Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Scott Speed and Leavine Family Racing to Go All Out at Talladega to Honor Victims in West, Texas

2013 Scott Speed - Photo Credit: Nick Laham/Getty Images
2013 Scott Speed - Photo Credit: Nick Laham/Getty Images
CONCORD, N.C. (April 30, 2013) - Sunday’s Aaron’s 499 will be the second race of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) season with restrictor plates. But for Scott Speed and Leavine Family Racing, their effort will be anything but restricted.

The team will dedicate its efforts on Sunday to the victims of the West, Texas, explosion that killed 14 people, including 12 first responders.

“We will run with restricted engines at the Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday, but I can promise you nobody on this race team will hold anything back,” Speed said. “Our race team has deep roots in Texas. Our car will be West, Texas, strong.”

The Texas-based team decided to bring awareness to the disaster with signage on Speed’s No. 95 Ford Fusion for Sunday’s race in the aftermath of the fiery explosion at the fertilizer plant near Waco, Texas. The roof to Speed’s car will carry to the words: “West, Texas, Strong. Victims – Survivors – Heroes.”

“As Texans, we all bond together,” said car owner Bob Leavine, who lives in Tyler, Texas. “Texans are strong people, proud people. And when something happens, we join forces.”

TrackingPoint and Jordan Truck Sales (JTS) will share the primary sponsorship for the 188-lap event. Returning team sponsor Jordan Truck Sales (JTS) will be on the hood of the No. 95 Ford.

The Austin, Texas based TrackingPoint will return with sponsorship on the quarter panels. TrackingPoint is an applied technology company that created the first Precision Guided Firearm, a revolutionary new long-range shooting system that puts jet fighter “lock and launch” technology in a rifle, enabling users to hit moving targets at extended ranges.

Secondary sponsors Friends of NRA and Besties with Testies also signed on for Sunday’s project.

Crew chief Wally Rogers knows the best way to honor the victims of the explosion is to run up front. The team will bring the same car that led two laps at the season-opening Daytona 500 and wound up with a lead-lap finish.

“We have a good restrictor-plate package,” Rogers said. “Scott has a good sense for finding good drafting partners and not taking big gambles. This is a great opportunity for this team to make a breakout performance. No other track lends itself to upset victories like Talladega. Of course, in our minds it wouldn’t be an upset.”

Races at Talladega and Daytona are run with speed-reducing restrictor plates that limit the amount of air and gasoline into the engine. The plates restrict speeds by as much as 40 mph for safety reasons.

Since Leavine Family Racing is running a selective schedule, Speed kept himself busy with driving in the X-Games Global Rallycross championship. He won a gold medal for Ford Racing by winning the race in an OlsbergsMSE Fiesta Star Ford April 23 at Foz do Iguaçu, Brazil. Speed won with a last-lap pass.

“Winning in Brazil was a lot of fun,” Speed said. “Winning at Talladega would be even better.”

About Us

Leavine Family Racing (LFR), currently a two-team operation in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the ARCA Racing Series, is a Texas-based team – headquartered in Tyler, Texas. The racing team also has an entry in the ARCA Racing Series – the No. 95 car with development driver Michael Leavine. The team is owned by Bob and Sharon Leavine.

Leavine Family Racing began competing in NASCAR with four career-starts for the 2011 racing season in NASCAR’s premier series.

The team’s shop is located in Concord, North Carolina, just outside of Charlotte Motor Speedway’s turn two.

Source: Leavine Family Racing

The article Scott Speed and Leavine Family Racing to Go All Out at Talladega to Honor Victims in West, Texas is from Catchfence.

Source: http://www.catchfence.com/2013/sprintcup/04/30/scott-speed-and-leavine-family-racing-to-go-all-out-at-talladega-to-honor-victims-in-west-texas/

Bob Gerard Gerino Gerini Peter Gethin Piercarlo Ghinzani

May 4 Callaway Ignites Cancelled

Source: http://www.skirtsandscuffs.com/2013/04/may-4-callaway-ignites-cancelled.html

Leo Kinnunen Danny Kladis Hans Klenk Peter de Klerk

Kopecky leads as Kubica rolls

Kopecky leads as Kubica rollsJan Kopecky hung on to his lead at the end of the second day of Rally Azores while Robert Kubica rolled.

Skoda driver Kopecky had taken the lead from Kubica on the final stage of the morning when thick fog caused the grand prix winner to back off and surrender the top spot.

Despite not setting the pace on any of the three stages run during the afternoon, the Czech driver kept his lead, albeit with his advantage over Craig Breen’s Sainteloc Peugeot reduced from 16.4 to 13.1 seconds.

Bruno Magalhaes overhauled his Portuguese compatriots to take third spot with Ricardo Moura and Bernardo Sousa – the latter fastest on SS9 – behind him.

Kubica started the afternoon sixth, but reduced the gap to fifth place courtesy of the fastest time on SS10. His roll on the following stage cost over four minutes and dropped the Citroen DS3 RRC to ninth spot.

Stage 12, which was due to complete the day, was cancelled by rally organisers due to fog.

This means that with Kubica reaching the end of SS11 after the car was righted, he is still in with a chance of continuing in the rally on Saturday.

Pos Driver             Team/Car               Time/Gap  1. Jan Kopecky        Skoda                1h05m11.9s  2. Craig Breen        Sainteloc Peugeot    + 13.1s  3. Bruno Magalhaes    Delta Peugeot        + 33.9s  4. Ricardo Moura      Skoda                + 35.5s  5. Bernardo Sousa     AT Ford              + 36.1s  6. Jeremi Ancian      Sainteloc Peugeot    + 2m01.0s  7. Jean Michel Raoux  Sainteloc Peugeot    + 4m06.2s  8. Miguel Barbosa     Mitsubishi           + 6m01.6s  9. Robert Kubica      Citroen              + 6m10.4s 10. Luis Rego          Mitsubishi           + 7m07.7s 

Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/real-world-racing/3rdparty/kopecky-leads-as-kubica-rolls

Nico Hülkenberg Denny Hulme James Hunt Jim Hurtubise

Video: Nelson Piquet Jr. Kicks Brian Scott Below The Belt At Richmond

Source: http://thefinallap.com/2013/04/27/video-nelson-piquet-jr-kicks-brian-scott-below-the-belt-at-richmond-nuts-balls/

Heikki Kovalainen Kevin Harvick Armour Vienna Sausage Kroger Chevrolet Clint Bowyer

Honda gets WTCC weight increase

Gabriele Tarquini, Honda, Slovakia 2013Honda’s three World Touring Car Civics will be 30kg heavier at the forthcoming Hungarian round this weekend.


The Japanese marque’s cars have earned extra ballast following a run of consecutive pole positions and a podium sweep in Slovakia.


All seven SEAT Leons – run by Munnich, Campos, Special Tuning and Tuenti – will meanwhile compete with an extra 10kg of ballast.


Qualifying and performance in the first six races of the season are used to calculate the series’ weightings.


The Civics are now just 10kg lighter than the Chevrolet Cruzes, which are running at maximum weight.


Lada’s two factory Grantas and the seven BMW 320s will continue to enjoy a 20kg weight break.


Tom Coronel claimed BMW’s first victory of the season in the reverse-grid second race at Slovakia.

Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/other-news/touring-cars/wtcc/honda-gets-wtcc-weight-increase

Randy Joseph Lajoie Kevin Paul Lepage William Ashton Lewis Jr Sterling Burton Marlin

Thailand approves layout for F1 track

Mark Webber, Red Bull demo in ThailandThailand is making progress with its plans to hold an inaugural Formula 1 race in 2015 after local authorities approved the layout for the proposed Bangkok track this week.


