Wednesday 24 April 2013

Stop sitting in the garages and get out (a solution to the Q3 problem)



Sebastian Vettel in China Q3; he’s left the pits early and is building up to what will surely be one of his renowned all out qualifying laps. The Red Bull hasn’t been the fastest at this track, but that shouldn’t stop him going for it. Ok he’s about to go for it… oh, he’s trundling down the pit lane.

It’s not the best sight in the world to see Formula 1’s current world champion not bothering to set a qualifying time. Yes, you don’t win any points on a Saturday, so if you think you’re strategy for the race is best served by not bothering then that’s what you do, but it’s not exactly the best advertisement for the sport. And it’s happened plenty of times over the last few years.

I was flicking through the latest edition of F1 Racing magazine yesterday in which there was an interview with Pirelli’s motorsport boss Paul Hembery. Now leaving aside the wider issues regarding the tyres at the moment, he was asked what he would do to ensure that all the drivers who make it through to Q3 set a representative lap time to which he replied that they have actually offered to make ‘bespoke qualifying tyres’ like they had in the 80s.

What this means is basically they’d make special tyres for the top 10 which would give enough extra sticky grip for one completely flat out lap. It would negate any impact on race strategy because presumably the top 10 would be allowed to start on whatever tyres the like; currently they have to start on the tyres they qualify on.

With this solution, I think you’d have to make two sets of qualifying tyres so each driver can have two attempts and also to make sure the full ten minute session is adequately filled with cars for the Television audience.

Other solutions I’ve heard of would be to introduce the 107% rule for Q3 which means they have to qualifying within 107% of the fastest time. This one actually seems to be the simplest answer but of course in Formula 1 nothing is ever simple, sometimes to its detriment, what’s wrong with just forcing them to set a time? Currently we have the 107% rule only running in Q1 so just in case Marussia or Caterham are particularly poor on a certain track they won’t be a moving road block on race day.

Perhaps though there is a better way to incentivise the teams and make for a better television experience. What I would do is this:

First of all I would cut Q1 by five minutes, giving all the teams 15 minutes to set a time in the opening session. It would probably force a lot of teams to send their drivers out earlier, thereby getting more cars out on track sooner without having to spent the first few minutes waiting to see something. You’d still lose six cars from this session.

Again Q2 would follow the same process we have now to eliminate six cars over 15 minutes. However the top 10 in this session which advance to Q3 would become more important than simple progression.

Here is how Q3 would work for me. I think this qualifying format is the best they’ve had, but I did like the element they had a few years ago where you’d get one lap to go all out to win. When doing that with the entire field it got a little dull as you waited for the top drivers for ages, but when it’s just the top 10 you’ve got the top guys already.

Of course you have to take television schedules into account and sending one car at a time would take a fair amount of time but having saved five minutes from Q1, there is a little time to play with to do a variation on this.

So anyway, if they were to produce special qualifying tyres I’d give the top 10 one set. Then starting with the 10th fastest from Q2 I’d release them like this. 10 to 7 would be released at 15 second intervals to go and set their laps. The intervals are there so that the TV cameras can pick up at least a portion of everyone’s laps. Once these four have set their times, you’d then release cars 6 to 4 at 20 second intervals, before finally doing the same with cars 3 to 1, a climactic top 3 showdown.

Then just to make sure they’re not going to have it easy on Sunday, they all must start on the softer option tyre, so that at least those who qualified outside the top 10 can still make progress with a different strategy if they so wish.

Of course this does mean that the top 10 will all have an extra set of tyres to play with seen as they’ll have special ones for the final session so those who qualified outside the top 10 won’t have an advantage like can happen at the moment.

So there’s some pluses and minuses to this scheme, but I think it’s a good alternative to one that currently allows them to sit in their garages for ages and perhaps not even bother to set a time and also good for the trackside and TV audience. Well it’s this or just make the rule that forces them to go out.   

photo from autosport.com

Sunday 21 April 2013

Vettel out front in dramatic Bahrain race


In a dramatic Bahrain Grand Prix full of dramatic on track action, Sebastian Vettel took his second victory of the year pretty serenely. Despite driving for Red Bull, the team which has lobbied hardest to have an adjustment of the tyres away from their current specification, he managed to control the tyres well and made a three stop strategy work to finish in complete control.

