Audi Coming to F1 - Design Study

Could Audi make it's way to Formula 1?

That's the question on a lot of people's minds with the new engine regulations set forth for the 2013 season.  Many new manufacturers have expressed interest in returning to or joining Formula 1 for the first time thanks to the new four cylinder turbocharged specifications.  The Head of Volkswagen Motorsport, Kris Nissen, spoke in May 2010 about the potential for Volkswagen to consider entering Formula 1 and other racing series as a result of new regulations surrounding engine specifications. Now that FIA has announced the 2013 F1 regulations stipulating 1.6 liter four cylinder engines be used, it's now closer than ever to see VW enter the series.

Kim Stapleton, an architect and designer, has been interested in this potential for a while now.  Beginning with a initial design study in 2007 and  a recent update in early January 2011, she has undertaken a speculative project to investigate the possiblity of Audi joining Formula 1.  Her exploration resulted in a concept for a car design based on the 2010 Red Bull Toro Rosso car in the images here.  I sure like the design, and given Audi's involvment with Red Bull in other series, it seems like a perfect fit for the Torro Rosso team.

With the potential for international exposure and a chance to race Ferrari, Renault, and Mercedes, will VW push for Audi to be a new team in F1?  What about Porsche, do they seem like a better fit for F1?  Of course, any entry into F1 would effect the other racing series that these brands already compete in.  Given Audi's dominating success in the American Le Mans Series (AMLS), who wouldn't expect them to come out wit.  Of course the question must be asked, how would F1 directly benefit the brand, whether that be VW, Audi or Porsche?  What about Lamborghini?

via Fourtitude

DNQ - So why is it Americans hate F1, again?

For my first entry, I decided to just go for broke and write a treatise on the state of Formula 1 fandom in America. It's long, covers a number of subjects and is probably stiflingly pedantic. Oh, it's so long and rambling you say. Blogs are supposed to be short, quippy and go directly. To. The. Point. In the future I'll be brief and include lots of Youtube links. Scout's honor. So let's just get out of the way. Imagine... imagine this being read to you in the voice of James May. There. Isn't that better? On to the show.

And here we find ourselves, about a month away from the 2011 Formula 1 season. I always wonder at the beginning of a season if and how I might coerce, entrap or otherwise bludgeon a new friend or family member into joining the Formula 1 party crew. Which is basically me. Neither a party or a crew. I digress. Last season was arguably one of the most brutally contested in recent memory. Down to the final race. Epic and exciting stuff! America exerted a collective yawn, scratched and rolled over. 

As a relative latecomer to the F1 party thanks to ignorance and lack of access, but eventually by way of enthusiasm for things that make a lot of noise and go fast, I think the ambivalence it has faced in America over the past few decades is honestly not easily explained away. To set the tone here, we should probably admit our context of the sport is skewed, thanks to our equally skewed perspective of Europeans, arguably the most religious followers of the sport. There's generally a perception that every European lives and breathes the exhaust fumes of 18,000 RPM V8s. Having lived in England, I think I have some degree authority to say that ain't quite the truth. Per capita there are undoubtedly more F1 fans in Europe than the States, but the level of antipathy or downright loathing is proportionately about the same as we see directed toward NASCAR here, or really any other popular sport. Even in Italy, outside of Monza, Rome and Maranello, you'll have a fun time with the GPS finding any sort of F1 memorabilia retailer. Maybe my limited experience is too limited or maybe I'm just flat out wrong, but it seems around the world, Formula 1 is just a segment of a sporting culture as dense and diverse as we know here in the States. It's not the be all, end all of sporting events. That would be soccer… I mean football. Still, F1 thrives everywhere but here. And that's interesting.

