OT: F1 Coming Back to the U.S.

Submitted by MGoAero on

The US will again play host to a Formula 1 event starting in the 2012 season, and running through at least 2021!  The venue will be a new, purpose-built venue near Austin, TX.  I'm very excited that the US is 'taking it seriously' and building a new track just for the purpose of holding F1 races.  Hopefully Austin proves to be well-suited for drawing in an F1 audience.  I imagine that NASCAR is especially popular down there, but maybe F1 will draw in those fans that are interested in motorsports in general.  Anyway, here's the link:

http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2010/5/10824.html

bluebyyou

May 25th, 2010 at 3:43 PM ^

I love F1 also - been going to races since I was a kid.  Ought to be fun sitting in the sun in Texas in the middle of June.  Makes Montreal even more appealing.

Bronco648

May 25th, 2010 at 3:49 PM ^

They should have returned to The Glen.  Why not use a traditional road course (Barber, Road America, Road Atlanta, Laguna Seca) where there are some serious challenges?  No one wants to pony up the $$$$$ to upgrade a facility or put up with Bernie, that's why.  I'm afraid the Austin event will turn into the Stardust (Vegas) parking lot race.

MaizeSombrero

May 25th, 2010 at 4:08 PM ^

I live in Austin, and I can tell you that NASCAR is not big in Austin. Maybe in the rest of Texas, but Austin is not Texas.

If it is in the summer though, it will be hot. And it will be hotter. And it will be hottest. It is so hot. So. Hot.

bcsblue

May 25th, 2010 at 4:15 PM ^

I miss when it used to be held in downtown Detroit. Detroit incorrectly called F1's bluff on demands for a full time garage. F1 pulled out and went to Indy.  Woops. 

JeepinBen

May 25th, 2010 at 4:33 PM ^

For me (and why Steve in PA says engineers are the only crossover) it's all about the technology in F-1 Cars that do it.

When you look at Nascar... you're looking at such dated technology. Nascar uses pushrod V8s! That's been dated technology since the mid 70s!!! Toyota almost didnt even get in to Nascar because they had to spend lots of money to completely develop a brand new engine based off of 30 year old technology!

F-1 On the other hand.... ridiculously cutting edge. I remember a few years ago when the paddle shifting transmissions came to F-1, and they were in normal cars within 5 years. That's the kind of innovation that really drives a sport - the cutting edge stuff. I'm still amazed that F-1 cars redline around 18,000 RPM. That's remarkable to me. Most cars redline around 6-7,000... these are 3 times faster! At 18,000 revolutions per minute, that means your piston is going up and down over 150 times PER SECOND! crazy precise!

/end engineer gushing

FGB

May 25th, 2010 at 6:01 PM ^

but I'm not holding my breath. As so many have pointed out NASCAR fans are generally not F1 fans, and vice versa (I haven't watched a NASCAR race in years), so even if Austin isn't NASCAR territory, the surrounding areas are.

This of course tangentially touches on the fundamental problem with F1 in America: there aren't that many fans, period.

Bring back Scott Speed! (no, don't. really, don't.)

Birdman

May 25th, 2010 at 9:51 PM ^

Its in Detroit, yes draws a crowd like every street circuit in a metropolis, but man, that track was not the most thrilling. I know street courses raraly are, and formula 1 amost always isn't, but the 2 are definitely not a good mix.

formula 1

May 25th, 2010 at 10:38 PM ^

Is there a map anywhere of what the circuit will look like? I still am doubtful for this going down as a few weeks ago, the US Grand Prix was going to be near Hoboken, NJ.... so that Ecclestone could have the NYC skyline as a backdrop.

I guess now that Ecclestone is going to have another track that's going to look like all the rest ( Hermann Tilke has designed all the last 4 or 5 circuits in F1) and he can dictate what kind of facilities he wants, he ran to Austin.

The difference between the folks in Austin vs. the new F1 tracks is that the governments of the respective countries are throwing ridiculous money at these places and many of them don't really make money. When the USGP stopped being held and Indy, it was partially due to the fact that the owners of the circuit, the George family couldn't make money because of Bernie's ridiculous fees that he expects paid to him and the fact that they lost their title sponsor, SAP. 

I wonder what the group who is planning this event is going to do to combat this problem, because its going to be no different this time around. At least Indy was already there and modifications to add the infield track to existing oval were relatively inexpensive compared to building a new circuit from scratch. Good Luck.

Clarence Beeks

May 25th, 2010 at 10:51 PM ^

I don't think they will be too terribly concerned with crowd size at the outset.  They only had 46,000 at Australia this year, which is actually up from last year.  I'm pretty confident that almost any venue in the U.S. could pretty easily exceed that in a debut event, let alone in later years.  As for street circuits, it's not going to happen.  They'd lose too much revenue on street circuits to non-ticketed attendance.