everyone survives, thanks mainly to the average driver >> being a lot more cautious. >> >> Before long though there's an incident. I pass a car pointing the wrong >> way, another going sideways, another pulled to one side behaving -- it >> seems to me anyway -- a bit sheepishly. I pass them all cleanly, >> following fairly closely behind another driver. >> >> For once I'm hanging onto the guy in front, and forget about the racers >> I've passed. But within a lap or two my mirror is suddenly full of cars. >> They're closing fast, but not so fast I need to pull over yet... after >> all, we're just entering the twisty bit of the track where passing would >> be suicidal unless I make an obvious mistake. >> >> Wrong! I'm lined up nicely for the turn and before I can react, one >> driver's gone round the outside of me, out-braking me by about a >> light-year. I slow to prevent an incident, and another driver passes me >> on the inside, showing total fearlessness. I somehow hold it together, >> and try to relax again as my heart pounds. >> >> But the third driver from the group I'd passed is now in my mirror. Sod >> this, I pull well over and let him squirrel off after his mates. >> >> Well, that was certainly exciting, but it was the wrong kind of >> excitement. I'm used to a calmer, more conservative type of racing back >> among those who're less certain of their talent. I suppose it's a >> compliment of sorts though that they thought I could be taken so >> predictably. >> >> On with the race. Plenty of time to calm down and get into my slow, >> steady little groove of 1:26es. But now I'm slowly getting closer to the >> guy in front. We'll call him Alain because, well, because that was his >> name. Not an Aussie name, and certainly not an Aussie driver. Slower, >> steady, and lapping about 1s a lap slower than myself. >> >> Looks like I've finally -- after gawd knows how many races! -- got a >> fairly evenly matched opponent. And I was right. >> >> For seven *glorious* laps I followed him around Summit Point. There were >> sections of the track where I could get very close, but they weren't >> sections where passing was safe for both of us, and I'd get no >> satisfaction whatsoever from pushing hard and causing someone to have an >> off. There's no money, trophies or scantily clad women riding on this, >> just a few lousy iRating points. So I back off where I'm not sure about >> his braking, and I lean hard where he shows confidence. It is both >> exciting and rewarding, even though he's slowing me down by about 2s a >> lap now. >> >> But what does that matter? Nearly everyone else is way off in the >> distance. So coming into the final bend of our seventh lap together I >> think I've finally got the measure of my opponent. I back off just enough >> to give him space, yet come out of the turn just behind him. That'll give >> me the whole straight to slipstream him and out-brake him -- as I know I >> can -- into T1. >> >> But what's this? Nooooooo! You can't over-cook it... please don't lose >> it... not now! >> >> Sadly Alain had pushed a little too hard. Maybe he could smell my >> anglo-saxon gameplan from across le Channel? Maybe his cat jumped on his >> monitor? Or maybe he just lost it the way we all do... by simply being >> human. >> >> I contemplate slowing to let him catch up, but that can seem a little >> insulting, and besides, there's someone else coming up fast now, and >> we'll be racing for position. I may not be the most competeitive person >> on the track, but I try not to be too much of an easy target. >> >> The rest of the race was fairly uneventful, but I was basking in the warm >> glow of the best seven laps of racing I've had... well, since about 1999 >> when I nearly had a heart attack from some very exciting and very close >> racing in GPL at Monza... I had to quit that race because my hands were >> shaking from the adrenalin rush. :-) >> >> The best part was finding out afterwards that Alain had also enjoyed our >> encounter, describing me as a 'very fair' racer. >> >> Now to some that's probably a huge insult. Who wants to be fair, this is >> racing, not knitting! But to me it was a huge compliment, and I came --> >> .<-- this close to renewing my subscription straight away after that >> race. >> >> If I do so in the next week it won't be because I love iRacing and its >> many, many flaws. It'll be because despite those flaws, iRacing has >> reminded me why I still have a wheel attached to the gaming end of my >> desk, even though it's years since I've used it regularly. >> >> Maybe, just maybe, that is enough to justify the ongoing cost and the >> many frustrations iRacing in its current form has to offer. >> >> Andrew McP... boring rec.autos.simulators for well over a decade! > > |
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