Racing is racing in the same way a ball game is a ball game. That's to say, the similarities often end right there at the name of the game. Each series has its own (daunting) learning curve, history, personalities and idiosyncrasies. That doesn't stop half the world from figuring out how the hell cricket is played. I do think F1 is set apart from the majority of sports, however, simply because at least at this point in its history, it's still more about the competition and the tools of competition than the associated, often fabricated drama. Not that there isn't (Webber vs Vettel comes to mind), just to a lesser degree. There still seems to be some of that gentlemanly, brotherhood of warriors vibe hanging around the paddock. Or maybe Bernie simply doesn't want to include that element into the product package? And he holds those reins with a Shaolin monk's deathgrip.  

I personally know NASCAR fans who don't actually watch races. I don't think they really care about the driving so much as the personalities of the drivers, their stories, their conflicts. Again, no disrespect, but they wear the gear and live the lifestyle, and maybe tune in to the post-race recap or any number of programs that offer analysis of the races after the fact... but that more significantly run down the minutiae of the drivers' lives and whatever conflicts are simmering in the conflict cauldron. If you were bored, I have no doubt you could distill an entire NASCAR season into a daily soap opera. Let's not even acknowledge NASCAR romance book clubs, other than to whisper of their existence and tremble with fear. Don't misunderstand this perspective as necessarily disparaging of NASCAR. It's true of any old sporting or entertainment product.  Obviously we don't see F1 in that light simply because it's not high visibility here. Visible at all, really. And again, while I'm sure there's some really interesting stuff happening off the grid and behind the scenes, it's just not promoted as an element of the overall entertainment package. Maybe that's due to the simple fact that Formula 1 by its nature appeals more to the hardcore racing fan, the techie, the gearhead, the Stig wannabe, and less to the drama junkie? OK, there's that Max Mosley thing. You can have Max Mosley. Backing away from that argument... and moving on. 

I don't think it's even that complicated, though. The politics and the drama and the legal issues and the rabble rabble rabble of the worshipping and/or loathing masses. On these shores, Formula 1 is probably quite a lot like soccer in the eyes of the public at large. As the staid old argument goes, Americans just can't relate at a cultural level. No American drivers. No American teams. No American cars. No American races. Elitist Europeans, bah and humbug to you. The reason this site exists and we're here reading and writing about F1 is in response to the elimination of one of those so-called stumbling blocks.  Provided the Mayans and George Lucas are wrong, Austin, Texas will be home to the American Grand Prix starting 2012. So goes the proximity argument. The other relatability issues are a bit trickier though, or at least slightly more intricate sociological arguments. For example, the chances of a factory Ford, Chrysler or GM team is as remote a possibility as Porsche entering NASCAR, and the ironically named Scott Speed was our last contender in the cockpit. The argument... Are we really that nationalistic? Yeah, probably.

Outside the States, the game we call football is called American football, and aside from the odd crowd of university-aged Yankophiles who take over the city park every Sunday afternoon with their buckets of KFC and black-market Raiders sweatshirts, it's not held in especially high esteem. Too slow, too boring, too many breaks for ads, and not as reliant on skill, technique and finesse as their homegrown version. Back in our quadrant of the planet, American audiences tend to think soccer, aka football, is too low-scoring, too boring and takes itself far too seriously. More importantly, we tend to believe the sport, its players and its fans look down on our culture and mock us for enjoying our "inferior" version of the game. That's the biggie. We don't like being told what to think, what to like or how to be. Collectively, that's probably how the majority of Americans understands the European perspective of our culture, including the supposed superiority of F1 to NASCAR or drag racing. There's a certain undeniable snoot factor that spoils many potential fans before they even have a chance to experience a race. The battle lines are drawn as soon as an F1 fans begins an argument with the words, "F1 is the best racing on the planet and NASCAR is a joke, I win, end of argument... now go home to your sister-wife and your mother-daughter, hillbilly troll."

