Hello drivers,
First of all, I'd like to thank you all for coming to the test race. While it might not have been the full success we would have liked it to have been, it illustrated several very important lessons.
The odds against this race going smoothly were sort of stacked from the get-go. In addition to a LOT of new teams in general, we asked all teams to bring new and inexperienced drivers for a baptism-by-fire. Which is, I guess, what they got. Furthermore, Blackwood is a very tight and twisty track for big cars like these, which added to the potential for chaos.
Personally, I felt the start went very well. There was a bit too much of a gap between some segments of the field coming to the green, but on the whole it produced a very clean and incident-free first lap. The rest of the first half of the race was also quite good. Some incidents, but nothing too serious. It was the second half of the race (from the second SC period onward) where things really started to go off the rails.
==========================================
There's a saying that TV racing commentators like to use over here in the US: cautions (SCs) breed cautions. They bunch the field, cool/dirty people's tires, and generally put a lot of cars in close proximity to one another. But the truth is that cautions don't HAVE to breed cautions like we saw them do today. There are several things that you as drivers can do to reduce the number of SC periods--note that every one of the five SC periods thrown in this race was thrown as the result of some kind of driving error that contributed to a car landing on its roof.
1. Behavior AS the SC period begins.
When the "SC Deployed" message is displayed, you should immediately back off. This doesn't mean that you need to drop to SC speed... it just means that you shouldn't be riding the ragged edge as you are under green flag conditions. There is nothing to be gained since there is no passing under yellow. You should cruise around and use the minimap to locate the position of the SC and the pack following it and slow down well in advance. There's NO excuse for running over the back of the pack.
2. Behavior under the SC period.
There was far too much contact under the SC period during this race. If you are close enough to run over someone when they hit the brakes, you are TOO CLOSE. These are very long races, and a few meters lost while running under SC conditions are easily made up. Drivers need to avoid erratic acceleration and braking. You should pretty much never have your foot all the way to the floor once you've caught the queue.
Furthermore, for future races the use of weaving to heat the tires will be banned. We saw several accidents during SC periods in this race caused by excessive weaving. The truth is that this sort of behavior does very little to maintain tire temperature and in fact does more to cause problems (accidents). Which of course leads us to...
3. Behavior during the restart.
On a restart following a SC period your tires will be VERY COLD, especially since patch Y forced many of us to switch to R3 or R4 rubber. Very cold tires mean that you have to consciously drive slower than you normally would in order to maintain control. YOU CANNOT DRIVE ON COLD TIRES AS IF YOU WERE ON WARM TIRES. Any incidents that are blamed on cold tires should in fact be blamed on the driver who over-drove those cold tires.
Moreover, though a restart is a great time to make up positions, it's also one of the easiest times to cause an accident and ruin someone's race. There were a great deal of needless incidents in the chicane in this race due to drivers being overaggressive and overoptimistic on cold tires.
Adding to this is the fact that lapped cars are in the mix on restarts. Faster cars should be aware of this and tread carefully.
==========================================
There were several teams running somewhat awkward looking setups today. I saw at least one FXR running a R4/R2 combination, which led to some interesting drifting, damage, and finally a flip. There was also at least one FZR running R4s all around. Some of this may be inexperience and some may be poor judgment, but I suggest that everyone work very hard on their setups for the real race.
It is not the admins' place to regulate setups, but please bear in mind that bringing a bad/unstable setup to a race can hurt other people's races too, not just your own.
One final issue is that of driving with damage. At several points during this race we had to ask drivers to pit after watching them drive around rather recklessly with heavily damaged cars. Some drivers pitted and didn't fix damage, which I put down to the new yes/no option for damage repair--so be vigilant of that as well.
If you are a danger to others, you will be asked to come in and fix your damage--think of this as a black flag in real life racing.
==========================================
In spite of all of this, I saw some very good driving out there as well. I believe that this series (and this field of teams) has some very good potential, and I think that with more collective experience these races will go quite smoothly.
I would like to congratulate CD, AR, FLP, and LFSLA on very clean, quick races. This is by no means a complete list, just a few that stuck out to my eye.
Many of the new and pending teams did quite well as well. We will have a full report and a revised list of accepted teams up soon, after which signups will be opened to multi-car entries. (We do however reserve the right to deny a team a second car and will justify our reasoning to the teams in question should this occur.)
Thanks again for attending the test race, and good luck in your preparations for the first round.