The Sports Authority of Thailand met on Thursday to discuss the concept, and confirmed that a 5.995 kilometre circuit would be created near the Royal Thai Naval Dockyard in Bangkok.


The circuit will run past several major tourist destinations, including the Grand Palace, the Temple of Dawn and Victory Monument.


Final approval for the track configuration is now set to go to government for sign-off within the next few months.


Thailand has been chasing the race for several years, with Red Bull a keen backer to hold a night race in the country’s capital.


The event will almost certainly attract a bumper crowd, with Mark Webber having drawn 100,000 spectators to a street demo in the city back in 2010.

Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/formula-one-news/f1-formula-one-news/thailand-approves-layout-for-f1-track

Z Line Toyota Kyle Busch Toyota Kimmy Z Line Designs Toyota

Reality Check: Bike-Share Station Takes Up Less Space Than Parked Cars

Curb space in front of 99 Bank Street then ...

You have to hand it to residents of 99 Bank Street. The lawsuit to have a bike-share station removed from the street in front of their West Village building is a textbook example of reactionary NIMBYism.

The suit, which has already been rejected in court, claims the station violates a rule against the placement of “street furniture,” and blocks the building entrance. Among the other reported complaints: the bike-share station will impede fire truck access, cause tourists to ride on the sidewalks, and lead to cyclists congregating under the building awning when it rains.

The suit also says the city’s bike-share program “presents a serious threat to public safety,” according to the Daily News.

Reality check: Bike-share has a great safety record. And as for building access, this Citi Bike station, which will hold 31 bikes, replaced a handful of car parking spots that occupied the same curb space, but with taller, blockier objects. If anything, May and her dog Pippin will have an easier time crossing the street mid-block now that there aren’t parked cars hogging curb space and cutting off the view of oncoming traffic.

… and now. Photos: Google Maps, DNAinfo

Source: http://www.streetsblog.org/2013/04/30/reality-check-bike-share-station-takes-up-less-space-than-parked-cars/

Kevin Michael Harvick Virgil Ernest Irvan III Kenny Dale Irwin Jr Dale Arnold Jarrett

Drinking It In: Five Questions before Richmond

Source: http://www.skirtsandscuffs.com/2013/04/drinking-it-in-five-questions-before.html

François Hesnault Hans Heyer Damon Hill Graham Hill

Caption this: Nelson Piquet Jr.

Source: http://www.skirtsandscuffs.com/2013/04/caption-this-nelson-piquet-jr.html

Cuth Harrison Brian Hart Gene Hartley Masahiro Hasemi

Nelson Piquet Jr., crewmen fight after Nationwide race

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2013/04/27/2853932/nelson-piquet-jr-brian-scott-fight.html

Rupert Keegan Eddie Keizan Al Keller Joe Kelly

Richard Childress Racing 2013 NSCS Toyota Owners 400 Post-Race Report

Richard Childress Racing Logo
Richard Childress Racing Logo
Richmond 400
Richmond International Raceway

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Richmond International Raceway
April 27, 2013

Race Highlights:

  • Richard Childress Racing teammates finished first (Kevin Harvick), fifth (Jeff Burton) and 13th (Paul Menard).
  • Harvick and Menard are tied for ninth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings, trailing leader Jimmie Johnson by 72 markers, while Burton sits 19th.
  • The No. 29 Chevrolet SS team ranks ninth in the Sprint Cup Series owner championship point standings, with the No. 27 team 10th and the No. 31 team 22nd.
  • According to NASCAR’s Post-Race Loop Data Statistics Harvick led the field in Speed in Traffic (118.676 mph), ranked fourth in Laps in Top 15 (400 laps), was the fifth-Fastest on Restarts (120.973 mph), earned a fifth-place ranking in Fastest Laps Run (23) and had the fifth-best Driver Rating (111.2).
  • Harvick completed 47 passes while running in the top 15, positioning him second in Quality Passes.
  • After gaining five positions during the final 40 laps (10 percent) of the Sprint Cup Series event, Harvick earned a ranking of third in the Closers loop data category.
  • Menard is the only driver to have completed 100 percent of laps attempted (2,990) in 2013 Sprint Cup Series competition.
  • Menard made 58 passes under green-flag conditions ranking him ninth in overall in Green Flag Passes.
  • Harvick earned his first victory of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season and was followed to the finish line by Clint Bowyer, Joey Logano, Jaun Pablo Montoya and Burton.
  • Burton gained six positions over the final 40 laps, ranking him second in the NASCAR Loop Data statistic category of Closers.
  • Burton made more Quality Passes (57) than any other driver entered in the event and spent 369 Laps (91 percent) of the 406-lap event in the Top 15
  • The next Sprint Cup Series race is the Aaron’s 499 at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday, May 5. The 10th race of the 2013 season is scheduled to be televised live on FOX beginning at noon Eastern Time. and broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and Sirius XM NASCAR Satellite Radio.

Menard Earns 13th-Place Finish Saturday Night at Richmond International Raceway

Starting from the 29th position, Paul Menard and the No. 27 CertainTeed/Menards team faced handling issues as track conditions changed throughout the evening, ultimately finishing 13th at Richmond International Raceway. The early laps of the race looked promising as Menard made a steady march toward the front of the field and was scored in 19th by lap 50. Clicking off lap times as fast as the leader, coupled with lightning-fast stops by the pit crew, the 32-year-old driver worked his way inside the top 15 at lap 140. As the sun began to set, the track conditions changed and Menard struggled with a tight- handling racecar. The No. 27 pit crew made a variety of chassis adjustments to the Chevrolet SS during the middle and later portions of the originally scheduled 400-lap event, in hopes of remedying the issue. With just three laps remaining, the yellow flag flew and crew chief “Slugger” Labbe called his driver into the pits one final time for four fresh tires and fuel. Menard lined up 17th for the green-white-checkered restart and gained four spots in just two laps to finish 13th under the lights. Menard’s top-15 finish ties him for ninth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings heading into Talladega Superspeedway.

Start – 29 Finish – 13 Laps Led – 0 Points – 9th

PAUL MENARD QUOTE:
“Once the sun went down we struggled throughout the race to find the right setup for the CertainTeed/Menards Chevrolet. “Slugger” (Labbe, crew chief) and the team never gave up working really hard to make adjustments all night in an attempt to get the handling issues resolved. I have to thank my pit crew, they did an awesome job in the pits tonight and gained us several positions on pit road throughout the evening. There at the end, the car was handling better and we were able to gain several positions to come home with a solid finish. All-in-all it was a decent points day, so we’ll take it and head to Talladega Superspeedway next weekend.”

Harvick Goes to Victory Lane at Richmond International Raceway

Kevin Harvick and the No. 29 Bell Helicopter team earned their first point-paying event victory of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season under the lights of Richmond International Raceway on Saturday night. The California native started the scheduled 400-lap event from the 17th position and maintained a spot in the top 15 during the early laps, while battling a tight-handling Chevrolet SS. The No. 29 pit crew made an array of adjustments throughout the course of the originally planned 300-mile event during multiple scheduled four-tire pit stops. As the race progressed, Harvick worked his way toward the front of the field finding a home in the top five. Still battling handling issues during the final laps, Harvick drove down pit road on lap 397 for four tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment under caution. The RCR veteran driver was scored in the seventh position as the field was set for a green-white-checkered finish. During a dramatic restart, Harvick gained five positions with two laps remaining and captured the lead as the field came to the white flag. The 37-year-old driver remained out front during the final lap, and was able to collect his 20th Sprint Cup Series-career victory. Following the first-place finish, Harvick is now tied for the ninth in the Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings.