For at least the first half of its existence, at least until NASCAR learned how to market itself, Formula 1 wasn't the exclusive domain of European playboys and Middle Eastern royalty (pardon the gross generalization). American Dan Gurney and his Eagle cars are legendary. The guy was a phenomenal and frequently winning driver who was, and still is, a hero to American racing fans. No American drivers? Tell that to the authoritative source of all Internet wisdom. So it's not as though there isn't some entry to the sport, at least from a proud historical perspective. Aspirational American F1 drivers are not unicorns. At some point, maybe sooner than later thanks to our new dedicated circuit, we will see another American world champ. And let's be honest - even if you bleed Ford Blue, if you don't hold respect for Ferrari, Lotus (in name, at least), Mercedes and McLaren as racing machines, there's a problem in your brain. That's not an opinion. These aren't esoteric one-off shops like Panoz or even Dallara (who make the Indycar chassis). These are the progenitors of the modern racing car and the modern sports car. Point being, fast cars going being driven quickly is relatable to pretty much anyone who calls themselves even a casual racing fan, regardless of the badge on the machine. 

After all those words words words, what is the barrier, the problem, with F1 in the United States? Even the most ardent F1 fan is going to point an angry finger at the intrusive regulations that have sapped a lot of the energy and excitement, as well as danger, from the sport. The march toward Health and Safety Compliance began with its heart in the right place, led in the '70s by World Champion Jackie Stewart, who had essentially tired of seeing his friends die or suffer life-altering accidents. The Great (some might say perfect) Ayrton Senna was the last driver to die on the track, in 1994. The argument is whether or not increased safety means increased blaah. I'll admit, for the past many years, epic battles for position and balls out overtaking, aside from the possibly insane Kobayashi, God bless him, are rare. You're more likely to see races won through chess-like pit tactics than wheel to wheel competition. It happens, but compared to the rubbin' is racin' dictum of NASCAR, I can see how that would be a turn off to folks who expect crashes to be the highlight of a race. More than the drama surrounding drivers' and teams' conflicts, audiences want to see four cars abreast going into a corner knowing full well at least two of them have a better than average chance of exploding. That's good TV, and you could even argue good racing. Not that there's anything wrong with that. Need an analogy? Citizen Kane. Die Hard. Both perfect. 

So I haven't answered any questions here, just thought out loud about how we fans of F1 can help others become fans, or at least accept the sport as either entertainment or the positive implications for the Central Texas region. Last season, the global viewing audience for F1 actually grew, from 520 to 527 million. In America… well, how many people have Speed Channel and a DVR? Deep sigh.

Two allegorical anecdotes for you. I was watching a race one Sunday morning when my step-father in-law, who was visiting for the weekend, sat down next to me on the couch. He hadn't watched a car race of any sort in ages and was just curious about what was happening on the screen. He's an accountant and number junkie, and was quickly taken in by the analytical aspects of the race. How many laps could a car run without refueling? How did average speed correlate to tire wear? He's also an avid golfer. What really snagged his interest, at least for that single race, was the pursuit of perfection. He was amazed at the consistency of the lap times, even factoring in traffic. I don't play golf, but he explained that the addictive quality of the game was that same pursuit of perfection. How every variable  interacted with one another, from the initial action of gripping the club up to the point the ball lay absolutely motionless on the ground, and how you're playing every moment of the game in anticipation of the next swing being better than the last. Just like every corner of every lap of every race. It's the consistency and the ability of the driver to manage those aspects of the race he can control, and the ability to either anticipate or react to those he can't. So there's that.

This one's a little bit looser, but bear with me. When we first started dating, my wife claimed she hated science fiction. It was the one genre of entertainment she simply couldn't abide. I wasn't necessarily mocked, but I certainly wasn't enthusiastically encouraged in my fandom of all things Trek, Battlestar and Wars. So it was surprising to find Buffy the Vampire Slayer in her DVD collection. Oh, and if you like Buffy (I do now, thanks to my wife.. .we'll get there in a sec), then you'll loooove Firefly. Well, on principle alone I couldn't tolerate a show called Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Seriously? Nope. However, turning her Finger of Self-Righteous Mocking back around, aren't those shows both technically sci-fi? Doesn't that make you a sci-fi fan, I asked my wife. Oh crap… her resignation. And with that, Battlestar Galactica, Dr. Who and any number of other seminal sci-fi shows ended up in our Netflix queue. All it took was for her to realize and then admit she was a fan to open the door to a weirder, geekier world. She wasn't alone either. We're halfway through the entire seven year run of Buffy, and it's probably one of the best television shows ever produced. Go ahead, argue with me. The moral is, if all it took for her to become a fan of something she thought she hated was to realize something she already like qualified as that very thing (and be big enough to openly admit it), and for me to just give something a chance watch a couple of hours of a show I couldn't tolerate simply on the basis of its name, then there's hope for Formula 1 in America. 

