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#227604
As a not very regular contributer to this forum and on a cold Sunday night I though I'd share with a bunch of strangers why I started following F1 so religiously and why some of you might, maybe, be interested in the form of racing I'm involved with.

After having a little experience in carting at a young age and as a cyclist, the sport that I attribute my keen interest in F1 is HPV racing. Basically, a HPV, or Human Powered Vehicle, is a 3 wheeled recumbent trike (bike with 3 wheels) that is ridden by a team of 8 riders over the duration on between 6 and 24 hours, depending on the event or race length.


This vehicle is not actually one of the ones I've raced, however gives you a fair indication of how the rider potions themselves in the vehicle while pedaling.

These vehicles are built while at school as part of the schools curriculum, with many students wanting to become engineers or involved in motor sport taking part. The programs usually involve all areas of the curriculum ie. English, Science, Maths, etc etc as teams need everything from sponsorship letters to raise money to design and produce vehicles (using carbon fibre, kevlar, etc) right through to having a team website. Many past participants have gone on to study motor sport engineering here in Australia, with a number of these people landing jobs in the Australian Rally Championship, V8 Supercar series and more importantly, F1.

The vehicles themselves are designed on CAD programs with the hope of producing the most aerodynamic shape possible and are constructed using lightweight materials such as carbon fibre, Kevlar, fiberglass and chrome molly aircraft tubing, resulting in a vehicle that ways round 20kgs meaning less weight for the rider to push around the track. An estimated cost of each vehicle is around $5,000.

In a 24 hour race, leading teams will aim to complete 1,000 kms, and reach speeds of around 80 km/h on the tight, twisty circuits raced on. After finding a straight piece of road and altering the gearing in the vehicle, I have personally reached 97 km/h in a straight line, powered solely by my own legs.

I've attached some photos, but basically the point of this post is to see if anybody else around the world is involved in any similar sports that relate to F1, or if it is predominantly carting that people are involved with.

After an injury lately playing football (soccer) I've been unable to ride in these endurance races however still love the 'sport' and would highly recomend it to anybody that loves a challenge, pushing their body to breaking point or simply technically minded.
#227610
One of my favourite memories. This Vehicle was capable of speeds in excess of 75 km/h when I was riding at the age of 13! Was a car before its time, completely dominant and still holds the national distance and lap record for a primary school team.
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#227611
Finally, my former schools vehicle that recently broke all record for a school age team by quite a considerable margin. Completely designed and built by students between the age of 16 and 18, constructed using nothing but carbon fibre and bicycle components.
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#227614
Coooool! Dj Polly! What a fantastic experience. What an innovative school you went to. Brilliant. Thanks for sharing your experience.

Mine is less sensational. Vague links with Grahan Hill through my mum and some work she did for DDA (Disabled Drivers Association). Later I was at college near Cranfield (institute of technology). A lot of the current F1 designers were there, they had a wind tunnel. Went out with a guy who designed cars (FF2000, F3000, Champ cars and F1). I guess the seeds were sown, er, interest in F1 seeds that is!!
#227620
I can not believe a school could afford Carbon Fibre... My school would of ummed and arred about using a polly bag


:rofl::rofl: Mine ran to letting me paint a racetrack on the playground and having our sportsday racing scooters F1 style around it
#227640
Dunno, grew up with the likes of Jackie Stewart, Jo Siffert, Jean-Pierre Beltoise, Jacky Ickx, Jochen Rindt, Clay Regazzoni (ah, those eyes!), Emerson Fittipaldi, etc., duking it out on the screen. Guess I got the bug with my mother's milk :drink:
#227643
i bought a bmw williams jacket from cyprus february 2007 then in march i read the sports section of the news of the world, about lewis hamilton, i thought oh i follow that lol and that was it, istantly hooked!
#227658
I got a subscription to car and driver magazine after picking it up to read a cover article about my car at the time. A 1985 VW GTI. I became interested in F1 since there were so many references to the great drivers of the time. Lauda, Prost, Laffite, Senna, Rosberg.
#227661
For me - I think my interest started when Mark Webber thought it would be a fun idea to drive his BMW Williams across the Sydney harbour bridge as a promotional event. :thumbup: But I was exactly hooked.

I also remember seeing something in the news about Schumacher versing a Eurofighter Jet - and that was AWESOME! :thumbup:

I grew up in a poor family, and one day a friend gave us his old Play Station 1. It was the coolest thing ever. The year was 2005 - so we were a bit behind the times but that's ok... My uncle gave us some of his old games, and one of them was a Formula One game based on the 1995 season. My favourite tracks were Spa, Aida, and Buenos Aires.

I'm sure I tried watching the 2005 Monaco Grand Prix - but I think I fell asleep. It was when I first had a TV in my room. I also watched my first soccer games on TV then as well.

For the 2007 season - I needed someone to support. Before the Melbourne GP they were talking about this new guy called Hamilton so I thought "New Fan for a New Driver. That works! :thumbup: " But I could only watch the Monaco Grand Prix that year.

For the 2008 season, I once again missed all the Asian races because they were held in the middle of the day. So my first race again was the Monaco GP. And I saw Hamilton get a puncture but still win a race, and I remember Vettel schocking the commentators because he started on the back row and finished 5th. So those became my two favourite drivers and I watched nearly every race since. I'd still find it hard to watch the Asian races though...

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