Start – 17 Finish – 1 Laps Led – 3 Points – 9th

KEVIN HARVICK QUOTE:
“I just want to thank everybody for this great finish. It’s been a tough start to the season, but it all worked out for us tonight. We’ve gotten beat a couple times this year on pit road, but pitting was the right thing for us to do at the end tonight. When tires fall off by almost two seconds, you’ve got to come in and get fresh tires for the restarts. Gil (Martin, crew chief) made the right call and it worked out. I’ve got to thank Bell Helicopter, Budweiser, Jimmy John’s, Rheem, Chevrolet and everybody who participates in our team’s program.”

Jeff Burton Caps Off Solid Run with Top-Five Finish at Richmond

Jeff Burton and the No. 31 Airgas/Bulwark Chevrolet team ran in the top 15 for 369 laps of the 406-lap night race at Richmond International Raceway, and finished off the solid effort with a fifth-place finish. After starting the event from the 16th position, the South Boston, Va., native climbed into the top 15 early and reported to crew chief Luke Lambert that the No. 31 Chevrolet developed a tight-handling condition in the middle of the corners, especially on long green-flag runs. Lambert and the No. 31 pit crew worked hard throughout the evening by making tire pressure and chassis adjustments on multiple pit stops, while Burton maintained a top-15 running position. After narrowly avoiding a multi-car accident on lap 328, the Richard Childress Racing driver brought the white and black machine to pit road for fresh Goodyear tires and Sunoco Green E15 fuel. The adjustments made on the pit stop improved the handling of the car and Burton worked his way into the top 10 with 28 laps to go, and eventually moved to seventh-place on lap 385. The final caution flag of the night was displayed with four laps to go, setting up a green-white-checkered finish. While the top-six competitors came to pit road for service, Lambert made the call for his driver to stay out putting Burton at the top of the leaderboard. On the final restart, Burton raced hard before the drivers with fresh tires were able to get around the veteran driver on the final lap. In the end, Burton crossed the finish line in fifth for his first top-five result of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. With the strong finish, Burton gained four positions in Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings, moving up to 19th.

Start-16 Finish-5 Laps Led-7 Points-19th

JEFF BURTON QUOTE:
“We were seventh there and I thought I had the No. 22 (Joey Logano) beat before the caution flag came out. The caution came out and what the heck, we might as well try something. Luke (Lambert) made a good call there and obviously new tires were a lot better. But it was worth a shot. We were going to maybe finish sixth without the caution so to pick up a spot from it was worth a shot. I thought it changed a lot. I thought Kevin (Harvick) and I both got better at the end of the race and some other cars got worse as the race went on. However, Kevin got good at the end of the race. He was his best at the end; we were our best at the end. I think all of that was the track changing and kind of going to our setups a little bit.”

Source: Richard Childress Racing

The article Richard Childress Racing 2013 NSCS Toyota Owners 400 Post-Race Report is from Catchfence.

Source: http://www.catchfence.com/2013/sprintcup/04/28/richard-childress-racing-2013-nscs-toyota-owners-400-post-race-report/

Oswald Karch Narain Karthikeyan Ukyo Katayama Ken Kavanagh

City Council Prods NYPD to Map Crime Data … Except Traffic Crime

Last week, the City Council passed a bill that should revolutionize the way New Yorkers access NYPD crime data. For the first time, crime stats will be mapped, and will be searchable by precinct, area code, and street address. The data will be filed with the city Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications, which will update the map each month.

NYPD transportation chief James Tuller thinks the public lacks the capacity to comprehend traffic crash data.

“The bill will enable elected officials, community organizations, and the general public to localize current high crime areas and use resources more strategically and efficiently,” said sponsor Fernando Cabrera, council member from the Bronx.

The interactive crime map will offer the same tools that City Council members and street safety advocates were aiming for with the Saving Lives Through Better Information Act. But two years after that bill passed the council, NYPD is still releasing traffic crash data as a series of PDF files. Meanwhile, council members seem to have stopped pushing the department to publish crash data in a format that would readily enable advocates and the public to target dangerous locations for improved engineering and enforcement.

Crime data maps are nothing new. As the New York World points out, Chicago, Philadelphia, and other cities have maps like the one ordered by the council. But NYPD is notoriously secretive, and guards traffic crash data even more closely than other violent crime data. While Cabrera says NYPD took no official position on the mapping bill, which was prompted by difficulties encountered by the Norwood News in obtaining Bronx precinct stats, the department fought the council tooth and nail to keep traffic crash data under wraps.

“This information is only valuable to those with the training, knowledge and experience to understand its context and interpret it correctly,” said NYPD Chief of Transportation James Tuller at a council hearing in 2010. “That is the role of the police commander.”

Though the council forced NYPD to release crash data, the department did its best to circumvent the law by publishing it in a way that renders it useless to all but the most tenacious advocates and citizens. Six months from now, when the crime data map is expected to go live, anyone with Internet access will be able to get an instant picture of where assaults and burglaries are happening in their neighborhood — by month, year, and year-to-date. That same resident would have to devote hours to get an in-depth look at where people were injured and killed by motorists on the streets where they walk or bike every day.

The Norwood News reports that making the crime data map will only entail a one-time expense:

DoITT officials say it would take about six months to get the website and map up and running and wouldn’t require much extra work on their end or from the NYPD, which is often the agency’s excuse for not being more forthcoming with information.

The NYPD compiles this information and inputs into a software program already.

This is all the more reason for the council to demand that crash data be given the same treatment.

At a February 2012 council hearing on traffic safety and NYPD crash investigation protocols, Jessica Lappin confronted NYPD brass on the half-hearted compliance with the Saving Lives Through Better Information bill, which she sponsored. When NYPD counsel Susan Petito said the department believes data released on a spreadsheet could be manipulated “to make a point of some sort,” an incredulous Lappin assured officials that the public wants to analyze the data to improve safety, not use it for “evil.”

This was the last we heard from the council on the subject until January. At a presser convened by Lappin and council transportation chair James Vacca to scold DOT for being late with a report on dangerous intersections, Streetsblog asked about NYPD crash data dumps. “We don’t like the way they’re complying, but at least they’re putting information up,” Lappin said. “They are complying with the letter of the law. We just don’t think they’re complying with the spirit of the law.”

It seems now that if they truly want NYPD to release traffic crash data in a useful format, council members can make it happen. Will they?

Source: http://www.streetsblog.org/2013/04/29/city-council-prods-nypd-to-map-crime-data-except-traffic-crime/

Lucas di Grassi Cecil Green Keith Greene Masten Gregory

Despite Warning Signs, Fed Kept Money Flowing to Fisker

2012 Fisker Karma EcoChic

Five years after showing us the sexiest plug-in we’d ever seen, Fisker Automotive is in the process of packing up and switching off the lights. The California startup, founded by the man who penned the gorgeous BMW Z8 and the Aston Martin V8 Vantage, is the only automaker to base its entire business on luxurious plug-in hybrids. But not for long.

Founder and former chairman Henrik Fisker quit in March, a month before the company fired three-quarters of its staff and began preparing for bankruptcy. Navigating an unfortunate string of events—including damaged cars from Superstorm Sandy, two major recalls, and its battery supplier going bankrupt—is a company that’s been in financial trouble for the past two-and-a-half years. There are no buyers. At least $192 million in taxpayer money may never be repaid. And after a congressional hearing on Wednesday, Fisker’s fate as the next Tucker is pretty much sealed.

