Motorsport Content, talking about the sport as well as interviewing the drivers which make it happen. My content consists of F1 Documentaries, Interviews, Motorsport Insight and my journey into the world of amateur racing in my Honda Civic Type R.
If you want to be a design engineer: do BTEC, not A-levels. Then focus on getting an engineering degree. Then you need an engineering job where you can use your degree but which allows you to focus on this - designing, building and racing a 750 Formula car - as a hobby - for the next ten years. Take time to document the design, build and development of the car to use in your future CV. Then focus on your design engineering career.
@@thomasberry8873 Well if you're doing them then the choice is made and it's not a disaster. Just over 60 years ago(!) I left school with O-levels and started on something roughly equivalent to BTEC. After three years I joined a degree course on the second year - so never lost any time. The point is, while the A-level entrants had enjoyed long scholastic holidays, I and my fellow apprentices got two weeks holiday a year and were soaking up engineering all the rest of the time. Wherever subsequent university lectures touched on practicality we were well ahead of the A-level entrants. Later on, as a senior engineer, it was painfully obvious that A-level then degree recruits needed a lot of mentoring to come to terms with industry - and some never really did - whereas those who'd fought their way to a degree while doing some sort of a job could get right on it and surged ahead. So don't waste your holidays! Learn to weld, design/build/fly a model aeroplane. Do something related to engineering and start building a CV now.
thank you for making this the right topic that all racing games should have. I hate reading people saying Oh that's too dark and it sound's bad or it doesn't look as good. it all comes down to Gameplay Physics, hell yeah!. We know most games now have in the game settings changes to the gamma and brightness but we always have to be bothered by people talking about that crap. Here is the #1 topic I look for in all racing games: What game works better for controller and other works best for Steering wheel.
What about Mt. Tremblant or Mosport in Canada? They were both fantastic tracks and a real challenge for drivers. I understand about being able to easily bring in crowds for le Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in downtown Montreal but it just doesn't have the hills and hairpins of the former tracks. (both of which also hosted countless CanAm, Group 4 and 6 and TransAm races back in the day and even Indy cars in the late 1960s) Aside from those two tracks, it would be awesome to see racing on the banking at Monza again. With modern concrete and epoxy formulations it would be possible to give it a better surface than it's ever had.
I basically have been weekly karting this track for this year but I remember the first time i can and it was like this now i look at the old track and i dont get why they didnt have the updated track it just looks bad through the bridge and t1 parts