- iRacing.com Announces iRacing 2.013,060
- iRacing.com to create virtual McLaren MP4-12C GT39,287
- Scanning What’s in Store for iRacing with Tony Gardner7,440
- Dave Kaemmer Comes Clean on Dirt7,406
- The iRacing.com Protest System – May, 20126,735
- Improving the Sound of iRacing5,635
- iRacing 2.0 Debuts in 2011 Season 34,936
- Preview Shots of HPD ARX-01C, Ford GT & Suzuka4,892
- Two New Cars and Two New Tracks Coming to iRacing Soon4,801
- iRacing.com to Build Digital Honda for New Super GT Series4,549
- iRacing.com Announces iRacing 2.0 41
- Dave Kaemmer Comes Clean on Dirt 32
- The iRacing.com Protest System - May, 2012 30
- No Obstacles Here 18
- Scanning What’s in Store for iRacing with Tony Gardner 18
- The Customer is (Nearly) Always Right 15
- V-Sunk 15
- Tips from a Human Sim-Racer 12
- My VW TDI Experience 11
- What Happens in Vegas Leads to VIR 11
- iRacing.com2342
- NASCAR 1894
- Motorcycles 1845
- Formula Cars 1710
- WRC 1436
- IndyCar 1302
- Touring Cars 873
- Sports Cars 307
- Other Racing 356
Mikkelsen pulls clear in Scotland
October 8th, 2011
Andreas Mikkelsen will take a 50.7-second lead into the final day of the Rally of Scotland, having maintained a superb pace at the front of the field to pull clear of his nearest rivals.
Only two of this afternoon’s planned three stages were run as heavy rain meant conditions on the scheduled Drummond Hill closer were declared too bad for the stage to go ahead.
Mikkelsen’s increased cushion was due in part to the speed that saw him win the Craigvinean and Errochty stages that did take place, but also because erstwhle challenger Thierry Neuville spun twice on Errochty and broke his Kronos Peugeot’s reverse gear.
That cost Neuville just over 50s, and saw him drop from second to fourth place.
Bryan Bouffier therefore moved up to second in the PH Sport-run Peugeot France entry, but the Monte Carlo winner is just a second ahead of resurgent reigning Intercontinental Rally Challenge champion Juho Hanninen, who has been happier with his Skoda this afternoon – although still unable to match Mikkelsen’s times.
There was heartbreak for Proton during the midday service. P-G Andersson had been running fourth and fighting for a podium in the team’s most competitive IRC performance since Alister McRae’s second place on this event two years ago, but he picked up substantial penalties when his Satria refused to start in the regroup. Andersson is now back in 12th, with erstwhile leader Guy Wilks 15th for Peugeot UK and Kronos following his earlier accident.
Craig Breen has advanced to fifth in his Kel-Tech Ford, right behind the delayed Neuville.
Attrition ahead has allowed championship leader Jan Kopecky to progress to seventh for Skoda, 10s behind Skoda Sweden’s Patrik Sandell.
Leading positions after SS8:Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
1. Andreas Mikkelsen Skoda UK 58m52.8s
2. Bryan Bouffier PH/Peugeot France + 50.7s
3. Juho Hanninen Skoda + 51.7s
4. Thierry Neuville Kronos/Peugeot Belux + 1m25.8s
5. Craig Breen Kel-Tech Ford + 1m28.5s
6. Patrik Sandell Skoda Sweden + 1m33.9s
7. Jan Kopecky Skoda + 1m43.4s
8. Jarkko Nikara Mitsubishi (private) + 2m22.2s
9. Toni Gardemeister TGS Skoda + 2m27.3s
10. David Bogie Mitsubishi (private) + 2m33.0s




David Phillips
Chris Hall
Jameson Spies
Jason Lofing
Tim Terry
David Allen
Allen Krier
Chris Cunningham
Tim Doyle
David Roberts
Ben Rothberg
Dylan Sharman
Gedervania
February 24th, 2012 at 7:41 amAs said above, the old sniayg goes To make a small fortune in racing, start with a large one. I ran 3 seasons in SCCA Club Racing’s Formula Continental and did some US F2000 races as well, and ran a FABCAR Porsche 911 in some endurance events. I don’t even want to mention what that cost. The lesson I learned was that TV coverage of a series is gold. US F2000 lost their coverage in 2002, and it is nearly impossible to get sponsors interested in a series when they wont see their’ car on TV. Sponsorship is advertising, and if the ad isn’t seen it’s not effective. You will have to start out in karts or an inexpensive car in SCCA (or NASA) paying your own way until you can convince sponsors you can win and get them noticed. Formula Vee (like Steven) is a great class to start out in, as is Spec RX-7, Spec Miata, or Spec Racer Ford. The latter is a sports racer class that is fairly inexpensive (remember, this is an expensive sport/hobby all things are relative when I say inexpensive). Do a season or two in one of these, then try to move up to FC, F1000, or similar, or maybe T1/T2 or similar if you want to go touring car/GT racing later. Build seat time and experience, and build your resume and gain exposure. You will almost never find sponsorship in club racing, unless you have family or friends who throw a little help your way. Once you can consistently place in the top three and have some wins, you can move to trying to rent a seat in a car in one of the pro series. Grand Am and Speed World Challenge offer good programs with TV coverage; these are TC/GT series. If you want to go open wheel then the Formula Mazdas are THE way to go. Great package and great competition. You will be renting a seat (car) for the season (or maybe a few one-off races if the budget requires) from a team who owns and maintains the car, providing track support and a crew for you. This can run from $ 100k a season up to $ 500k and above depending on the series, the car, and which team (read: how competitive they are). To raise this money, you usually will need sponsors. You contract with a sponsor (or sponsors) to pay you $ X dollars in return for the exposure they will receive (in effect, you are selling them advertising to a key demographic). You are at this point a professional driver, and racing is now your job. To get such a highly sought after job, you will need a powerful resume, full of a greater amount of and higher-quality experience than others who are basically applying for the same job. You have to look the part, sound intelligent, and be someone the company trusts with their image, since you will become a spokesman and representative for them. Just like any job, you have to always strive to be the best around, and continually improve, because if you don’t someone else will. It is a lot of hard work and sacrifice, but if you truly want to race at a high level as a career, it will be completely worth it in the end.Oh, and you don’t HAVE to be under 25. It would really, really help, but if you want it bad enough the extra years you have driven street cars and experienced different things in traffic will at least help some, and the additional maturity can help shorten the learning curve. Search Elliott Forbes-Robinson and you’ll see someone who can still get into a competitive car and compete at the pinnacle of sportscar racing, so there’s not necessarily an expiration date. I’m 33 and having recovered from a broken back am now trying to get back into a car. But the younger you start, the more years you can compete, and seat time racing other cars is the only way you can gain experience and improve.