Posts Tagged ‘Chevy Impala’

2010 Special Event – iRacing Daytona 500 – 14th Place

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

This race is a tale of what might have been: The evening before the iRacing Daytona 500 I changed my PCs motherboard is preparation for a graphics card upgrade and unfortunately although I reinstalled Windows 7, reinstalled a bunch of programs, got iRacing working, etc, I forgot to do something terribly important…

On Saturday 13th February, 2010 I was unable to run the 500, but got in a quick qualifying session for my race on the 20th just 15 minutes before the race session: I set a 48.075 and this would put me in 11th-place to start the race.

With 30 minutes of warm-up, it gave everybody plenty of time to check their setup, practice put stops, etc. I personally just practiced getting into and off pit road at speed and missed an opportunity to notice and correct that ‘terribly important’ thing once again…

The start of the iRacing Daytona 500.

The start of the iRacing Daytona 500.


I have to admit, I believed this race was going to be fairly easy for me. I didn’t know that I’d win it, but I knew I had won the first ever official race with this car in the service and just a week earlier I had finished second in a NASCAR Class A race. I ran the pace lap in fourth-gear so I would use as little fuel as possible and when the green flag flew I gained a single position, moving up to tenth.

We raced through a few cautions in the early laps, but things remained fairly constant for me until lap 15: It was the first time I’d really had to slam on the brake and when I did so it must have knocked my calibration off (recalibrating was the ‘terribly important’ thing I’d forgotten to do). At that point I was running 12th and just biding my time, but unknown to me the brake was now dragging and I hadn’t noticed the tiny sliver of red on the brake indicator.

Over the next 100 laps or so I just went backwards. At the time I believed I had lost an engine cylinder and was down on power, it wasn’t until about lap 114 that I realized what had happened, having finally noticed that the brake indicator was showing applied brakes.

Initially I just pulled back on the brake with my left foot while pushing on the throttle with my right, but after I began to experience cramping I managed to fix it for good on lap 164. However, during those last few laps I had had enormous fun: I normally wait until there’s ten laps remaining before I push really hard to get to the front, but knowing my position I used a combination of strategy, aggression and good luck to come back from two laps down to one, and come back from 22nd-place on lap 114 to 14th as the race ended.

Three-wide at Daytona.

Three-wide at Daytona.


Every position was hard fought and it was enormous fun to be forced to concentrate for that long: It reminded me of the way I had felt during the iRacing Rolex 2.4. The only difference really with the iRacing Daytona 500 was that it was an unpredictable type of racing and that was proved when on lap 194 of 200, I got involved in a big wreck that started ahead of me in the pack.

So I ended with mixed emotions, just like everyone else: At one point I had resigned myself to just running for safety rating with a damaged engine, but I ended up having a lot of fun in some really tight racing. I had very few incidents (scraped the wall on lap 100, car contact on 190, the wreck on 194 and an off track on 198 while I got out of the way of the other cars on the final restart), but I still can’t help but think what might have happened had I not been trailing brake for half of the race!

My only real solace is that if this were real life, NASCAR would have probably forced me to start at the back anyway due to an ‘engine change’ in my PC… Starting back there I probably would have gotten involved in one of those early accidents and wouldn’t have had the fun I did during the race. Maybe next year I’ll be able to finish on the lead lap!


View playlist on Youtube.

2010S1 Week 1 – NASCAR Class A – Daytona – 2nd Place

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

This was a fun race, and it’s difficult because now after the good finish I have the tough decision of whether I should try to make a full season with the NASCAR Class A series in iRacing, or not. I usually don’t have that much time to race, so I’ve stuck to the Class D series’ recently (short, punchy races are a lot of fun, too), but we’ll see. I was, after all, the first person to ever win a race with this car in the iRacing service, so I just joined to make sure I still had what it takes to win ahead of the iRacing Daytona 500 World Tour event.

If you would like to run the 2010 iRacing.com Daytona 500, check out this promotional video I made that features a great promo (3 months, free COT, free Daytona – $32).