2012 Fisker Karma EcoSport

When Justin Bieber grabbed a chromed-out Karma last year, we figured Fisker had nailed the rich West Coast demographic that proved so critical for Tesla Motors. Despite the aforementioned series of unfortunate events, the first Karmas started rolling out of Fisker’s Finnish factory in December 2011. But ultimately, Fisker would only sell 2000 cars before production ground to a halt in August 2012. Fisker had planned to produce a second offering, the Atlantic, at a gutted GM factory in Delaware—which Vice President Joe Biden promised would create 2500 jobs—but it never opened.

We’re not against the government loaning our money to companies building expensive technology that eventually will trickle down to the mainstream. Ford and Nissan together have borrowed $7.3 billion from the same loan program to build alternative-fuel vehicles in the U.S., and if we’re to believe recent accounts, Tesla may record its first-ever profit this year.

What we are against, however, is unchecked government spending, and as it stands, the Department of Energy hasn’t explained why it continued funding Fisker for at least an additional year despite knowing the automaker was having trouble meeting its loan requirements. As to what extent “crony” political connections played in awarding Fisker’s $528 million loan in the first place, well, that’s the nature of our government and every big American business. No matter what executives say, we’ll bet Fisker stuck a few feet in the door for that kind of money.



But there’s a bigger problem when a company can rake in $1.2 billion in private funding and miss a $10 million loan payment, or when the White House promises jobs and a whole community is left hanging. We’d have wanted Fisker to succeed and feed us more eye-popping designs. Instead, we’re footing its losses because a few people didn’t bother to check the bank account.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/caranddriver/blog/~3/TsyM9uJ-Q-g/

Toyota Kimmy Z Line Designs Toyota Parker Kligerman Trevor Bayne

Monday, April 29, 2013

In Colorado, a Big Legal Victory for Active Transportation Funding

Believe it or not, in many U.S. states one of the biggest obstacles to active transportation is in the constitution.

Embedded in the constitutions of 22 U.S. states are bans on spending gas tax revenues and/or vehicle registration fees on anything but highways and bridges. That means no matter how much practical value a sidewalk, busway, or bike lane would add, those projects must go begging for funds.

Municipalities throughout the Denver area will soon be able to use gas tax revenues on projects like light rail expansion. Image: Captured Refractions

But thanks to the efforts of a broad coalition in Colorado, the number of states with constitutional restrictions on sustainable transportation spending is about to fall to 21. Governor John Hickenlooper will sign a bill tomorrow that opens up $250 million a year in state gas tax revenue to walking, biking, and transit projects.

Colorado-based transit and environmental advocates found a way to overcome the ban without the monumental effort and expense of a statewide referendum. And they’re eyeing six other states around the Southwest with hopes for a repeat or two.

Colorado’s constitutional amendment — passed in 1935 — states that gas tax revenues and vehicle registration fees can only be spent on highways and bridges. To make matters worse, the state had always depended on a narrow reading of the term “highways” to exclude local roads, sidewalks, and bike infrastructure, as well as transit.

Rather than try to overturn the rule, advocates in Colorado simply challenged the way it was being interpreted, said Will Toor, a former mayor of Boulder who helped lead the campaign as director of transportation at the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project.

“Fifteen years ago, a group of us began making the argument that that was really an inappropriately narrow interpretation,” said Toor. “There are other places in the constitution that describe railroads as highways of the state.”

In 2009, a coalition of transit advocates had a small breakthrough. The Colorado legislature wanted to pass a new vehicle registration fee, but lawmakers needed the political support of transit advocates. The transit coalition was able to win a small, but important, fraction of the funding for transit – just $15 million out of $1.2 billion.

“That established the precedent that the legislature had more broadly interpreted the restriction,” Toor said.

That was the impetus for Colorado Senate Bill 48, which the governor is due to sign tomorrow. Crucially, transit and environmental advocates framed SB 48 as an issue of local control, not a campaign to boost transit spending, says Toor. When they’ve tried to frame it as a transit issue in the past, it’s been “extremely controversial,” said Toor. This time, the law simply allows $250 million — the share of statewide gas tax revenues that is directed to local communities each year — to be spent on transit, biking, and walking. It does not require communities to spend it that way.

“The message was that the people that best understand the transportation needs are the ones that are the closest,” said Toor. “Shouldn’t they been able to spend these dollars on what they see as their highest and best needs?”

Will Toor, the former mayor of Boulder, helped lead the successful campaign to open up Colorado's gas tax revenues to transit spending. Image: darkendeavors.com

That turned out to be a winning strategy that helped Toor and his fellow advocates raise a big tent. A diverse coalition of supporters, including the Colorado Municipal League and the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce, threw support behind the measure.

“That was really the key step: moving this from something that was being pushed mainly by the environmental community into something that was really being advocated by local government organizations,” Toor said. “They really saw this as a great tool to have additional flexibility with their funds.”

Support for the measure was initially strong in the state legislature. The bill sailed through a Senate committee unanimously. Then it stagnated in the statehouse for a time while other legislative priorities moved forward, and the trucking and construction industries started lobbying against it. But ultimately it was difficult for opponents to overcome the wishes of local government leaders from all parts of the state. In the end, it passed along party lines, Toor said, with an amendment that limited transit operating expenditures to 15 percent.

Toor and his coalition are now looking to export their successful campaign to Arizona, Utah, and four other states in the region where constitutional restrictions inhibit sustainable, efficient transportation investments.

Source: http://dc.streetsblog.org/2013/04/25/in-colorado-a-big-legal-victory-for-active-transportation-funding/

David Carl Allison Gregory Jack Biffle David Lee Blaney Michael Duane Bliss

Meet Your Next Transportation Secretary

Mayor Anthony Foxx has accepted President Obama's nomination to be the next U.S. DOT secretary. Photo: Flickr/psychoticwolf via Smart Growth America

Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx just accepted President Obama’s nomination to be the next transportation secretary.

Before we get into the details of Anthony Foxx’s résumé and policy positions, let’s just take a moment to appreciate this: The White House has nominated a mayor to be secretary of transportation.

There is often a wide gulf between states and cities when it comes to transportation policy — with cities preferring to invest in multiple modes while states mainly spend on highways. One way to interpret Obama’s nomination of a mayor to head U.S. DOT is that he’s casting his lot with cities. In Foxx, he’s selected the chief executive of a southern city that has made significant progress on transit and walkable development the last few years.

“I know every mayor is thrilled today because one of theirs will become transportation secretary,” outgoing Secretary Ray LaHood said at Foxx’s nomination today. He said the appointment sent a message that “mayors count” and “cities count.”

“When Anthony became mayor in 2009, Charlotte, like the rest of the country, was going through a bruising economic crisis,” President Obama said. “But the city has managed to turn things around.  The economy is growing. There are more jobs, more opportunity. And if you ask Anthony how that happened, he’ll tell you that one of the reasons is that Charlotte made one of the largest investments in transportation in the city’s history.”

Foxx has only been mayor since 2009, and the city was already heading in the right direction. Charlotte’s light-rail system, LYNX, launched in 2007, and its complete streets policy won an award before he took office. But Foxx has also made his own mark.