He made a good start to draw alongside pole sitter Nico Rosberg, who was very aggressive off the start, swerving almost to the pit wall but Vettel couldn’t quite get him and it left a gap for Fernando Alonso to dive through on the inside.

Vettel has his steely side too, and he swooped down the inside into turn 5 to take back second place and began to stalk Rosberg, the Mercedes beginning to show its trademark from last year as the tyres faded dramatically. Vettel was soon by and immediately headed off into the distance.

He didn’t really get too far away, but as the rest squabbled for position you always felt Vettel had pace in hand as he demonstrated by setting fastest lap a few laps from the end, sparking the now traditional radio message from Red Bull to tell him to back off.

Ferrari and Lotus still look strong contenders to snatch victories but the question now is how consistently can they do it? Ferrari has had a few reliability issues and organisational slip ups, while Lotus might well have been in contention if they could have qualified higher up the grid. It’s ominous that Red Bull despite their tyre issues was able to dominate in such dramatic fashion.

Ok, the tyres were not meant to degrade as much at this track, it was always going to be more of a temperature issue to keep them operating at their best, but it’s an emphatic demonstration that Red Bull are still the fastest out there. 

However, it would have been interesting to see what happened if Pirelli had stuck to their original plan to bring the high degradation soft tyres, and hadn’t switched them to the medium to accompany the hard compound and it’s also noteworthy that Webber’s tyres didn’t last. Whatever though, Vettel was in a class of one today, a fine win.

Star of the race: Grosjean comes alive again

As Vettel motored on up front, it was all kicking off behind him. It was a fantastic display of driving skill as the best drivers in the world went wheel to wheel at 200mph, and apart from the odd bumped wheel and askew front wing endplate, it was all pretty much the non-contact sport it’s meant to be.

I think first of all Lotus’ Romain Grosjean has to be highlighted. There’s no doubting the Lotus was one of the fastest cars out there today, but also after he failed to get into the top ten, Grosjean knew that starting from 11th was still going to be a tough afternoon.

There’s been something slightly off about the Frenchman so far this year. Last year he showed tremendous speed but also a penchant for crashing into people, especially at the start. To be fair to him a lot of the incidents were not of his making but after the huge start line crash in Belgium for which he was banned for one race he seemed to become even more hesitant.

This year he hasn’t shown the speed we know he possesses. It looked like the events of 2012 had taken their toll on him and his potential was going to be firmly locked away. He also felt there was something wrong with the car.

For Bahrain they brought him a new chassis, and despite the problems in qualifying Grosjean came alive. He showed his speed and brought out the aggression again as he stormed through the field. He battled hard, but all the time he looked in control, he looked like he was aware of his surroundings, knew where everyone was and dealt with the situations appropriately in the split second you have to decide things from the cockpit of a Formula 1 car.

It was a great drive as he charged towards the final podium spot, capturing it with just a few laps to go. This could be a real turning point in his career; if he can replicate this form at the next few races a new star of Formula 1 will have arrived.

Paul di Resta just misses out on podium

Paul di Resta was so close to his first podium, so close, but he was always going to be vulnerable to attack in the closing stages as he managed his tyres on a two stop strategy. So it proved as Grosjean on fresher tyres having pitted three times snatched the position away from him.

However fourth place was still a great result for the Scotsman, Force India finally getting the top five result that their pace has deserved all year. In Bahrain they were good from the start, di Resta 5th in the first two practice sessions, and there he qualified albeit after grid penalties for Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton were taken into account.

Force India team mate Adrian Sutil joined him on the third row, but suffered a puncture courtesy of Felipe Massa’s front wing on the first lap. He made a decent recovery to 13th but was out of it from the start. di Resta’s luck didn’t desert him though, he took fourth at the start, was soon past Rosberg into third, and even managed to lead for several laps too.

If Force India can keep up development then Paul might not have to wait too long for his first podium. It’s also positive for him, as Sutil seemed to be grabbing the headlines so far this season, so for di Resta to reassert himself was needed.

Sergio Perez gets aggressive

McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh had said in the week leading up to the Bahrain Grand Prix that Perez needed to show a more aggressive side. Didn’t he just?

Perez showed the kind of form that got him the McLaren drive in the first place. He was robust, incisive with his overtakes and didn’t give up.

