Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/06/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hello gang; it has been a while. I was scanning the archive and the above thread drew me back. Some of you know that I raced a Triumph TR-3 during my Navy service and thereafter, a Porsche Super 90 coupe at Linas-Montlhery in France. I am an automobile racing nut and although I much prefer road-racing, I have followed most forms of motor racing since the early 1950's, have attended Formula One races at Watkins Glen, Silverstone, Brands Hatch, Monaco, Monza, Spa-Francorchamps, Nurburgring, Reims, Rouen and Zandvoort. P.S., Marc James, the U.S. Grand Prix has taken place at a fair number of different locations: Sebring, Watkins Glen, Detroit, Long Beach, I think Miami, but never, never at Lime Rock. P.P.S. how many know (I know Frank D. does) that in the early days of the modern world championship, the Indianapolis 500 counted toward the F.I.A. world driver's championship? Because its organizer, USAC, was the U.S. representative to the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile. Now to the real reason for this post, the debacle at Indy last Sunday. It was clear to me on Sunday, watching and listening to the race report, that the culprit was Michelin (whose tires I have used with great satisfaction for many years). They supplied a tire that was unsafe in the circumstances of this race. All of the physical parameters of the race were well-known to all teams and suppliers. Michelin manufactured and delivered to its teams tires unsuitable to those conditions. Let me ask you just what you think would have been the response of the Michelin-supplied teams if Bridgestone had supplied Ferrari with unsafe tires and had then asked Charlie Whiting of the F.I.A to allow the installation of a chicane to lower the speeds in turn 13 so that Ferrari's Bridgestone tires would not fail? And so that the speeds of all of the Michelin-equipped cars would be reduced to speeds that Ferrari could match? Give me a break! Michelin screwed up and wanted the F.I.A. to bail them out. There was no Ferrari-driven cabal or comspiracy here. Frank was absolutely right in writing that Whiting's decision was correct. The Michelin teams tried very hard with really outrageous commercial pressure to get the F.I.A. to violate its own rules. The fault lies with Michelin. The fault for the debacle lies with the Michelin-shod teams. They could have raced in turn 13 at lower speeds. Or they could have changed worn-out tires during the race and accepted the penalty for doing so. They chose to threaten and then grossly to embarrass the international racing community. Bad show. P.P.S. Marc James, your gratuitous knock on U.S. soccer suggests that you have no idea about what is happening on the playgrounds of American schools. And why you persist in using raised-pinky effetist caricature language is beyond me. But your analysis of American attitudes toward G.P. racing is not. Many of us Americans like most all forms of motor racing (tho' drag racing has zero interest for me). NASCAR has produced a phenomenal success because the public can identify with the cars on the circuits. While they are certainly far removed from the cars we drive, they look like our cars and they have pushrod V-8's like many American street cars. Millions of kids can dream of becoming NASCAR drivers and dozens and dozens actually can. Because while it is not inexpensive to run a NASCAR team, it is not a lottery number. Formula One, on the other hand, will always be an elitist endeavor. There are presently only ten (10) teams racing in Formula One; there used to be eleven. That is it. AND, the cost to run a team for a Formula One season is between a quarter and a half a BILLION dollars. At the low end budget of $250,000,000., you will not have a competitive car. Or a competitive driver. Different ball games. Despite which there was an enormous crowd at Indy last Sunday for the debacle. What that debacle will cost F-1 is anybody's guess. My guess is that F-1 will be back though it will take some time to recover from the wounds the Michelin teams inflicted on the enterprise. My 2c. Good to be back Seth