As mayor, Foxx oversaw the extension of the city’s one light rail line, a project which will nearly double the Blue Line’s length and extend it to the UNC-Charlotte campus by 2018. He’s also been a champion for Charlotte’s downtown streetcar project, which currently consists of just a short starter line but which Foxx and local transit advocates want to turn into a 10-mile route in Center City to spur more walkable development. He hasn’t been able to convince the City Council to support it, but the White House has supported the project to the tune of $25 million.

Foxx also seems to get the value of bicycling. Under his leadership, Charlotte has built out it bicycle network and begun a bike-share system. “During his tenure Mayor Foxx has been supportive of initiatives including an expansion the city’s bike route network, green bike lanes, bike boxes, sidewalk construction projects and other projects to meet bicycle and pedestrian needs,” Tobe Holmes, a board member at the Charlotte Area Bicycle Alliance, told the Alliance for Biking and Walking.

“He clearly understands the importance of biking and walking to creating a vibrant and economically successful community where businesses want to locate; where people want to live, raise a family and retire; and where people have a real choice of transportation modes,” said Andy Clarke, president of the League of American Bicyclists, in a statement.

It’s not all bike-share and streetcars, of course – Charlotte is a sprawling city, and Foxx hasn’t put his foot down against highway expansion. In fact, he secured funding to complete a 60-mile beltway and has supported widening I-85 from six lanes to eight according to Next City’s Matt Bevilacqua. Foxx also helped lead the expansion of the Charlotte airport.

LaHood, the man Foxx will replace, learned fast on the job and surprised everyone with his strong commitment to sustainable transportation and understanding of the connections between transportation, housing, and environmental policy — connections mayors deal with every day. But LaHood wasn’t chosen for those qualities. In fact, in the beginning, few expected his tenure at U.S. DOT to go in the direction it did. He was chosen first and foremost because he was a Republican, as an overture across the aisle – an overture that clearly didn’t work.

Now Obama has chosen a rising star in the Democratic party whose city hosted the Democratic convention last year. And this rising star does come to the job “with a predisposition to seeing how transit can potentially transform a city that’s been almost entirely auto-dependent into one that’s more walkable and pedestrian-friendly and be a driver of economic growth,” said Joshua Schank of the Eno Center for Transportation.

“The choice shows an interest in continuing to focus on metropolitan transportation priorities,” Schank said.

Charlotte was the case study for a 2011 research paper on the impact of rail transit on obesity. Social scientists and health experts found that LYNX riders’ body mass index fell by an average of 1.18 points compared to those who didn’t ride the system, and were 81 percent less likely to become obese over time. Schank speculated that studies like that have helped open Foxx’s mind to the broader benefits of sustainable transportation, including the environment and public health benefits.

Still, Schank had been hoping the administration would put forth a technical expert this time around. President George W. Bush did that when he nominated Norman Mineta – a signal of bipartisanship, yes, but also someone with a resume in transportation policy.

“I think it is more of a challenge for a non-technical expert who’s not a member of the inner circle to have an influence on the White House,” Schank said. “Those are the two things we’d look for to see if there’s going to be a substantial change of policy.”

Schank expects Foxx – like LaHood – to be a loyal implementer of White House policy, not someone who goes above and beyond the administration’s priorities.

Foxx’s nomination will have to be confirmed by the Senate after a hearing before the Commerce Committee.

Source: http://dc.streetsblog.org/2013/04/29/meet-your-next-transportation-secretary/

Trevor Bayne Out! Pet Care Toyota Jason Leffler David Carl Allison

Auto GP to race at Mugello

Auto GP 2013The Auto GP Series will race at Mugello on July 14th this year, replacing a provisional meeting scheduled to take place at Zandvoort.


The change of venue for the fifth round of the championship is a result of the Dutch venue’s preference to hold the event on July 7th, creating a potential clash with the German Grand Prix meeting.


Series promoter Enzo Coloni said, “We are happy to be back at Mugello. So far, we are the series with the most Italian drivers on the grid, eight, and being back in Italy is a well-deserved reward for a country that has given so much to our sport.”


The race will be the second Italian round of the season, following the opening race of the year at Monza in March.


Mugello hosted the 2011 Auto GP season finale, in which Kevin Ceccon took the title.

Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/real-world-racing/3rdparty/auto-gp-to-race-at-mugello

Yuji Ide Jesús Iglesias Taki Inoue Innes Ireland

Kubica loses Azores lead to Kopecky

Jan KopeckyJan Kopecky stormed into the lead of Rally Azores on the second morning of competition as a puncture and terrible weather resulted in overnight leader Robert Kubica falling to sixth spot.


Ex-Formula 1 driver Kubica had led at the end of the opening day of the fourth European Rally Championship event of the year by nearly 10 seconds.


The Pole increased his advantage to 11.1s by taking his Citroen DS3 RRC to the fastest times on stages five and six.


But he suffered a puncture on SS7, the first of two runs through Feteiras, and allowed Skoda man Kopecky, who was fastest on the stage, to close the gap to 4.9s.


A mix of fog and think mud on SS8, the final stage of the morning loop, resulted in Kubica backing off and conceding more than half a minute to Kopecky.


“It was very difficult stage, we could not see anything in places,” Kubica said.


“Eighty per cent of the stage I was just cruising to the finish; I had no confidence in the pace notes. I’m just happy to be here.


“Driving the rally car, you should push, but I think I made the right choice not to push and instead to finish this stage.”


Robert Kubica Kopecky now holds a 16.4s lead despite suffering intercom problems on SS7.


Irishman Craig Breen, Kopecky’s main rival for the championship, is now second in his Sainteloc Racing Peugeot, despite suffering a puncture of his own on the same stage.


Ricardo Moura, who was passed for third by Breen on the first stage of the day, was promoted back into the spot as a result of Kubica’s delay.


Bruno Magalhaes and Bernardo Sousa also moved ahead of Kubica.

Pos Driver             Team/Car               Time/Gap
1. Jan Kopecky Skoda 46m11.5s
2. Craig Breen Sainteloc Peugeot + 16.4s
3. Ricardo Moura Skoda + 19.0s
4. Bruno Magalhaes Delta Peugeot + 19.3s
5. Bernardo Sousa AT Ford + 30.1s
6. Robert Kubica Citroen + 1m04.5s
7. Jeremi Ancian Sainteloc Peugeot + 1m38.6s
8. Mark Wallenwein Wallenwein Skoda + 2m36.6s
9. Jean Michel Raoux Sainteloc Peugeot + 2m57.1s
10. Miguel Barbosa Mitsubishi + 4m05.2s

Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/real-world-racing/3rdparty/kubica-loses-azores-lead-to-kopecky

James Hunt Jim Hurtubise Gus Hutchison Jacky Ickx

Report: Intel developing headlights that make rain invisible [w/video]

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When computer hardware companies start getting involved with the development of automotive technologies, you can be sure some futuristic stuff is about to go down. How does invisible rain sound to you? Intel, along with Carnegie Mellon University, has come up with an idea for a new headlight system that can make rain seem to disappear from the driver's direct line of sight.

According to CNET, the headlight uses a camera housed within the headlight assembly to detect rain (and presumably snow or hail) as it falls, and then it uses a processor to anticipate the path of the rain. Finally, the actual light is created by a projector, which uses the information supplied by the processor to block out the pixels where the rain is expected to be. This technology, as you can see in the image above, should help improve visibility since there will be less light reflected back at the driver by raindrops.

For now, the only way you can see this rain-cancelling technology is in a demonstration in the video report posted below, but Intel thinks that it could make its way into production within the next 10 years.