That’s actually what was great about the race today, so much passing and re-passing. Half the time when someone passes another car they disappear off into the distance. But I was losing count of how many times the likes of Perez, Jenson Button and Rosberg would be passed, then a few laps or even corners later they’d be fighting to get their position back.

Perez has not had the start he’d have liked at McLaren. He expected to be fighting for podiums and wins not for the lower reaches of the top 10. To be fair this is mostly down to McLaren bringing out a dud of a car. But still while Button seemed to be taking charge and getting more out of the car than it deserved, Perez had been fairly quiet in the first three races, today though that Latin flair was back in evidence.

He went wheel to wheel with a number of drivers this afternoon, his overtake of Fernando Alonso for 7th was wonderfully aggressive (which the Spaniard didn’t like), but nothing was quite as dramatic as his fight with his team mate Button.

No quarter was given, they were allowed to race, and Button who was beginning to struggle in the second half did not want to be beaten for the first time by his new team mate. Perez wanted to make a point and as they switched places, you could sense the entire McLaren team on tenterhooks. It was dramatic, but it was impressive. At times like that if I was a team owner, I’d have told Button to get out the way, but this was much more fun.

Things possibly went slightly too far, Perez tapped Button flicking a bit of front wing off against Jenson’s right rear tyre. Potentially it could have ended both their races, it didn’t though but it prompted Button to get on the radio to the team to tell Perez to ‘calm down’ and later he said he was over aggressive.

Sergio therefore went wheel to wheel again, their front tyres meeting down the back straight, Perez leaving the track only to come back alongside. It was awesome to watch. But Button’s tyres were shot and he ended up making a fourth stop to slide down to 10th.

Perez kept the entertainment up though, passing Alonso and then on the last lap he grabbed 6th from Webber. This result will give him a bit of confidence and it certainly brought McLaren into the limelight, especially with their choice to let them fight although words were said that to Perez after that this aggression may need to be tempered on occasion. 

However, despite their improved race pace it doesn’t take away from the fact they are not fast enough, especially in qualifying. They have a lot of upgrades coming for Spain, and they need them if they want to get back on the podium.

Ferrari lose ground

It all went wrong for the Scuderia. Alonso was keeping a watching brief in second 
behind Vettel when suddenly his DRS flap stuck open on lap 8. He pitted a lap later when it got stuck again. He dropped down the field and actually made a great recovery to finish 8th without the aid of DRS. Massa suffered two punctures on his way to a miserable 15th.

But after the great victory in China, Ferrari looked primed to produce another strong result after locking out the second row. Ferrari has got a stronger car than last year, but so far this year they’re not quite getting the consistency together that they had in 2012.

Alonso has now fallen 30 points behind Vettel in the championship. At no point last year in a woeful early season car did he fall so far back. It will be of concern, but at least this year they can take comfort that they have a strong car which looks like it’ll challenge for podiums and more importantly consistently battle for wins too. In Bahrain Ferrari didn’t feel they’d lost valuable points, they felt they’d lost a victory.

Rest of the top 10

Kimi Raikkonen took his third podium of the year with second place. He was the highest placed driver to use a two stop strategy and after dropping back at the start from his 8th grid position he actually did quite well to get to the podium. Yet again the Lotus demonstrated its kindness to tyres and the pace it can still achieve. There is no doubt now that Kimi is in the long haul for this title, he lies only 10 points back.

I was quite surprised to see Lewis Hamilton end up 5th, from his interviews I think he was too. He suffered from the Mercedes problem on tyre trouble, and also balance issues in the first half of the race, but then it all suddenly came good. He stopped three times, once less than his team mate, and subtly moved up the order. For a race with so much overtaking and fighting it was a surprise that it took so long for Lewis to get involved in a scrap but his fight with Webber for 5th was as dramatic as anything else on track. Those 10 points also moved him up to third in the title fight.

Webber brought the second Red Bull home in 7th, being passed by Lewis and Perez towards the end. He looked on for a podium at one point but his tyres failed him and he couldn’t maintain the pace.

Nico Rosberg took the final point, he had taken a great pole position, but despite some brilliant defence couldn’t keep up and made a fourth stop that dropped him to 10th. He looks like he can challenge Lewis, but results are not going for him at the moment.