Anyway, let’s talk about my race…

I qualified in second-place with a 47.830. I was just using the (new) Advanced setup for the car (which is actually quite good now) and knew that I had a good shot.

I started well and slotted into third-place on lap one. Everyone raced side by side successfully with only one hairy moment when the car ahead of me touched the apron in turn four. On lap 30 there was a wreck ahead of me and I just managed to clear it. I pitted, coming out in sixth-place.

For the entire race I had been experimenting with the high line. It seemed that if I was overtaking on the outside I could do it by myself as long as I wasn’t near the front, once I got closer to the leader on the high side the air just knocked me back. After the restart from the caution on lap 30 I knew this and decided to wait until ten laps to go before I pushed for the lead.

So, with ten to go I went for it, I was moving up from fifth-place and luckily caught the fourth-place man as he had a blip in his connection. I just snuck my nose on the inside and he had to give way. At the same time the second-place car had bobbled up in the turn and I followed the inside cars through, moving into third almost straight away.

I wasn’t able to move into second-place until lap 64 of 70, when the second-place car bobbled in the turn just enough for me to stick my nose on the inside again. It was close, but being a clean racer he knew he had to give me the inside and just said “Damn it!” over the in-race radio… Now I just had to pass the man who had been leading since lap 17!

I certainly tried my best. I tried to look for a gap on the low side, but one never came. I tried to go high on the backstretch, but always decided to slot back into second. Eventually I decided that after hearing others complain about not being able to hold the car down in the turns, I’d try and see if I could make the leader have that problem… So I started to bump draft at the end of the straight, hoping he’d have to run up the banking and give me the low-side.

Unfortunately, the leader was always glued to that inside line and eventually I started to bump draft simply to try to stay ahead of the outside line which was forming. I crossed the line a mere 0.070s behind.


Watch on Youtube.

So, like I said: I am not sure if I will compete for a championship in the NASCAR Class A Series. Certainly feeling pretty good about the World Tour event though… Daytona 500, here I come!

Marcos Ambrose & iRacing

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Another video I put together this morning. A version of it will be going up at RaceSavers.com (Marcos’ regular sponsor), but that version will have a promo code. Expect more from the Ambrose and iRacing partnership in the future. :)

iRacing – New Decals on Cars

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Another one which was posted in the iRacing forum. This is a brief look at how the paint kit is getting a little different sometime soon. :)

Two Chevy Impala SS cars at Talladega - sporting new logos.

Two Chevy Impala SS cars at Talladega - sporting new logos.

iRacing Impala SS Cup (2009-01-31 8:00 pm) – I take victory in the first ever Impala race!

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

I really can’t believe I managed to do this… But, I won the first ever Chevy Impala top-level stock car race within the iRacing service. I felt in contention the whole way and I don’t feel like it was just luck – I feel I earned it.

It is the start of a new season, 2008 Season III is finished and now, finally, we’re on Season IV. Here’s how my licenses started the season:

My Class A licenses.

Under an hour before the race, I ran a practice and qualifying session. I felt pretty competitive in the practice using the default advanced setup, so entered the qualifying session at 7:45 pm, setting a time of 47.832. I registered to race at 8:00 pm and found that my qualifying time meant I would line up third in the starting order.

I got a decent start and very quickly found just how little you’re able to see when running in a pack of these new cars. They’re very wide on the back end and the rear wing completely takes away the ability most stock cars give where you can look through the windows of the car ahead for extra vision. So, feeling blind I wanted to get up-front and try to stay out of danger…

I managed to move into 2nd place by lap 2, but by lap 4 had dropped to 8th. I steadily moved up and on lap 16 while in 5th place, I saw an accident ahead of me after someone had taken too much of the apron in the turn… He came up the track and hit someone, who spun straight across my nose, taking my steering out of alignment.

I tried pitting, but when that didn’t work, reset the car. On lap 22 the race would restart and I found myself in a lowly 11th place. There had been a number of cautions already, so I figured it was likely there would be more and knew I either needed to hang back, or push forwards… I pushed forwards!