Track Site Visit and Highlights of the Facilities

Today we want to introduce you to a few exciting things:

1.   Kevin and I shot our first on-location video at the future track site in Elroy, Texas. It took a few takes (HA!) but we’re really pleased with being able to share with you actual footage of us at the track site and an in-person perspective of what is currently in Elroy and what is to come. Though we do expect track construction will ramp up in the next few weeks, we wanted to give you a view of the site before things start to really change on the ground.

Track Site Visit January 30th, 2011 from The Austin Grand Prix on Vimeo.

 

2.   We’ve also spent a lot of time thinking about our interactions with you, our fans and readers, and how to deliver the most unique experience. Why do you want to keep coming back to TAGP website? Why do you follow us on Twitter and interact with us via our Facebook page? We launched this site on May 25, 2010 because we, ourselves, were having a hard time finding interesting and credible news. We were literally scouring the internet for any and all news surrounding the official FIA announcement of F1 coming to Austin. We didn’t want you to have to go through the same trouble so we launched this site as a hub for all info with the hopes of becoming the #1 fan site for F1 fans worldwide who want to learn more about Austin, and Austinites who want to learn more about Formula One racing. As more sites begin to populate the web, we’ve discovered a deeper niche that needs to be filled: sure you can Google “Austin” and read all about it on Wikipedia. But what does Austin look like when you step off the plane? What does the drive from Elroy, Texas to 6th Street look like? With our combined love, respect and excitement about Austin, we’d like to re-introduce ourselves as your “Austin Ambassadors.” We’re committed to taking the two-dimensional approach of information delivery and amping it up to three-dimensional: engaging videos and interviews so you start to familiarize yourself with this great city as you prepare for your many trips to Austin starting in 2012!

3.  Choices Choices Choices! We’ve been listening to fan feedback and are expanding our merchandise line. We will soon offer a different style of t-shirt (a more traditional make with a heavier fabric), a different cut (women’s tees) and more COLORS! We’ll also be adding additional products in the coming months as we continue to market The Austin Grand Prix via our adopted slogan: COME AND RACE IT©!

Thank you for an amazing eight months. We are extremely excited about continuing to expand our reach as the #1 fan site for Formula One returning to the United States via Austin, Texas in 2012!

 

Here are some photos from our visit in November, 2010 as well:

 View of Track Site from the South West Corner

 

View of Downtown Austin from Highway 812

DNQ - your weekly motorsports and car culture ruminations

I'm going to be writing, hopefully on a weekly basis, on whatever happens to be piquing my interest at that exact moment. I don't really... research my subjects. I just sort of... do it. That's the ticket. Formula 1, racing in general, cars in whatever context, culture, what have you. For our first getting to know you get-together, I thought I'd just jump into the deep end and reveal the dark trauma that molded me into the person I am today.

When I was 13 years old my dad would let me drive the family Taurus around our neighborhood. It was sparsely populated, thankfully, and he was always in the passenger seat offering sage advice and keeping me calm. This was your basic stop, go, turn training. We'd later get into what to do if you hydroplane, to always brake before the turn and how to take a constant radius corner. These were just the basics. To make a long story short, pulling into the driveway one Sunday afternoon I over-accelerated trying to get over the concrete lip at the threshold of the garage and smashed through the living room wall. It was weeks before I could even come near the driver's seat, and shame of shames, I was almost 17 before I got my driving license. I did not like cars very much, and I certainly didn't take much joy in driving them.