Charles Pic delighted Caterham who brought some upgrades which resulted in him finishing ahead of both Marussia’s for the first time this year and Esteban Gutierrez’s Sauber. Maybe Heikki Kovalainen’s appearance in first practice gave them a better direction too.

Back to Europe

So four races have gone, that is effectively a quarter of the season done already. Ferrari should have done better, but they have the car to challenge, Lotus is ready for a title challenge and Mercedes are lurking.

Force India are the surprise package while McLaren will be looking for their revisions in Spain to take them back to battling for wins. Sauber have disappointed, Williams have reversed while Toro Rosso look like they have untapped potential on occasion. Marussia and Caterham battle looks to be intensifying.

Red Bull look strong and you fear they have extra speed just waiting to be unleashed if the right tyre circumstances arrive but it’s still too close to call at the top... for now.

LAT and XPB photo's taken from autosport.com, all others from planetf1.com

Tuesday 16 April 2013

F1 on the Bahrain agenda again


Bahrain has been out of the press for a while now but with Formula 1 returning again for the biggest international event the country holds it's political situation is once again being looked at and questions about the safety of the F1 personnel and whether the race should be held are back on the agenda.

There's a lot to be said about the current situation and the rights and wrongs of whether Formula 1 should be involved in a country where both the government and the opposition use the race as a political tool. 

The government want to project the image that everything is alright and the situation has normalised while the opposition want to use the race to further their agenda by highlighting their plight.

As ever with a country like this that was caught up in the original middle east uprising from 2 years ago, there are many sides and aspects that could be discussed. In fact I wrote a few blogs last year here and here that fell on the side that Formula 1 should not be going to a country that was in such a state of disarray and detail some of the events that were happening at the time.

As it turned out over the weekend last year, apart from a few minor incidents the race went off without a hitch. And I have reason to change my mind on what I have previously written. The media obviously sensationalise for a good headline, but you don't always get the full facts and both sides of the story as expertly detailed by respected journalist Joe Saward. 

For instance a car bomb exploded last Sunday April 14, the blast claimed by the opposition group named February 14. They and Anonymous would like to see the cancellation of the race and threaten disruption, but these events are not regular occurrences but these are the main headlines you would get about Bahrain not that there are many peaceful marches as that's not very exciting. Of course the blast can be said to be timed to provide maximum exposure just as a major international event is about to arrive.

For a far more detailed exposition on the current situation in Bahrain and analysis on how the media present it, I would recommend reading Saward's blog here. It make's for very interesting reading.

If there was a major uprising and it would harm the people of the country I would be against Formula 1 putting on the event. However, it is a sporting event and despite it being used as a tool by both points of view in Bahrain, as long as F1 itself doesn't involve itself in the political situation then there is no reason for it to not go ahead. 

Although having said that, with the Bahrain government so closely linked to the race it's hard to see how it can't be involved. But in the end, it is just that, a race to entertain, not to make a point. That it can be used as such make's the waters murky, but a lot of countries are using Formula 1 to promote themselves on a world stage, should we look at every single countries human rights record? That would certainly be interesting. 

There were the tragic explosions at the Boston Marathon yesterday (April 15), simplified argument I know, but this won't put the world on edge about F1 attending America in Austin, Texas later in the year and this country is on high alert most of the time.

Formula 1 is like a bubble of the best and worst of western capitalism, and that it spreads this message all around the world is always going to tick a few people off. But at it's core it's just a race series, that might seem naive but F1 should not get involved. Even if circumstances change in a country, F1 is just there to race.


For more information on the current situation here's a history of what's been happening in Bahrain. 

Here's a report on the recent bomb blast in Bahrain.

And here's Joe Saward's blog again.

photo from autosport.com

Sunday 14 April 2013

Alonso masterful in China



It’s still early stages but Fernando Alonso stormed back into the title chase as he became the third different winner from three races in China. It was another good race as various strategies played out, but in reality it didn’t look like anyone was going to stop the lead Ferrari driver today.

And that’s what he looked like again, after much talk of how his team mate Felipe Massa had out qualified him in the last four races, Alonso beat him in Q3, and trounced him in the race. What’s more he pretty much dominated everyone else to take his first of the year and the first since the German Grand Prix 13 races ago.

As happens most times with the Ferrari’s both Alonso and Massa leapt forward from their respective grid positions of 3rd and 5th to move into 2nd and 3rd positions right from the off squeezing Kimi Raikkonen down to 4th and keeping pole sitter Hamilton in sight.

