jdlive wrote:I've been to F1 in real life several times and it always looks way too slow, especially in flat out sections, it looks like they are driving in slow motion. Television makes it appear a lot faster than it really is.
I made this video today, this is 300 KPH through Eau Rouge, but it looks painfully slow, not like something that I myself couldn't do or wouldn't dare to do. They could easily go 50% faster. This year I've asked some of the people around me and they were all surprised they went so slow in reality as well.
Watch the video in full screen because the tiny screens do the same thing television does, making it look faster than it really is.
Please Bernie and everyone involved, go for much safer tracks and let these cars go a lot faster!
I think there may be some cognitive dissonance between what you are "seeing" through Eau Rouge and what is happening. The fact that it is a curve rather than a straight, your ability to rotate your head at a rate much slower than the car's speed, and the ability to track its motion from the straight through the top of Eau Rouge is causing your mind to "race faster than reality" compared to TV.
The same thing happens even when seeing clips from the Reno Air Races. 300 - 400 mph WWII-era planes screaming past you doesn't seem as exciting when you are tracking them from left to right across a mile or two of track as oppose to simply staring forward and have them blitz through your sight-line.
I do want the cars to be allowed to go faster, pushing the real limits of technology and skill on more and more challenging tracks, but one's perception as a spectator should not hinder the fact that the cars are still going very VERY fast.