First of all, I'd like to thank you all for coming to the test race. While it might not have been the full success we would have liked it to have been, it illustrated several very important lessons.
The odds against this race going smoothly were sort of stacked from the get-go. In addition to a LOT of new teams in general, we asked all teams to bring new and inexperienced drivers for a baptism-by-fire. Which is, I guess, what they got. Furthermore, Blackwood is a very tight and twisty track for big cars like these, which added to the potential for chaos.
Personally, I felt the start went very well. There was a bit too much of a gap between some segments of the field coming to the green, but on the whole it produced a very clean and incident-free first lap. The rest of the first half of the race was also quite good. Some incidents, but nothing too serious. It was the second half of the race (from the second SC period onward) where things really started to go off the rails.
==========================================
There's a saying that TV racing commentators like to use over here in the US: cautions (SCs) breed cautions. They bunch the field, cool/dirty people's tires, and generally put a lot of cars in close proximity to one another. But the truth is that cautions don't HAVE to breed cautions like we saw them do today. There are several things that you as drivers can do to reduce the number of SC periods--note that every one of the five SC periods thrown in this race was thrown as the result of some kind of driving error that contributed to a car landing on its roof.
1. Behavior AS the SC period begins.
When the "SC Deployed" message is displayed, you should immediately back off. This doesn't mean that you need to drop to SC speed... it just means that you shouldn't be riding the ragged edge as you are under green flag conditions. There is nothing to be gained since there is no passing under yellow. You should cruise around and use the minimap to locate the position of the SC and the pack following it and slow down well in advance. There's NO excuse for running over the back of the pack.
2. Behavior under the SC period.
There was far too much contact under the SC period during this race. If you are close enough to run over someone when they hit the brakes, you are TOO CLOSE. These are very long races, and a few meters lost while running under SC conditions are easily made up. Drivers need to avoid erratic acceleration and braking. You should pretty much never have your foot all the way to the floor once you've caught the queue.
Furthermore, for future races the use of weaving to heat the tires will be banned. We saw several accidents during SC periods in this race caused by excessive weaving. The truth is that this sort of behavior does very little to maintain tire temperature and in fact does more to cause problems (accidents). Which of course leads us to...
3. Behavior during the restart.
On a restart following a SC period your tires will be VERY COLD, especially since patch Y forced many of us to switch to R3 or R4 rubber. Very cold tires mean that you have to consciously drive slower than you normally would in order to maintain control. YOU CANNOT DRIVE ON COLD TIRES AS IF YOU WERE ON WARM TIRES. Any incidents that are blamed on cold tires should in fact be blamed on the driver who over-drove those cold tires.
Moreover, though a restart is a great time to make up positions, it's also one of the easiest times to cause an accident and ruin someone's race. There were a great deal of needless incidents in the chicane in this race due to drivers being overaggressive and overoptimistic on cold tires.
Adding to this is the fact that lapped cars are in the mix on restarts. Faster cars should be aware of this and tread carefully.
==========================================
There were several teams running somewhat awkward looking setups today. I saw at least one FXR running a R4/R2 combination, which led to some interesting drifting, damage, and finally a flip. There was also at least one FZR running R4s all around. Some of this may be inexperience and some may be poor judgment, but I suggest that everyone work very hard on their setups for the real race.
It is not the admins' place to regulate setups, but please bear in mind that bringing a bad/unstable setup to a race can hurt other people's races too, not just your own.
One final issue is that of driving with damage. At several points during this race we had to ask drivers to pit after watching them drive around rather recklessly with heavily damaged cars. Some drivers pitted and didn't fix damage, which I put down to the new yes/no option for damage repair--so be vigilant of that as well.
If you are a danger to others, you will be asked to come in and fix your damage--think of this as a black flag in real life racing.
==========================================
In spite of all of this, I saw some very good driving out there as well. I believe that this series (and this field of teams) has some very good potential, and I think that with more collective experience these races will go quite smoothly.
I would like to congratulate CD, AR, FLP, and LFSLA on very clean, quick races. This is by no means a complete list, just a few that stuck out to my eye.
Many of the new and pending teams did quite well as well. We will have a full report and a revised list of accepted teams up soon, after which signups will be opened to multi-car entries. (We do however reserve the right to deny a team a second car and will justify our reasoning to the teams in question should this occur.)
Thanks again for attending the test race, and good luck in your preparations for the first round.