
OT: MotoGP IMS 2008?
#1
Posted 21 December 2006 - 23:22
Last year I thought this was impossible, but it sounds like the talk is pretty serious now. It is plainly obvious that they *must* modify the circuit to work for motorcycles, and I thought this would have been a major stumbling block to FIM certification. Apparently though, IMS is serious about spending the money necessary to make it happen:
http://www.cyclenews...eadlineID=10286
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#2
Posted 22 December 2006 - 01:19
#3
Posted 22 December 2006 - 14:08

if the 1st corner running clockwise is dangerous because riders face a wall on their left as they speed toward the finish line, how will running anticlockwise be less dangerous, even though they'll cut the corner immediately after the pits, when in that case the wall on the right would be closer than the wall on the left the other way around?

i can understand the marketing potential and influence of ims, but i still can't vision the track layout, regardless of the direction, hosting a safe and inspiring gp.
sceptic over here

#4
Posted 22 December 2006 - 17:17
Originally posted by giddyup409
i still don't get it![]()
if the 1st corner running clockwise is dangerous because riders face a wall on their left as they speed toward the finish line, how will running anticlockwise be less dangerous, even though they'll cut the corner immediately after the pits, when in that case the wall on the right would be closer than the wall on the left the other way around?![]()
i can understand the marketing potential and influence of ims, but i still can't vision the track layout, regardless of the direction, hosting a safe and inspiring gp.
sceptic over here![]()
They're not running the banked corner at all.
#5
Posted 22 December 2006 - 18:16
And the idea of a 2nd race in the US sounds good to me.
#6
Posted 22 December 2006 - 19:53
Originally posted by Dudley
They're not running the banked corner at all.
Exactly. It sounds like they would modify the pit lane somehow and make a corner going into there. Sorta like the corner at Rio de Janeiro (RIP?) before turn 1 of the oval circuit.
Too bad they cant use parts of turn 3 & 4 to make a few more corners... (get rid of the golf course

#7
Posted 22 December 2006 - 20:06
Originally posted by Dudley
They're not running the banked corner at all.
who said they are running the banked corner? current clockwise turn 1 is not on the banked corner and will be further away from the wall than any version of the proposed counterclockwise turn 1.
#8
Posted 22 December 2006 - 20:10
#9
Posted 22 December 2006 - 22:25
Originally posted by ehagar
Exactly. It sounds like they would modify the pit lane somehow and make a corner going into there. Sorta like the corner at Rio de Janeiro (RIP?) before turn 1 of the oval circuit.
Too bad they cant use parts of turn 3 & 4 to make a few more corners... (get rid of the golf course)
Who needs golf, besides those old insanely rich farts?

#10
Posted 22 December 2006 - 22:32
Originally posted by Ross Stonefeld
Oh...is that where Sete's leathers logo comes from?
The Bultaco thumbs up? He is the grandson of Francisco Bultó, the founder of Bultaco motorcycles.
#11
Posted 23 December 2006 - 10:43
Originally posted by giddyup409
who said they are running the banked corner? current clockwise turn 1 is not on the banked corner and will be further away from the wall than any version of the proposed counterclockwise turn 1.
People were talking about the walls being close in the current last turn and were asking how running it the other way would help.
#12
Posted 04 January 2007 - 14:42
I read the article and I think I understand what they're attempting to do about the wall. They're going to run the bike race in the opposite direction of the F1 race and put a chicane to the inside of oval turn 1 (F1 turn 13) to keep them away from the wall in the corner.
It will be interesting to see how well it works, if at all.
#13
Posted 04 January 2007 - 14:52
#14
Posted 04 January 2007 - 15:23
Originally posted by Stephan
I would like to know why only Moto GP bikes run on Laguna Seca, and not the 125 and 250's.
The Lagua circuit is only allowed to run for a limited number of days each year, and doesn't want to give up their lucrative AMA round, so the MotoGP race was shoehorned into the AMA meeting schedule. If the 125/250s ran there would be no room on the schedule for the AMA, meaning a drop in spectators/coverage for the event. I'd agree its a shame, I'd love to see 40+ 125s charging into the corkscrew on the firstlap. I hope if the IMS do run a MotoGP round the 125/250s get invited too.
There is possibly also something to do with laws about two-stroke motorbikes in California, but you'd have to ask a local about them.
#15
Posted 04 January 2007 - 16:26
IMS: is there any big bore bike racing there? Is that diamond cut surface OK for bike tyres?
#16
Posted 04 January 2007 - 17:31
Originally posted by Youichi
There is possibly also something to do with laws about two-stroke motorbikes in California, but you'd have to ask a local about them.
They've ran 500cc GP bikes there so that's probably not it.
#17
Posted 04 January 2007 - 17:56
Now why in the hell would anybody have a problem with exhaust emissions?Originally posted by Red ITC
I always thought emissions was the problem at Laguna but I also remember reading about money being an issue.
I have it on good authority, from God himself (yup, the same fella that told me invade Eye Rark - wherever the hell that is), that exhaust emissions don't diddly-o cause any problemification whatsoever with the enviromentalized situation on Earth, and if that's good enough for the gray matter between my ears, then it's good for everybody else on the planet too!
If things don't chage soon with the ridiculous, tyranical rules in Californiraq, we're gonna invade, have regime change, hang the dude in charge, and then find him guilty.
God bless the United States of Amnesia.
George Dubbya.
#18
Posted 04 January 2007 - 18:52
Originally posted by Dudley
They've ran 500cc GP bikes there so that's probably not it.
A lot has changed since then.
#19
Posted 04 January 2007 - 23:21
Originally posted by Ross Stonefeld
A lot has changed since then.
In 12 months?
Wasn't the WCM bike running a Yamaha 500cc right up till the end?
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#20
Posted 05 January 2007 - 16:11
#21
Posted 08 January 2007 - 01:21
Originally posted by Red ITC
IMS: is there any big bore bike racing there? Is that diamond cut surface OK for bike tyres?
As far as I know, they've never had bike racing at IMS. The road course was built specifically for F1. The AMA Superbikes did a test there once on the road course. They determined very quickly that the wall was too close to be safe going through the corner. I think that they went so far as to cut the test short.
Jake Zemke talked about it once on "2 Wheel Tuesday" on SpeedChannel.
#22
Posted 08 January 2007 - 03:02
Originally posted by Locai
As far as I know, they've never had bike racing at IMS. The road course was built specifically for F1. The AMA Superbikes did a test there once on the road course. They determined very quickly that the wall was too close to be safe going through the corner. I think that they went so far as to cut the test short.
Jake Zemke talked about it once on "2 Wheel Tuesday" on SpeedChannel.
This test:
http://www.cyclenews...HeadlineID=5441
I don't think the two strokes are a problem at Laguna. It is more of a case of being able to hold a small number of major events (4?) per year. I assume Laguna Seca didn't want to lose the AMA series at the track. I imagine A1GP or any other form of Open Wheel racing will not be back (except for the historics), so AMA might get its own event (as it is rumoured).
Two strokes are illegal in California... in fact they are illegal with a grandfather clause in all of North America (1989 in Canada I think). But, this does not limit competition based two strokes. For example, motocross and supercross. The problem is you cannot *register* a two stroke for public road use. They are specifically for Offroad and competition use only.
#23
Posted 08 January 2007 - 03:09
Originally posted by Locai
As far as I know, they've never had bike racing at IMS.
The first ever race period was a bike race on the oval
