
(Thanks to where2race.com)
Moderator: Mike Simanyi
Haha. Quite trueRick Brown wrote:...
True... but no other race series has as wide a field of vehicles, prep levels etc as we do. We have purpose built race cars (AM), to other series race cars (F2000/F1600, KM etc) to your most basic grocery getter (Yaris)Julian Manolov wrote:Haha. Quite trueRick Brown wrote:...![]()
LeMans, WRC, etc. no serious race series including multiple classes use silly multipliers... Overall winner is always the fastest raw time
Since I mentioned LeMans and WRC ... their grids are quite mixed if you look at the speeds between the different classes. Parity is not expected.Craig Naylor wrote:There is no "serious race series" as you called it where a grid would include: a F1, Top Fuel Dragster, NASCAR, and a 450 MX bike waiting for a green flag, and expecting some form of parity between them.
Actually 24hr Lemans and other 24hr type races are actually bad examples to show your point. Fastest Raw speed does NOT sit atop the podium. Most completed laps does, often it's not by the fastest car or even class on the track, but the one who spent the least time making repairs and other off track time.Julian Manolov wrote:Look at the 24h of LeMans - the P1 class is way way faster than the GT class. There are separate class results for GT and P1 but there are the overall results which pretty much everyone quotes. Overall results are by raw speed (number of laps in the particular case)
Some series do multiple laps, some do stages ... some refuel, some allow repairs. But it is the car with the highest average speed from the start flag to the finish flag travelling a certain track distance (distance sometimes calculated from imposed time limit). Sure, distance can slightly vary when you sometimes travel through pits but it is not that much variance in the big picture.Craig Naylor wrote:Actually 24hr Lemans and other 24hr type races are actually bad examples to show your point. Fastest Raw speed does NOT sit atop the podium. Most completed laps does, often it's not by the fastest car or even class on the track, but the one who spent the least time making repairs and other off track time.
So our end of the race is one completed single lap. If they break down on the first lap and don't post a time you can take the overall winCraig Naylor wrote:For most other motorsports, To sit atop the winners podium, you need to get to the end of the race, in AX you just need one fast lap for TTOD. Hell I bet a lot of NASCAR teams would run very different races if they just needed that ONE FASTEST LAP to win.
KJ's & Kessels cars often hold TTOD, but they would loose in your Lemans comparison, as they often don't complete all the laps afforded them (3,4, what ever).