I'll hold you to it.xpensive wrote:Or I'll eat a Nomex suit.
I'll hold you to it.xpensive wrote:Or I'll eat a Nomex suit.
I'll even buy one as a christmas gift just to see that.xpensive wrote: Or I'll eat a Nomex suit.
Doesn't NASCAR actually own SpeedTV?madtown77 wrote:Too true to both above.
Well, it's SpeedTV, not exactly THE source for F1 information. Love how they tried to make it look like an off-the-cuff visit.
If Cosworth doesn't prove to be a good engine, having the driver make engine sounds might actually make the car go faster.
Hell, I'd be happy for a few more parodies of racing referencing "Formula UHHHH"
Those are pretty strong facts that you are making up. Just because Windsor and Anderson have not seen fit to include you into their meetings, does not mean that you know a single, solitary thing about what is really happening at USF1.xpensive wrote:Surface finishing, eh? On an aluminium upright? Yeah right, for a Nascar vehicle perhaps.madtown77 wrote:Hey xpensive, that CNC was performing surface finishing, typically around 0.001"-0.002" per pass, so yeah, its pretty slow. That and they turned the coolant flow off for the cameras so they have to slow it down so they don't burn up the tooling and the part.As I said earlier, that video from the office and workshop was pure comedy with the cheap Jim Clark poster on the wall, shelves sitting on the floor, FIA software on screen and a CNC doing nothing but moving around a piece of Aluminium, which quite clearly did not have a place on an F1 car.
As for not having a place on a race car, looks an awful lot like a suspension upright without all the little carbon pieces around it for controlling brake cooling airflow.
I have actually tried to be corteous about this sad xcuse for an F1 team, but their effort has been pathetic from day one and there's not a chance in hell they ever gonna make the grid. Or I'll eat a Nomex suit.
When you listen to Windsor's ramblings, it's pretty obvious he simply has no clue as to what he's talking about.
"From start in an F1 car-design, you decide if you are going for maximum downforce or top-speed." Prat.
It is funny how you defend your bullshit opinion stating as fact by pointing to nationalism.xpensive wrote:All this flag-waving and self-sufficient American national-pride is so cute, in particular when it's a little...hurt?
Especially as an engineer, you must know that stating your own opinion as fact without any evidence to back it up is what gets most engineers fired.xpensive wrote:Come now, even as a non-engineer, you must be able to tell when something is credible, red white and blue or not?
# note that Python relies on line breaks and # indentation to parse syntax instead of semicolons # and curly braces NULL = 0 def main(): while usf1.car == NULL and days_till_bahrain != 0: usf1.windsor.gaffe() f1.insiders.doubt(usf1) new_news = usf1.get_news() if new_news == NULL: forum.doubt(usf1) elif new_news > 0: forum.americans.rattle_saber(usf1) elif new_news < 0: mockery = forum.euros.mock(usf1) if mockery > forum.americans.tolerance: forum.americans.backlash() else: forum.americans.laugh() days_till_bahrain -= 1 main()We can all rest easy now.
You can think what you want, and I can care less...xpensive wrote:If I read you right concept, if I fail to use the xpression "I think", you feel compelled to bring the discussion to the gutter?
Interesting that.
I guess I think you are a S****ck then, fair enough?
http://www.racintoday.com/archives/12508USF1 update: The issue of who will drive for USF1 in 2010 remains cloaked in secrecy.
But RacinToday.com has learned that the rate of activity has picked up noticeably in the team’s Huntersville, N.C. facility. New hires have gone to work on building the parts and pieces of the team’s first car, expected to break cover in late January or early February. Dan Passe, a public relations representative with the team, says USF1 has yet to reach full capacity and continues with its hiring process as employment contracts come to an end elsewhere, particularly after layoffs by some F1 teams such as Toyota.
As for the team’s web site, it remains under construction. Like the car, we’re told, the goal is to produce state-of-the-art technology and there’s a lot of work when in start-up mode.