Over the next four laps I had an incredible run. I moved from 11th to 2nd almost magically as the spaces just opened up for me. There was a little scare when someone made door to door contact with me – but for the most part I just had to stay patient and wait for the gap.

For the next 17 laps (until lap 42) I ran in 2nd place, seemingly unable to make a pass (I knew that nobody would help me on the high side if I pulled out). Then, going around turns 3 and 4 at Daytona I saw the leader drifting up in the turn and knew I needed to stick my nose in the gap… Thankfully the other driver was clean and although he tried very hard to squeeze me into lifting off completely to give him room – I didn’t… I took the lead!

We went through another couple of cautions and then restarted for the final time on lap 62 of 65. I had heard the former leader talking during the cautions and had seen them working on the high line on the previous green flag laps, so I knew they would be coming hard – and they did – because with about 2 laps to go I had already accepted I probably wouldn’t win…

As it turns out, a car in the low lane drifted up and hit the side of the 3rd car in the high line, this slowed that third car down enough that he lost the draft to the cars ahead, meaning that for just a few seconds we were 3 on the bottom and 2 on the top and there was no way they were going to win that battle… They gradually drifted back and I won with a best laptime of 46.960 set on lap 23 (during my charge to 2nd place).

It’s unfortunate that my Safety Rating went down, but it’ll work itself out. At least now that I am Class A all I have to worry about is staying above 2.0 to avoid demotion!

I managed to get Sony Vegas from Amazon for an absolute steal (there’s still one there for about $33), so you may notice a few extra effects being slowly brought into my videos! I hope you like this one. It includes my charge between laps 22 and 26, me taking the lead, me leading the pack and then me holding them off for the win.


HD also available.

Tips to a better quality screenshot/video with iRacing

Friday, January 30th, 2009
Chevy Impala (Mine is on the inside).

Chevy Impala (Mine is on the inside).

I’ve never really had top of the line equipment with my simracing, so I have managed to pick up a few tricks and now that replays are enabled within iRacing, I’m going to start using them again.

Basically, when all the software has to do is display the replay, there’s a lot of CPU, RAM and maybe a little Graphics Processor left over. Why are they left over? Well, because you’re not driving while watching that replay! So, simply turn up your graphics settings, open the replay and enjoy superb graphics your machine can normally only dream of during races… When you’re done with the glorious effects, switch them back!

Here’s the basic instructions:

1. Save your replay (preferably a cut segment of it so it’s easier to find what you want to capture).
2. Make a note of all the settings you currently have on your graphics page. If you have never altered the graphics settings before, then you’re using the defaults, just make note of that instead and follow the applicable instruction later.
3. Turn all the graphics to the maximum, but do not touch the memory slider in the center. You may also increase the resolution (as long as it is supported by your display) to a much higher one than you would normally be able to race with.
4. Exit the sim.
5. Go to the replays page and load the replay.
6. You should now have a viewable replay in high graphical settings. Take your screenshots, capture your videos…
7. When finished, exit the sim/replay viewer.
8a. If you were using the default graphics settings simply open the Instruction section of the members site, click Quick Start Guide, then select Configuring Your Hardware on the left side. Select Auto Configure and your settings are now back where they were.
8b: If you had configured your own graphics settings before this, simply open a test session and set all the graphics setting back to how you noted them, then quit the sim.
9. Open a test session to confirm everything looks as normal.

Note: Some hardware may not support maximum graphics. If the sim fails to load, go to #8a above (or click here) and follow instructions to reset your graphics settings. If the replay itself fails to load, then it is too large: Lower your graphics settings, load the replay, then cut it into sections.

The only real limiting factor for this whole thing, is texture memory. My graphics card has quite a lot of memory, so can show some really nice textures, yours may not, so things might not look quite so sharp. This is why you shouldn’t really fool around with what the default iRacing setting is for video memory because really your card has, what it has.

If any of you still run NASCAR Racing 2003 Season or Grand Prix Legends, both made by the same people behind iRacing, you can do similar to this with those simulations also.