The top seven started on the soft tyre which wasn’t able to last much longer than 5 or 6 laps at even a vaguely competitive pace, the front runners were then obliged to pit early for the longer lasting medium compound as they started a 3 stop strategy.

Alonso though was already proving the rule that the Ferrari is a better racer than qualifier as Hamilton proved the opposite for Mercedes when they swapped positions before the pit stops.

This meant that other drivers who had started on the mediums were catapulted forward as the leaders pitted, but Alonso and Lewis picked them apart quickly, and it soon became clear that Sebastian Vettel’s strategy of starting on the mediums was not going to work.

After the many pit stops were completed, Alonso once again swept back into the lead into turn 1 ahead of Vettel before the Red Bull driver had even made his final stop. There was nothing going to get in the way of the Spaniard today, it was a pretty masterful performance.

He may have only won by 10 seconds from Kimi Raikkonen, but once he was in the lead he looked in complete control despite when due to pitting he dropped back down the field. His engineer even came on the radio to tell him he didn’t have to push so much, to which he responded by saying he wasn’t as he then set the fastest lap.

It was that kind of day for Alonso, everything went right, and after a dodgy crash last time out in Malaysia he’ll be glad to get a victory under his belt and really launch his title challenge. He’ll be especially happy with the way the car looked after the tyres; Ferrari is looking very strong at this stage of the season.

He looked utterly elated as he celebrated because he knows he has to take every opportunity for a win when the front runners are so close together. He did that today, and he’ll already be looking forward to Bahrain so he can do it again.

Tyres

There has been a lot of talk about the tyres, and a lot of criticism directed towards Pirelli especially by the likes of Mark Webber and Hamilton. They feel the tyres degrade too quickly and it’s not real racing because most of the time the drivers are conserving their rubber and aren’t able to push flat out the way they want.

It was quite interesting to hear the likes of Jenson Button coming on the radio to ask if he should fight certain drivers or just let them pass to preserve the life of the tyres so as to make his strategy work. That’s not the sort of thing you want to hear during a race.

Having said that, Pirelli were asked to make tyres like this by the teams so as to improve the racing, therefore they can’t really complain when certain teams (Red Bull) don’t like it because they can’t manage the tyres as well as others.

It might not be pure racing, but the rules are the same for everyone and no one 
can deny that it’s providing an entertaining spectacle. The different strategy options in China today made for an interesting element as the early runners of the soft tyre then had to fight their way past the longer opening stints of the medium shod runners which didn’t work out until the end of the race.

The real question is whether that spectacle is now too artificially enhanced? It’s walking a tightrope but it’s not like we’re seeing completely random results.

The first three winners of the year have been, Kimi, Vettel and Alonso, is anyone surprised that these world champions have won? The best will always keep on winning whatever random elements are provided.

Fight for the podium

Kimi Raikkonen moved into second place in the championship after taking a decent second place from second on the grid. There were a few incidents along the way though. First off he fell to fourth at the start, but he didn’t do anything rash, kept it calm as always and kept pace with the front three.

It was an incident with Sergio Perez’s McLaren that nearly ruined his day. After the first round of pit stops to get rid of his soft tyres he came upon Perez who was still marching on with his first set of mediums. It had already been noted in the BBC commentary that Perez was moving around a lot while defending.

Kimi moved to the outside into turn 6 and had a wheel alongside but Perez squeezed him over onto the grass which resulted in the Lotus tagging the back of the McLaren causing damage to the front wing and nose cone. Fortunately for Kimi it didn’t cost him too much and they didn’t bother to change it, but I think Perez should have given Kimi a bit more room on that one.

Kimi later charged up to the back of Hamilton and by stopping 3 laps earlier than the Mercedes on the final round of stops was able to leap ahead and then kept him at bay for the rest of the race. An impressive result given the damage he sustained, which Lotus estimate cost him 0.25 per lap. Wonder if he could have got a bit closer to the lead?

Lewis Hamilton just about managed to hold on to the final podium spot. His medium tyres seemed to go off as Sebastian Vettel looked to make his opposite strategy pay off as he reeled him in with four blistering laps on the softs at the end. Only a dab of understeer and a slide kept the Red Bull from overhauling Lewis on the last lap.