"PlowBoy," > wrote in message ... > Andrew, > > I love Iracing, I signed up for a year, I was on the bunch of 1st > invitees... Ok, I loved it, (*LOVED*) past tense well sorta, I still like > it. Right now it is like that last soon to "ex" relations hip kind of > feeling, or Love and hate relationship. But so much like you I feel more > that I have good races and more bad. BUT I'm finding certain nights, the > races go with several racers seem to have the mindset, lets race, hard but > clean and understand the CONCEPTS of RACING which in real life means > without being killed, hopefully. That part is hard to impart into a > sim... > > But some nights there are those Terrorists I call them, the ones just fast > enough <for a lap or 2> to cause a crap load of angst when you race them, > bullying into turn one then off the track mid corner.... But right now my > 2nd biggest thing is the people that must be shutting off mirrors, and not > glancing at the F3 Screen, not even once in a while, and shut off the > voice communications. I'm talking about Oval racing, were I'm am not > usually the lapper, but I see this as well in roads... Being a pay to > race service, I find it hard to not get pretty opinionated about the > following: > > lappers that wont make an effort to hold a line, and to let themselves be > lapped. > > You mention the "pull over" mentality, and I applaud it, but it does bring > to My mind how I think that guy felt, that followed you when you "pulled > over" to stop/slow out of the way, and "plowed into you"... Here's how > I have seen or done it. I'm following you or say someone like you, lets > say, since I am sure I haven't actually raced you yet... I'm coming up on > you and decide I can move over, and pass you soon, if I do this and > this... So, I think about it, then just as I set off to do it, you pull > over and stop/slow down. Whoa! To me, just keep yer line, and pace, and > we can get along fine. I suspect others think so as well. > > Now that was just my thoughts, hoping that it might enlighten you on the > "overtaking car's" thoughts in that situation, sometimes. > > Well if I haven't made you mad... here is what has me so mad some nights > that I wish I could get my money back (lol).. PS: and yeah in real life > when dipwads do this type of crap, unless they are independently wealthy > or drive for like some nascar team, they get time to reflect on their > actions while spending the rest of the night rebuilding the car, if not > the next week, or heaven forbid after they exit the hospital. > > This week, one night, I had 3 races that I ran ahead of 2nd place by over > 2 seconds, in legends (both advanced and rookie versions) and in each, I > got wrecked by some azzclown that was given 3 laps (since I had time > between 2nd I tried to wait...) 2 times I get wiped out people who cant > just do 2 things.... > > 1 slow up so they can control his/her own destiny, and stay in the lane > they are in. Be predictable, that is being courteous. trust me losing 1 > to .5 seconds for one lap is less miserable (on 15-17 second lap sized > tracks even) than being wrecked. > > 2, when the clown spins, they seem to think EVERYONE else needs to stop, > while that car gets to violently turn itself around, ACROSS all 3 lanes of > traffic plus the aprons, in front of the lead pack or even just fellow > competitors > > 2A, OR THE WORST OFFENDERS, they spin but refuse to HOLD the brakes tight, > giving them that spin plus moving target (like a misdirection play). No, > we get the spinout that you have to dodge, PLUS they back the car across > all lanes of traffic. HEY NOW, It isn't that they got knocked out by the > impact, nor has the game simulated brake failure, !!!!nope it is BLATANT > DipSh*tty-ness!!!! > > I can usually handle dodging a single car spin, at least not be "****ed as > all get out" at that person, if I don't manage to miss them and get taken > out of a race, even while leading, that IS, when the car that spun does > the right thing! they SIT FR#KING STILL as possible. > > IMHO I'm one of those people that hate "restrictions" on things but Gawd > Darn it. there are night that im seriously considering evangelizing that > there needs to be a day of training or something for too many, followed by > some test, oral or written.... before they are allowed to race... > > Ah, nice to vent a little.... > > Plowboy > > > When I first started I had a few incidents where I slowed and changed line and got hit from behind. Nowadays I just hold my line unless I have enough time to move over before the fast driver is anywhere near me. My current problem is bends, especially after a straight. Say its a right hander, I normally move over to the right of the track and slow down with plenty of time before the incoming drivers get near me. Unfortunately it is sometimes too much time and I get to the bend before they do, but on the inside. They normally hair in at light speed, dab their brakes then turn in, only to find me there. The resultant maneuvering normally causes them to spin off or go off the track. - At least this is what I think is happening. I not entirely sure whether its all my fault as most of the time the lead two cars get by me with no problem. It's normally the third that gets into problems. Obviously, it is not my intention to do this and if there is a safer way of letting the faster drivers by in this situation, I'd like to know it. I guess there is a reason why my car sports a big red stripe on the back RobP |
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
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iRacing: The race that changed my mind!
LOL
Me laughing! 0-0-0-0-0-0 "Andrew MacPherson" > wrote in message ddress_disguised... > lid (Maat) wrote: > >> You had to write a novel just to tell us that you kinda like >> iRacing? > > Some people go for long walks to digest their thoughts, or drink to > celebrate their happiness. I tent to write my thoughts down for complete > strangers to be bored to death by. > > I can only apologise when I get a 'little' carried away. It's easy enough > to ignore my posts though. :-) > > Andrew McP > |
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