Leap forward about 20 years, and suddenly you find someone not just obsessed with cars and  car culture, but racing and racing history. Yes, I was late to the party. I don't think I can admit to becoming a full-blown fan of F1 until 2003, when I was in grad school in Leeds, England and Sunday mornings were spent in our subarctic kitchen with a pot of coffee and a wool blanket, watching the race on the ITV network on a 15" unlicensed television. The fact I was there, in a country where racing mattered, was my motivation. That and to have a thing in common with something that resembled an avid group of race fanatics at the university.  Instant friends (quick aside - I'd find myself defending NASCAR with disturbingly frequency). Pair that newfound fandom with Top Gear, at that point in only its third series after its 2002 rebirth, and I was well and truly becoming a fan not just of racing, but of the cult of cars.

For real perspective though, you have to move backward a bit further, to the year 2000. I'd just bought a red 1995 Acura Integra GS-R. For several weeks it had sat in front of an accountant's office on my drive home from work. Should I mention my car at the time was a Pontiac Sunfire GT? No one should ever mention the Pontiac Sunfire... I drove the car, loved the car, wanted the car, but decided to think about it. And think about it. Almost too long, as when I actually did call the seller to commit to purchase, he was on his way to a dealer to liquidate it. To this day, my favorite car. I fell into the online communities for Honda owners, which at the time was the official manufacturer of the fast and furious lifestyle. Medieval times. I slowly and tastefully upgraded certain components. The suspension was upgraded to Type R spec bits, wheels were changed for lighter alloys, tires upgraded to Dunlop SP8000s, intake/header/exhaut also upgraded to Japanese Type R parts. The car also came with a Dinan chip upgrade. Dinan is a BMW aftermarket specialist, and the Integra chip was an odd duck one-off. It raised the red line and remapped the fuel delivery for more power. It was magic. 

The car was just meant for autocrossing. I went to a driving school, taught by my old Cub Scout leader who happened to be a master mechanic and drove an Austin-Healey Bugeye Sprite Mark II with a Mazda b13 two rotor, twin turbo motor. He was nationally ranked in the Solo II series. I got Henry Watts' seminal work "Secrets of Solo Racing" and studied it like a textbook. I raced around cones in empty parking lots on Saturday mornings. I got faster and more comfortable making inputs. I began to understand the physics that occurred between the tires and the road. I finally loved racing, but more importantly, I loved driving. Unfortunately, in Central Arkansas, without cable, and in pre-household Internet days, my F1 consumption was limited to magazines and a few rudimentary Web sites. What we did have in abundance were back roads, and at the time $1 gallon gasoline. So I drove.

As a pitiful aside to the Integra story, it died in early 2002. I was driving to Arlington, Texas to interview a crew who had allegedly transformed the Pontiac Aztec into something that didn't incite villagers to scream Kill it with fire! Some oil on the 635 in light rain, cars spinning, me going head to head at 65 MPH with an F350 duallie. I had a couple of cracked ribs, the car was dead. It saved my life. I still have the shift knob on my bookshelf. 

For a little more context, I went to school at Baylor University. I was a journalism student and deeply involved with the student newspaper. Several of us were car enthusiasts. My knowledge came mainly from the issues of Car & Driver and Motor Trend my dad collected during my formative years. I certainly wasn't a fanatic or even particularly knowledgeable. The internal workings of an engine were as mysterious as girls, but just like girls, I knew they were interesting. At least one of my classmates has since gone on to become a very well-known automotive writer, and several others have taken up residency in the world of automotive journalism. I realized too late that was a valid career option - I still had it in my head record labels were signing great unheard rock bands and it was my destiny to play bass guitar for a living. In a band that wore capes. And wrote rock operas. Needless to say, I chose poorly. I did however have an in as a freelancer, and worked up a respectable portfolio of pieces, mainly for industry trade publications, eventually blogging and even writing features for a few prominent automotive sites. Hence the Aztec cover story. My proudest literary achievement however is my Starred Commenter status on Jalopnik. The pinnacle.