Continue reading Intel developing headlights that make rain invisible [w/video]

Intel developing headlights that make rain invisible [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 29 Apr 2013 12:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.autoblog.com/2013/04/29/intel-developing-headlights-that-make-rain-invisible-w-video/

Lucas di Grassi Cecil Green Keith Greene Masten Gregory

Drinking It In: Five Questions before Richmond

Source: http://www.skirtsandscuffs.com/2013/04/drinking-it-in-five-questions-before.html

Bill Homeier Kazuyoshi Hoshino Jerry Hoyt Nico Hülkenberg

Infiniti to Build Extended-Wheelbase Q50 for Chinese Market [2013 Shanghai Auto Show]

This U.S.-market Q50 will see its wheelbase stretched for the limousine- tastes of China.

To accommodate the tastes of the Chinese market, where those with the means to own a premium vehicle often prefer to enjoy it from the luxury of the back seat, Infiniti has announced a long-wheelbase version of it’s Q50 sedan. The extended-wheelbase Q50, as well as the Chinese-market QX50 compact crossover—what the EX37 will come to be known as once Infiniti’s lineup-wide change in nomenclature goes into effect—will be built at the company’s Xiangyang plant in China beginning next year.



China is Infiniti’s second-largest market and is crucial to expanding the brand’s presence in the premium segments. Nissan’s luxury arm also cited the importance of market-specific and locally-produced offerings as further reasons for the China-specific Q50. Still, laying out some serious cash for a purported sports sedan and then leaving driving to the hired help seems awfully wasteful to us—kind of like ordering a steak dinner from Gibsons and then taking it home just to watch the dog inhale it. Regardless, the stretch phenomenon doesn’t appear to be going away anytime soon: just last year BMW revealed its Chinese-market extended-wheelbase 3-series.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/caranddriver/blog/~3/IQu7jHs7A-0/

Theo Helfrich Mack Hellings Brian Henton Johnny Herbert

Today’s Headlines

  • Cuomo Announces Sweeping Transit Upgrades: 30 More Subway Stations Have Wi-Fi Service (NYT)
  • Impassioned City Council Votes to Impose Fines for E-Bike Possession (Advance)
  • Pershing Square, Outside Grand Central, to Become Permanent Pedestrian Plaza (NYT)
  • Community Board 12 Endorses Washington Heights Plaza (DNA)
  • Stanley Williams, 50, Killed Trying to Cross Harlem River Drive (DNA)
  • Three Hurt in SoHo Curb-Jump Crash; NYPD: “No Criminality” (DNA)
  • Opponents Say East 91st Street Waste Station Would Be Dangerous to Kids (DNA)
  • CapNY Talks With Jerry Nadler About the Long History of the Cross-Harbor Freight Tunnel
  • Post Can’t Decide What It Hates More: “Rogue” Cyclists or Traffic Etiquette Program
  • Manhattan Street Vendors Protest Bike-Share Stations, Refrain From Vandalizing (Gothamist)
  • NIMBYism a Time-Honored Tradition on PPW (Curbed), But Kips Bay Is a Contender (DNA)

More headlines at Streetsblog Capitol Hill

Source: http://www.streetsblog.org/2013/04/26/todays-headlines-1623/

Armour Vienna Sausage Kroger Chevrolet Clint Bowyer Zaxby s Chevrolet Brad Keselowski

Team Chevy 2013 NSCS Toyota Owners 400 Post-Race Recaps

Chevy Bowtie Symbol
Chevy Bowtie Symbol
KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 BELL HELICOPTER CHEVROLET SS – RACE WINNER
WALK US THROUGH THOSE FINAL LAPS AND THE PASSES YOU MADE TO GO FROM SEVENTH TO FIRST:

“That was a heck of a first lap of the restart. I thought that the outside line might have the advantage because it had a couple of guys with new tires in the second row, and lined up on the outside. But the two tires – these cars drive a lot off the left rear – and we only took two tires, and they didn’t get that great of restart but my car launched, and I was able to drive it in the first corner and hope for the best down there. I figured four, eight, 12…how many ever tires that were on the outside of me would be better than none. It all worked out, and here we are.”

WHEN THE CAUTION CAME OUT, YOU WERE CATCHING JUAN PABLO MONTOYA FOR THE LEAD, WHAT DID YOU THINK AND WHAT WAS YOUR DISCUSSION WITH GIL MARTIN?
“Just about how few laps there was left. But, when the tires fall off almost two seconds, you’ve got to come in and get tires. There’s not very many guys that stayed out. It all worked out tonight. We’ve been on the other side of it this year, so to be in Victory Lane is great.”

WHEN YOU CAME OUT SEVENTH, WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE SAID IF YOU WERE TOLD THEN YOU WERE GOING TO WIN?
“I knew we had a chance because we were the second car on four tires. You never know what two tires is going to do on a high tire-wear track like this. So, it all just opened up.”

ON THE WIN:

“Well, I just want to thank everybody. It’s been a tough start to the season. Our cars have been really fast. I’ve got to thank Bell Helicopter, Budweiser, Jimmy John’s, and Chevrolet and everybody who participates in this car. Richard Childress, you know, a lot of people have thought we might lay down this year and there ain’t no lame in that game, is there? It was a great night.”

THE PHRASE ‘LAME DUCK’ HAS BEEN USED BEFORE, BUT THERE WAS CERTAINLY NOTHING LAYING DOWN TONIGHT. YOU HAD TO MAKE A DECISION THERE WHEN THAT CAUTION CAME OUT, WHETHER TO STAY OUT OR COME IN FOR TIRES. I GUESS YOU GUYS MADE THE RIGHT CHOICE

“It all worked out. Sprint Cup racing is something that you’ve got to take chances and they guys that stayed out took chances and we had to take chances. But we’ve gotten beat a couple times this year and I thought it was the right thing to do and (crew chief) Gil (Martin) made the right call and it worked out.” 

JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 DEPEND CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED FOURTH
YOUR THOUGHTS AS YOU SAW THAT LATE CAUTION COME OUT WHILE YOU WERE LEADING:
“Pissed off.  Everybody on the Depend Chevy this week did an amazing job. We had a great car. Same as last week, we had a great car. The pit crew redeemed themselves tonight. They did a great job all day, no mistakes. That is what we needed. We needed to come out of here and do with everybody smart, as he did. It is the luck of the draw. We restarted on the outside, and we were screwed.”

GREAT MOMENTUM FOR NEXT WEEK:
“I felt like last week we had a top-five car as well, but not quite a car to win. I think this weekend…we came here and tested, and the guys did an amazing job, and we had a good car all weekend.”

I GUESS ALL YOU CAN DO IS LAUGH. IT LOOKED LIKE IT WAS YOUR RACE TO WIN

“Yeah, we made the right calls when we pitted and when we stayed out and everything, but we got that caution at the end and it was a no-brainer to take tires. And I think what hurt us is we restarted on the outside and when you restart on the outside and people got really bad tires, everything packs up. And when you’re on the outside, you can’t; you know, where are you going to jump? When you are on the inside, you can just jump to the guys. And when (Kevin) Harvick went by I tried to get to the bottom and then the No. 22 (Joey Logano) was there and I said we’ve just got to get a finish. Remember, before this we had six really bad weeks. I thought everybody on the Depend Chevy did a really good job and I’m just really proud of the guys.”

WHEN THE CAUTION FLAG CAME OUT, WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?

“I said, ‘Really? Really?’ (laughs).”

JEFF BURTON, NO. 31 AIRGAS/BULWARK CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED FIFTH
ON HIS RACE:
“We were seventh there; thought I had the No. 22 (Joey Logano) beat before the caution came out. The caution came out and what the heck, we might as well try something. Luke (Lambert) made a good call there, and obviously new tires a lot better. But, worth a shot. We were going to maybe finish sixth without the caution so to pick up a spot from it was worth a shot.”

