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Old 27 Sep 2016, 17:09 (Ref:3675546)   #178
canaglia
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canaglia should be qualifying in the top 10 on the gridcanaglia should be qualifying in the top 10 on the grid
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Originally Posted by Mike Hedlund View Post
Was the #4 the prototype I hit in the last chicane? If so, I left him plenty of room and went to the brakes early to make it easy for him to overtake me. He spun on turn-in and instead of doing what any reasonable driver would have done (let the car roll back off the racing surface onto the paved runoff and out of the way), he held the brakes the brakes and I hit him square in the side while trying to dive under him.

It ruined our race as it put a huge hole in the front of the car that killed front downforce and our top speed (drag). Even without that, we've had some sort of issue with our chassis ever since it was used at the last minute for the LM24 -- Wolf has consistently been 1-2+ seconds off whichever pro is driving the other chassis, and I think we can all agree that he's a pretty good driver (regardless of what you think of me.. :-)).

Anyway -- we still had a shot at a podium at the end, but the safety cars really ruined our strategy since Wolf was in the car for both (which meant he only had 3 green flag laps). We had to roll the dice and pit Marco at the last stop and not do tires to get him out ahead of the green Ferrari -- that was our only chance since they were going to be a lot faster no matter what. In the last 10 minutes or so Marco was a sitting duck as we were around 4 seconds a lap slower than the Ferrari (who had fresh tires and a fully functioning car).

Overall, racing a GTE car at Spa was one of the coolest things I've ever done, even if it was difficult to drive and I didn't do as good of a job as I should have. A bunch of the prototype drivers (but not all of them) were complete c*nts the entire weekend. GTE and LMP3 cars really do not mix well with their current performance windows, it's not enjoyable to be in a race with them.

In FP2 a P2 car tried to pass me into T5 and I left him room. He locked up all 4 wheels, went flying passed me and straight through T6. I stayed on-line and hardly lost any time and I came out of T6 on the racing line and he rejoined the track at full speed and chopped me. So I pushed him off the track going into T7. Two laps later I caught a P3 car and he started blocking me to keep from overtaking him. I hit him coming out La Source (on the exit!) as he tried to block me again. That's the first time I damaged the RSR -- both front corners and the nose in one session. But, some of the prototype drivers only understand it when they get hit. There's people driving in the series who have no business being on a race track, let alone in a "professional" series with the speed potentials these cars have.

Sorry for the vent. :-)

-mike

Hi mike, more than once I've read some post of yours. If I remember well, you have experienced driving both ferrari 458 and porsche 911 in your career. Both cars have most of their weight on the rear of the car, but what's the difference of driving feeling and handling between the two cars?
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