Leaping backward one more time, my dad liked cars. He wasn't a car nut, but he held a slightly higher than average interest in automobiles and racing. The coffee table was perpetually covered with car magazines and he'd frequently wax nostalgic about his '71 Monte Carlo SS and the time he drove from Fayetteville, Arkansas to Dallas in under three hours. The Indy 500 was an annual ritual at my house. He was a particular fan of the Andretti family and Bobby Rahal. I can vividly recall hauling out my arsenal of Legos and building an entire field of open-wheeled cars to race and crash around the living room. On rare occasions, the whiskered antenna on the roof of our house would pick up a Formula 1 race. My dad didn't miss those. He'd tell me This is the best racing. I wasn't convinced. But there's no crashing (well, not enough to my mind, at least)! That's why it's the best. He explained these drivers in their seemingly slower-than-Nascar machines, with odd names like Piquet, Prost and Lauda, were the best in the world, bar none. I recall thinking it was boring. They slowed down to take corners. They didn't deliberately smash one another into walls. There were no fireworks or explosions or Survivor playing Eye of the Tiger in the midfield. 

 I think I get it now. Formula 1. At least I hope I do. I understand the beauty of the sport. The trauma. The perfection. It was a maturity and experience issue for me. A lot of factors had to come into play to awaken that appreciation. Not to say F1 can't be appreciated on a purely visceral level. It's fast and noisy and dramatic and sometimes gaudy and always glamorous. It just seems for a lot of people, for the true fans, it's the summation of their interest in all of those things and then some. I'll get more into all that jazz in a later blog. 

For now, I just wanted to introduce myself... validate my credentials so to speak. I'm also an Austinite. I work here. I own a house here. My wife teaches here. We're going to raise our children here. I play in a band here. It's where I'm going to live. If I honestly thought the F1 project was going to be detrimental to any of those admittedly selfish quality of life standards I mentioned, then I don't think I'd support it. I'd still be a fan and I'd still support a race in the States. 

But that's not the case. When the facility opens it's going to be a true asset to the city, the region, the state and the nation. Think Road Atlanta or VIR, Buttonwillow or even Laguna Seca... but better. World class racing, and not just F1. LeMans and GT races, sports car series, amateur series. It'll generate revenue for the city and county. It'll bring prestige on the international stage. It could help with workforce recruitment or even entice international companies to open up shop here. Supposition, but as long as we avoid the tarpit public/private funding fiasco that has recently consumed the Nurburgring in Germany, I can't see how it would fail to be a positive for the entire community. You don't have to like Brooklyn hipster indie rock to appreciate, as a resident of Austin, the benefits of South by Southwest or Austin City Limits Festival. Austin is a weird, diverse place. Old school Texas, Cosmic Cowboys and modern, high-tech international business hub. We're lucky to live here and I genuinely believe we're lucky to have this F1 project taking root. Give it time, and give the (potential) fans time. It will be awesome.

Will Today's America Embrace 'Senna'?

An important film had its US debut at Sundance a mere 48 hours ago. It's a film for Formula One fans past, present and future. It's a film that paints the picture of the “greatest that ever drove” with minutiae detail that rivals a Van Gogh. It's a film where producers Manish Pandey and Asif Kapadia whittled down 15,000 of never-before-seen archival F1 footage into a comfortable 104 minutes, without losing the essence of the legendary Brazilian Ayrton Senna.

 

 

In a Formula1Blog post 'Negative Camber' peels back the layers and gives us a deeper understanding of the writing and producing that went into making this epic film.  Check out the interview: Q&A With Senna's Manish Pandey and Asif Kapadia

I first heard about "The Senna Movie" from 'Lois Marketing' in her October 2010 post on the LinkedIn group "Friends of Formula 1 Austin Texas."  Once I heard about the film, watched the Japanese preview, and read up on its reviews, my immediate thought was "This needs to be screened in Austin during the SXSW Film Festival." I started tweeting Pandey and Kapadia and even posed the same question on the LinkedIn group page and our Facebook page.