Lewis will be disappointed as Mercedes qualifying pace failed to translate into the race. Still a second consecutive podium is a bonus he probably wasn’t expecting at the start of the year, but a driver like him will want more when he’s able to start at the front. He’s having better time of it than his team mate though who suffered a second retirement of the year and generally didn’t seem to have much pace while he was out there.

Vettel’s fourth was a good recovery from 9th on the grid, but Red Bull will be concerned that they weren’t even in with a shout of victory today. Vettel drove well though and revealed a steelier side to him over the weekend. When asked to comment about the team orders incident in Malaysia, he pretty much said and I am paraphrasing here, that he’d do it again and Webber deserved it after his failure to help him on other occasions. In other words he wants a fourth title and he’ll do anything to get it. He still leads the title chase after three rounds.

Daniel Ricciardo stars at last

Ricciardo has blatant potential and finally he was able to show it for Toro Rosso. He qualified an impressive 7th but the fact he was able to maintain that position showed that was no fluke even with a nose change caused by an incident unseen by the cameras.


Yes a few top runners dropped out but he would still have picked up a few points. He’s taken an edge on his team mate Jean-Eric Vergne who could only manage 12th today and when there’s a potential Red Bull seat up for grabs next year, performances like this will be noted.

Mark Webber’s disastrous weekend

I’m pretty sure that after the controversy of the team orders fiasco in Malaysia he wanted to show just what he could do. Well team mistakes and an unfortunate incident with Vergne’s Toro Rosso put paid to that.

In Q2 he was under fuelled and stopped out on track. As the car didn’t have enough fuel to provide a sample he was dropped to the back of the grid. He started on the softs and got rid of them after a lap. He charged in the clean air so that when Vettel pitted Webber was ahead on track.

It could have been an interesting battle to say the least but it was now that Mark dived to the inside of Vergne and clattered into him for which he got a 3 place grid penalty in Bahrain. A quick nose change followed but a lap later he was out as the right rear wheel wasn’t attached properly, but it did nearly take out Vettel which would have made for an interesting talking point.

No dramatic comeback for Mark, not even a point. Vettel is now a wins worth of points ahead.

Rest of the top 10

Jenson Button played a good game of letting everyone pass him as he went through the race on the only two stop strategy to get points. He ended up 5th which after the recent troubles McLaren have had is a good result. They expected more from their upgrades though, but at least it’s some kind of progress. Perez had a weekend to forget in the other McLaren winding up 11th.

Massa brought the second Ferrari home 6th. He was nicely tucked up behind Alonso after the first few laps but stopped a lap later than his team mate to discard the soft tyres and this dropped him further back in the pack from which he never recovered. He spent a lot of time stuck behind di Resta, but unfortunately for Massa you do get the feeling that if it had been Alonso more progress might have been made. He’s still in good form though.

Paul di Resta survived a clash with his Force India team mate Adrian Sutil to claim 8th place. Sutil couldn’t survive an attack by Esteban Gutierrez who launched his Sauber into the back of the Force India taking them both out. Gutierrez now gets a 5 place grid penalty at the next race.

Romain Grosjean is having a tough time of it. He really doesn’t look on it this year at the moment. Whether that’s because mentally he is still being effected by the events of 2012 or it’s a problem on just his car is hard to tell, but he needs to up his game quickly. He still took 2 points for 9th.

Nico Hulkenberg was leading ahead of Vettel for a while in the early stages as he too used the medium tyres first strategy. A switch to softs at his 2nd stop instead of using them at the end dropped him way out of contention though and he couldn’t make the ground back up so 10th will be a disappointment.

Good race for Valteri Bottas in the Williams as he ended up ahead of his team mate Pastor Maldonado despite starting behind him. Williams though have failed to score a point when expectations were for so much more.

Jules Bianchi again headed the newer teams and continues to impress in the Marussia.

Eight drivers were to be investigated after the race for using DRS in a yellow flag zone, but no action has been taken. 

Next race in Bahrain just a week away

This season is shaping up to be even closer than last year, the top 4 drivers are 
with a fourth place finish of each other and there’s many other potential race winners besides them. All at least appears to be quiet on the Bahrain front, although there have been a few small protests. Hopefully, it’ll be a quiet weekend, full loud noisy action packed racing.

all photo's taken from autosport.com