| Online Racing Tips |
Below you find a collection of online racing tips. These tips won't make you an unbeatable driver, but they may provide valuable insights in certain aspects of racing that sometimes are not that obvious.
1. Find out if track position is important at the track: in
the finishing stint of a race, it's always important. But in the first 80%, you
MAY be better off holding off and following the guys who are about as fast as
you. This way you can get into the rhythm, save your tyres and strike when it
counts. However, be sure not to stay behind a SLOWER driver.
2. Save fuel: use fourth gear under yellow.
3. Focus on the track instead of the drivers.
4. Before the race, find out if you should repair damage. At
Bristol, for example, you can be perfectly competitive with a broken right front
fender and it would be a waste of time to repair it.
5. Don't want to repair damage? Confirm this before EVERY
pitstop, or NASCAR 3 will repair it anyway.
6. It's ALWAYS better to loose a place than to brake a piece of
your car.
7. Don't get panicked when in the lead and being followed
closely: keeping the car in one piece is most important.
8. At the finishing stage of a race, THINK before entering the
pits: do you REALLY have to pit?
9. Relax on (re)start. DON'T BLOW YOUR ENGINE!
10. Be sure to check the temperature during warm-up. You don't
want to be entering the pits under green in the first few laps of the race
because you're running too much grille tape! Also, be aware that a different
temperature can make the car looser or tighter.
11. THINK!
12. Please read the last line again. Always act on conscious
thinking, never act on instinct.
13. Relax! Don't get heated up, stay calm all the way.
14. Never fight a guy who's lapping you when you've already
been lapped by the leader of the race. You will lose speed, he will lose speed,
and he will get you anyway. So you won't gain anything. By letting him pass,
however, you will gain respect and he will probably let you pass when the time
comes.
15. Never try to pass on the first lap after a (re)start. This
lap is for sorting out the field, not for gaining places. Many, many accidents
happen in the first lap under green. Remember you can't win the race in the
first green lap, but you sure can lose it.
16. Use your F2-key in real-time update mode all the time. This
way you get a very good idea of where you are on the track and overall what's
happening. You will also know if the car behind you is lapping you and, most
important, how much faster he is. If he's a lot faster you know you should let
him pass as soon as possible.
17. Never attend a race unprepared. If you don't know the track
and don't know if you can hold a line, don't join the race. You'll end up
crashing out anyway and will most probably take other drivers with you.
18. If you see the entire field disappearing from time to time
you're warping. It sounds harsh, but as a true sportsman you should park you car
in the pit and disconnect. You will destroy other drivers' races otherwise.
19. Finishing is ALWAYS more important than gaining a place. To
finish first, you first must finish.
20. If you crashed out, never start telling people interesting
stories about the crash when the race is still in progress. Other people will
get distracted and crash too. If you crash out with someone else and you want to
talk about it, take your chat to ICQ. Be sure to first cool down though...
21. Beat your opponents on the details: practice qualifying,
pitting and tyre saving.
22. Treat other drivers the same way you would like to be
treated.
23. On a (re)start, keep your distance to the driver in front.
Most likely he will brake early to avoid trouble in turn 1, so be prepared for
that.
24. Read the rules thoroughly. They are NOT the same for every
league out there. Especially regarding pit entry / exit, many leagues have
different rules.
25. Never press Escape when you are on the track: your car will
stay put there and other drivers will probably crash in it. To prevent pressing
the Escape key by accident, you can put the cap of a bottle of soda over it.
26. When setting up your car only change one thing at a time,
that way you can learn what each change does.
27. Always pee before a race, it's very hard to concentrate
when you need to go and a pitstop to pee can cost you dear.
28. Try and make your own setups, everyone drives differently
and what is fast for one driver is not always fast for another.
29. Always try to get the right rear tyre about 15 degrees
hotter than the right front. If not, you will get too much push on worn tyres.
30. Never make a race setup on the basis of one fast lap,
having a consistent setup throughout a run is far more important.
31. Check your mirrors when entering a corner to see if someone
is attempting a pass.
32. When in the middle of being lapped do not alter your line,
the faster cars will try and get a tow then pull to the inside, if you move over
at the same time problems will occur.
33. If you have ADSL or cable, take the phone off the hook.
34. If your spotter tells you you've been black flagged, take
your stop-and-go penalty, even if you're sure it's a bug. The simulation doesn't
care if it's a bug or not, it will DQ you if you don't take the stop-and-go.
35. When running super speedways and you're on your own (not
drafting and not being drafted), you're usually better off letting the driver
behind you catch up: the two of you together are faster than you are on your
own.
36. More often than not, the fastest way around the track is
NOT 'Kicking some major butt' but sitting back and relax instead.
37. In every corner, consciously remember the following phrase:
'Smooth in, smooth through, smooth out'.
38. You are allowed to pass on pit road, even under yellow. Use
that rule! If the speed limit is 40mph and the guy in front is doing 38mph, pass
him!
39. Be sure to spend the last five to ten minutes of free
practice running qualifying laps using your qualifying setup. This way, when
qualifying starts, you will be adjusted to the qualifying setup, resulting in a
better starting position.
40. Practice your starting technique: drive to the line at pace
speed on cold tyres and hit the pedal when your imaginary green flag waves. This
way you'll know how your car will react when entering turn 1 on cold tyres at a
(re)start.
41. When passing someone who just crashed, be *very* careful:
the guy in front will be very busy recovering from his crash and may not notice
you, resulting in another crash, but with you as the victim!
42. Don't only practice the perfect line: run some practice
laps using only the low line and some laps using only the high line as well.
This will give you much better feel for the track, will save you when you're
about to lose the car and will better prepare you for the two-wide fights.
43. This may sound obvious, but nevertheless: when in the lead
under yellow, make sure you are NOT in front of the pace car (which has entered
pit road) when the green flag drops! He may brake sooner than you think, so
you'd better keep your distance.
44. Make yourself wide on a (re)start, so you can take it easy
without getting passed by a bunch of guys.
45. When practicing for a race, make sure to do at least one or
two full fuel runs. This way you know how your car behaves on worn tyres and
empty fuel tank, so you know what to expect during the race.
46. When you've caught up a driver and are on his tail, even
though you are faster, don't ever try to pass right away. You don't know his
braking points! Just follow him for a while and make your move when you know
where he's vulnerable.
47. Especially when you're racing in a room with dimmed lights,
like many of us do, make sure your monitor isn't set too bright either. If it's
too bright, it will increase eye fatigue, causing you to loose concentration in
longer races.
48. When you are crashed out by another driver's mistake, don't
waste your energy too long thinking what the other guy did wrong. You won't be
able to change that in the future anyway. What you can change, however, is your
way of dealing with these kinds of mistakes: use your energy to try to find a
way to avoid being taken out when such an accident occurs in future races. It'll
gain you a lot.
49. Never, NEVER trust your spotter when he tells you you're
all clear. The spotter is a blind, lying idiot and many collisions have resulted
from spotters who couldn't see. To be sure no car is besides you, use your F2
function in real-time mode. When a car is 0.0s away from you, he is besides you,
whatever your spotters says. When he's 0.1s away from you, you're all clear.