After reading the interview my belief is reignited.  As Kapadia mentions in his interview with Negative Camber, he wasn't an F1 enthusiast when approached by Pandey to do this film. But they were both able to get to the heart of Senna's story with the aid of 15,000 hours of unseen archival F1 video, and create a story that "somebody who doesn’t like Formula One, or a person who has never heard of Senna, will get the film...".  So, someone who wasn't an F1 enthusiast spent the past few years pouring himself into 15,000 of archival footage to tell a story - one that you will probably love because you're already an F1 fan reading this blog - but also a movie that you can take your F1 newbie friend to as well - and they will probably enjoy it? <insert lightbulb moment>

This sounds like a no-brainer to me! Seriously - how can this movie NOT be screened in Austin - the future home of the United States Formula 1 Grand Prix from 2012-2021 (and hopefully beyond)?

Pandey and Kapadia have taken the time to tell a chronological and psychological story, and from everything I've read, they've done it well.  I hope F1US realizes the potential of this film for past, present and future US F1 fans.

Have you seen it? When do you think it will come to the American masses? How could this impact the future of F1 in the US?

The Flying Lap - Peter Windsor Discusses F1 on Web TV

One of the amazing outcomes of launching this site has been the incredible converstations we have started with what we once considered "out of reach" F1 insiders. We never thought we would be in the same room as Red McCombs, shake hands with Susan Combs, or chat up a new friend named Tavo. We never thought our passion for Formula One racing would connect us with other fans in Atlanta, Canada, South America, London or Australia. We underestimated the number of F1 and motor enthusiasts in the Austin area alone! However, once we started talking about our exponential enthusiasm for F1 coming to Austin, we realized people were listening, and we started to listen back.

During the summer we read about a weekly chat on Twitter titled #F1Chat.  Hosted by a Formula One racing enthusiast and marketing maven, Lois Martin, #F1Chat was interesting to us because it encompassed the short 140-character appeal of Twitter but allowed users to stay on guided topic by using the keyword (or "hashtag" as they're called on Twitter) #F1chat.  I have really enjoyed sharing Lois's F1 enthusiasm, despite being located across the country, and during one of the chats, I was surprised to "see" Peter Windsor pop in and engage in the discussion.  Just a few months ago Lois's popular weekly chat became affiliated with Formula1Blog.com, an amazing online resource with incredible in-depth analysis and discussions of all things Formula 1, and she joined the group as Contributing Editor and continues to host #F1Chat.  Which brings us full circle, because...

A great new online show debuted last week called "The Flying Lap With Peter Windsor."  It is a live online Formula One Q & A show on Smibs.tv hosted by Peter Windsor and starring some incredible guests.  Here's the trailer:

This week's show will feature Bob Bell, one of the most successful F1 engineers of the past 30 years, and Todd McCandless, creator of one of the most prolifically-read formula one blogs on the internet, Formula1blog.com.

The show airs live at 12 noon CST on Wednesday, however there is also a special feature this Thursday.  Because we don't want you to miss a beat (and we think helping our friends with some good 'ol word of mouth is cool), check out any or all of the following links:

Smibs.TV
The Flying Lap Website
The Flying Lap TV Channel
The Flying Lap on iTunes
The Flying Lap on Facebook
The Flying Lap on Twitter

Peter Windsor's Website - The Race Driver
Peter on Twitter

Formula 1 Blog
Formula 1 Blog on iTunes
Formula 1 Blog on Facebook
Formula 1 Blog on Twitter
#F1Chat on Twitter
Lois on Formula 1 Blog

By no means is this an all-encompassing post on all the amazing people we've met, but we wanted to share this post so you can tune in to tomorrow's show.  We'll continue to share amazing resources with you as beginner and veteran F1 fans alike! 

Have any resources we should check out? Post them in our comments.  Here is last week's The Flying Lap show which included an intriguing discussion about the Senna movie.