HOW MUCH DID THE RACE TRACK CHANGE TONIGHT?
“I thought it changed a lot. I thought Kevin (Harvick) and I both got better at the end of the race. I thought some other cars got worse as the race went on. But Kevin got good at the end of the race. He was his best at the end; we were our best at the end. I think all of that was the track changing and kind of going to our setups a little bit.”

KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW RACING/SEALY CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED NINTH
TALK US THROUGH WHAT HAPPENED IN THOSE FINAL MOMENTS OF THIS RACE:

“It was an awesome run just to be in the top-five all night. Just nice and steady, waiting for the race to come to us. We didn’t make many adjustments on the Furniture Row car. We were hoping to be on the right sequence at the end. Some guys had older tires. Some guys had newer tires. We were in the mixed. A green-white-checkered at the end, it is just chaos. Cars are everywhere. People are beating and banging and shoving each other out of the way. It’s pretty wild.”

WHAT WAS SAID BETWEEN YOU AND TONY STEWART:
“Why don’t you be a good reporter and talk about the racing. Tony and I talked it over; it’s a free-for-all at the end.”

WHAT TOOK PLACE BETWEEN YOU AND TONY STEWART?

“We’ll get to that in a minute. For us, this was a solid run with our Furniture Row car. We were there. We were top 5 all night. Some guys cycled ahead of us. Some guys we were able to get back by on long runs. So all in all, it was a great night for us to be in the top 5, have restarts up front, and lead some laps. And then, you could just tell. Green-white-checkered; everybody is going to put on tires. Some guys are going to do two. Some guys stayed out. And it’s just a free for all. There is rubber build-up in the outside groove. There are cars sliding up with old tires. So, I don’t know what the No. 14 (Tony Stewart) was upset about. I got hit from behind. I got hit every which-way. So did he. (Matt) Kenseth moved us up out of the way at the end, so that’s why I was upset with him, but hey; everybody is a free-for-all. We got a top 10. But the biggest thing here is ten laps ago, this car didn’t have a scratch on it and now it’s destroyed.”

WHEN YOU LOOK AT THIS RACE TODAY, WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO TAKE-AWAY AS YOU CONTINUE TO BUILD WITH THIS ENTIRE OPERATION?

“Just being able to work together through sequences of the race. And today, we didn’t quite have the best handling car, but we worked with it in the top 5 and we hoped that the race would come to us. Today, it just didn’t pan out. But today was a great day to be in the top 5; we posted a top 10. And we’ve got to go for wins. That’s where we’re going to be able to make the Chase and be in the top 20 in points.”

About Chevrolet

Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 140 countries and selling more than 4.5 million cars and trucks a year.  Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature spirited performance, expressive design, and high quality. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

Source: Team Chevy

The article Team Chevy 2013 NSCS Toyota Owners 400 Post-Race Recaps is from Catchfence.

Source: http://www.catchfence.com/2013/sprintcup/04/28/team-chevy-2013-nscs-toyota-owners-400-post-race-recaps/

Nicolas Kiesa Leo Kinnunen Danny Kladis Hans Klenk

Goke Delivers at Michigan

The last time the ISOWC drivers came to Michigan, the race came  down to the last lap. This time was no different.

The last 30 laps of the 2013 ISOWC Michigan 400 lived up to reputation, by delivering it all. Excitement, confusion, drama, and high emotions. Who could expect less from the track where over the two years previous, no driver could be certain of their finishing position until the last corner of the last lap? The first 345 miles of the 400 mile race went without caution, beating the series record of 309.8 miles set in 2012 at Twin Ring Motegi, and becoming only the third race in series history to go green for more than 300 miles. To say that it wasn’t eventful however would be a lie, as drivers had to get the job done over three rounds of pit stops, separating and bringing the field together over numerous occasions.

For Aero X’s Randy Crossno, getting to the lead and staying there was the order of the day. The most successful sim-racer in the ISOWC at Michigan had finished in the top 2 on both previous visits to the 2 mile speedway, losing out by less than 0.001 on the latter occasion. Randy led the most laps and set the fastest lap in the race, but his day was ended prematurely after a bad spotter call caused an incident between himself and Eric Vanek.

Points leader Denis Garese struggled early on, running outside the Top 10 for much of the first half of the race. After being one of a number of drivers to lose the draft to the lead pack in the early stages, he had to rely on help from Jon Porzuc to move forward, showing the fact that at Michigan, even rivals will put their team colors to one side to achieve the common goal of working their way to the front. Denis was able to stay on the lead lap for much of the race, before losing out in the fourth round of pit stops.

Garese’s biggest challenger in the points, Dave Judson was running at the front of the pack for most of the day, before disaster struck, and he was given a stop and hold penalty for an unsafe pit exit. Race control deemed him to have had two wheels above the yellow line before the safe merge point, and many thought his day was done as he fell a lap down. He said the following about his race:

“Tristan kept asking us on TS, to do a nice line. It was hard to do it with the other cars around us . . .” – Dave Judson

“Our cars lack of speed with full tank and we were forming a group behind, with Bram and Pierre. During our efforts to form a line Eric had an unfortunate contact with Pierre. we had to be more careful to finish the race. Tristan kept asking us on TS, to do a nice line. It was hard to do it with the other cars around us and we were losing time on the lead group. In fact it seems that Jon was there to make it even harder so we can not catch up. Anyway there were still a lot of laps do do.”

Elsewhere, Jon Goke showed his form once again, being towards the front of the group, and despite a bad 2nd pitstop, was closing in on Randy Crossno. Luck was on his side on his fourth pit stop, able to get out just ahead of the pacecar as the yellow flew, and was able to stay on the lead lap, enabling him to fight on for the win. Jon Porzuc was having a tough day, falling back on the first pitstop, then having to find help where it came, first with Garese, then with Broken Aero’s Gary Borkenhagen. Eric Vanek also was strong early on, before pit issues.

Friends off the racetrack, friendly rivals on, Wil Vincent and James McClure spent much of the day in a stalemate, after both making mistakes in their first pitstop. Vincent overshot his pitbox, losing the draft, and spent the entire second stint 1.9 seconds behind McClure as the two were lapping identically. Vincent said after the race:

“Stint 1 was great, was able to run out front, but couldn’t quite get the lead on the high lane. Then I messed up my first pit stop and me and James were Pretty equal in clean air, then it was downhill with more pit woes. I tried my hardest to stay on the lead lap, but was involved in a big battle with TM Hauser, and Randy slipped by whilst we were fighting for position”.

The Last 30 Laps
After over 170 laps of racing, the first caution of the day flew whilst a number of cars were on pit road. Race control froze the order as they were when the flag flew, so Goke was able to luck out and get the race lead, with just a handful of cars remaining on the lead lap, and half the field scored one lap down. Things were always going to be difficult on the restart, with the single file rule and guys on different fuel loads meaning that drivers had to get going perfectly, or risk losing the pack. Unfortunately for Randy Crossno, and Eric Vanek, a bad spotter call meant that the two came together, putting them both out of the race, and causing the second caution of the day.

