Long beach 1979 and nuerburg good w/ the lower powered touring cars the porsche 911 3.0 is fun on tight tracks as well as higher speed ones like magny cours and spa.
Old or new fuji speedway's good to get comfortable with the cars. bathurst, Suzuka. the long straightaways on tracks like Jiading, sepang give you a chance to rest a bit.
it's too bad that these improved physics can't be shared publically. i'm also looking for a more realistic F1 sim, but all the cars seem way too fast. i can easily beat RL world records w/ verious F1 mods. that could be because the tracks themselves arent modeled correctly (too much grip or modeled incorrectly)
Also, i'm still itching for the corvette 3.0 mod like itches for rocks
i would expect incredible levels of detail to be paying that much. but i guess a great deal of the price is for the 'service. I was hoping for incredible graphics, marbles, rain, dirt on track, pitting, rain, better damage than we've ever seen in a racing sim... at least all of the features of LFS and rFactor.
I've never played, so i dunno...I would've thought that at least pitting would be included.
lol, if jeff gordon endorses iRacing along w/ a few other drivers. maybe some cars from the Speed GT championships or Speed touring car championships those cars seem to have some great racing on the tracks already included in iRacing. After build my new pc, i'll definatly try out iRacing. paying 20 bucks just to try the game out is gonna suck...
i'm really looking forward to it, because i havent saved up enough money for my new pc and the retail wheel yet.
TBH, the force feedback is more enjoyable in rfactor in some ways than in LFS w/ this wheel. the ffb is more visceral and violent. while with LFS, everything feels a bit soft in comparison.