Not too far away. I think it's on Jacobson Road just east of the property. It was taken by my buddy who also shot the photo I posted above. We co-admin Friends of Formula 1 Austin Texas on Facebook. Is that where you got it?WilliamsF1 wrote:Is this somewhere close to the track?
Maybe the Blues, with an outboard motor.mx_tifoso wrote:The new Pirelli Cinturatos will do great there!
So maybe the title for the story should be "Rain Doesn't Slow Work on Circuit of the Americas"?Williams said the rain was not enough to affect the overall construction schedule for the track, which is to be the site of the inaugural United States Grand Prix on Nov. 18.
"We've planned for rain events throughout construction," Williams said. "We saw what the regional (rainfall) average is, and we're coming off the worst drought in the area in years. We did not spend as many rain days early on in the project (as projected)."
Whether it affects the end result or not, the rain has definitely slowed construction. It's still not back to the level of activity we saw before the rain. Work is pretty much limited to the paddock area and we're just now starting to see a slow trickle of trucks arriving to fill some areas of the track that are dry enough.Pup wrote:So maybe the title for the story should be "Rain Doesn't Slow Work on Circuit of the Americas"?Williams said the rain was not enough to affect the overall construction schedule for the track, which is to be the site of the inaugural United States Grand Prix on Nov. 18.
"We've planned for rain events throughout construction," Williams said. "We saw what the regional (rainfall) average is, and we're coming off the worst drought in the area in years. We did not spend as many rain days early on in the project (as projected)."
No...instead they wasted precious dry weather days with weeks of delays and slowdowns. It's not like there are rain days in the bank because it didn't rain for so long. Had they worked throughout, then they could honestly make that claim.We did not spend as many rain days early on in the project (as projected)
LOL. Where did I say c, d, or e in either of those posts?Pup wrote:What we know from the story is:
A) it rained and, B) construction is on schedule.
From that, you argue that:
C) construction is behind schedule and, D) it will be delayed even further. [And you toss in E) they're behind schedule for other reasons, too. I don't know why.]
Now, B obviously disproves both C and E directly; nor does A even imply C; and finally, D does not follow from either A, B, E, or any combination thereof.
Try again?
hairy_scotsman wrote:Where did I say c, d, or e in either of those posts?
E:hairy_scotsman wrote:They may finish at the same time they have planned, but they'll have to work that much harder, and some rain days they planned into the latest schedule will now be gone. There's going to be more rain this winter and spring.
You post here and on Atlas, and perhaps elsewhere, as a supporter of the race, yet you not only seem have a perverse joy in reporting bad news, but have a habit of twisting any news to present it in as negative a light as possible. Were I a skeptical person, I might think that you have other motives than what you state.hairy_scotsman wrote:...instead they wasted precious dry weather days with weeks of delays and slowdowns. It's not like there are rain days in the bank because it didn't rain for so long. Had they worked throughout, then they could honestly make that claim.