The one victor out of this was Dave Judson, who stayed out under the previous caution to get back onto the lead lap, and was able to top up with Sonoco race gas, meaning he was good to go till the end. TM Hauser was able to get up to second in line, before the caution came out, and was the biggest loser, having to line up behind all the lead lap cars, and costing him the opportunity at getting back on the lead lap. ISOWC/iRacing rules state that if a caution means there is less than 10 laps of Green Flag racing before the end of the race, then the previous rule of lapped down cars starting “In Line” is negated, to allow all drivers on the lead lap to race for victory. In the case here, it was to prove the start of a very unfortunate period of the race to TM, and his Vortex team.

“I was praying for a yellow from lap 10 after I re-arranged the front suspension and aero package slightly.” – Bram Venneman

Approaching the Green Flag for the restart, TM spun his tyres, and his car shot across the racetrack, into the outside SAFER barrier, just missing his Vortex Team Mates and Wil Vincent. Expecting the caution to come out immediately, Denis Garese and Eric Luval both slowed down, but the caution didn’t come for another 10 seconds, placing Vincent ahead. Despite the claims of bias, race control held their ground, and it was now Vincent leading the charge of cars one lap down.

There were however just four cars on the lead lap of the 13 still running, namely 3 Banshee Autosport drivers and 1 Panther Online Racing driver. A couple of the cars remaining in the race had suffered some minor damage, most notably Bram Venneman, who commented:

“I was praying for a yellow from lap 10 after I re-arranged the front suspension and aero package slightly, typical that we get 170 laps of green just as I needed a yellow badly.”

Randy Crossno once again lead the way early, before slipping to a career-worst ISOWC Michigan finish.

On the final restart, the top four drivers all got a good restart, and fell into a four car pack, with Vincent about a further half second back, but able to break away from the other cars a lap down. Coming to the white flag, it was still anyone’s race, and through Turns 3 and 4 it looked as though Jon Porzuc might sneak by at the line. Jon Goke however kept the momentum on the inside out of Turn 4, and with James McClure behind him, was able to use the draft to take victory by 0.059, once again providing the close finish Michigan had become famous for.

Goke becomes the first double winner in the 2013 ISOWC, having previously won the Spring race at Pocono, and shoots up to third place in the championship. After the race, we caught up with him: (URL to MP3: http://www.isowc.org/uploads/mich400goke.mp3)

Dave Judson was able to close the gap to Denis Garese in the championship by coming home two places ahead of the Frenchman, however, one of the stand out drives had to goto McClure who was in potentially foreign territory the last 20 laps, but still came home third. Denis Garese kept the championship points standings with a 6th place finish, and after the race had the following to say:

“Was hoping Dave would try to take the inside on the last lap, as I felt I could get a run on the outside. He stayed high and I was able to get under him through the corner. Coming to the line, the wide open space below the white line looked really inviting and instinctively started to move down there, but didn’t want to be that guy. Couldn’t be happier with a podium finish in a great league!”

This week, the series moves on to Phoenix International Raceway, and the last oval race of the first Mini Championship. Goke and Judson have it all to do before Laguna Seca, as the Vortex driver of Garese has been much stronger on the road courses. With 250 laps of action, on a track which never allows drivers time to breathe, it will surely be yet another interesting race.

Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/iracing-news/goke-delivers-at-michigan

Kurt Thomas Busch Kyle Thomas Busch Jeffrey Tyler Burton Richard Allen Craven

McLaren Electronics wins major award

McLaren Technology CentreMcLaren Electronic Systems has received the Queen’s Award for Enterprise 2013.


The firm, the McLaren Group’s electronics division, also won a Queen’s Award for innovation in 2009.


MES supplies control ECUs to Formula 1, the NASCAR Sprint Cup and the IndyCar Series, alongside activities in non-racing industries.


Dr Peter van Manen, MES managing director, said: “We are delighted to have been recognised in the Queen’s Awards for the growth of our international trade.


“We are proud that our technology is at the heart of international motor racing and that we are able to translate it into other important markets.”


Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/formula-one-news/f1-formula-one-news/mclaren-electronics-wins-major-award

Charles Robert Hamilton V Kevin Michael Harvick Virgil Ernest Irvan III Kenny Dale Irwin Jr

Duval Claims Championship and Leads the Charge into NiPS

With Chicagoland now in the books, so is the first NASCAR iRacing.com Class A Series (NiCAS) season of 2013. The Gen6 cars threw a curveball to drivers and teams, as well as delayed the start of the season, but ten drivers were able to adjust on the fly better than anyone and will be rewarded with a trip to the 2013 NASCAR iRacing.com Pro Series (NiPS). The new style stockcars evened the playing field for everyone, and it showed in the final standings as there was a refreshing mix of new and old faces at the top.iRacing.com Motorsport Simulations

Dylan Duval is a driver that has had a lot of success on the iRacing.com service in the trucks, but has now elevated himself to the top of the charts in the NiCAS to take home the 2013 Season 1 Overall Championship. With ten wins and twenty top fives in his thirty starts, Duval put up outstanding numbers all the while competing in mostly 5000+ SoF races. Brandon Atkinson finished a distant second, earning himself the second seed into the 2013 NiPS. Atkinson only snagged three wins on the year, but in a series like the NiCAS where attrition is always a factor, consistency is key. Rounding out the top three was Kenny Humpe, who will be a definite favorite in the upcoming NiPS.

Brandon Buie was not on the radar of many people when the season kicked off, but after an impressive fourth place overall finish and a transfer into the NiPS, he will have a hard time flying under the radar anytime soon. Former NiPS competitor Justin Trombley will be making a return to the prominent series as he rounds out the top five, just four points behind fourth place Buie. Kevin Burris from Hamlet, NC showed up big for season one, finishing sixth overall, with Tyler Laughlin from Knoxville, TN finishing seventh and also advancing to the NiPS. Lee Herron, former pro Nic Morse, and PJ Stergios rounded out the top ten and will all advance. Brian Day was the first man out by a mere twenty points as he will now have to suit up for Season Two.iRacing.com Motorsport Simulations

Returning NiPS driver Kenny Humpe and current NASCAR iRacing.com Series World Championship (NiSWC) driver Brandon Schmidt tied for most wins on the season with eleven. However the slight edge goes to Humpe who did it in twenty races, compared to Schmidt’s twenty nine. The Champion Dylan Duval was the only other driver with double digit wins on the season with ten. Jim J Robinson yarded the field in top fives with thirty five on the season, while Schmidt led the way in poles with sixteen.

In an effort to make point battles competitive and fun for everyone involved, iRacing.com splits drivers into ten divisions with drivers who have similar skillsets. This allows for less experienced drivers to still have the challenge of points racing, as they gain experience. It also allows for ten very happy people at seasons end, instead of just one.iRacing.com Motorsport Simulations

Patrick Davis Jr. led the charge of Division Two drivers to claim the title by over 100 points, while the Californian Michael Clemente took home Division Three honors. CW Webster put distance between himself and second place Paul Beardmore in Division Four, while Nate Chodur claimed Division Five in another runaway. Division Six was much closer as Chuck Earnest edged Scott Bolster by thirty seven points, while Division Seven went to Don Norris by a wide margin. Justin Erickson dominated Division Eight, Thomas Engle took Division Nine, and the final Champion is Brian Guedesse of Division ten.

With one season now in the books with the new Gen6 stockcars, teams have developed a notebook of things the car likes and doesn’t like. As well as drivers now having experience adjusting to what the car needs behind the wheel to make speed. Look for even closer racing next season as more teams begin to figure out the cars and look to race their way into the NiPS.

Source: http://www.iracing.com/inracingnews/all-news/duval-claims-championship-and-leads-the-charge-into-nips

Jacky Ickx Yuji Ide Jesús Iglesias Taki Inoue