As I recall the name is because it is sorta centered in The Americas..south and north...You guys sure like to read stuff into things.Nando wrote:Still makes no sense. It´s not the only race in the US soon.
Or "Americas" for that matter. They should have simply called it Circuit of America, i know they wantedt to.
But could have been too much considering they have Road America.
strad wrote: As I recall the name is because it is sorta centered in The Americas..south and north...You guys sure like to read stuff into things.
Christ Nando...Nando wrote:strad wrote: As I recall the name is because it is sorta centered in The Americas..south and north...You guys sure like to read stuff into things.
I would say Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala and Panama would be slightly more centered.
Central-America for example.
I'm glad the green paint that was on the tower appears to have been just a base paint. Gotta say the observation tower looks pretty sharp. Also gotta say I'm really-really fond of the layout and topography of the circuit.hairy_scotsman wrote:
Heh, you're as bad as the idiots who assert that Birmingham is anywhere near the midlands of England let alone Britain.strad wrote:Christ Nando...
This is part of my point.sknguy wrote:lol... actually Strad, the American monopoly on the word America can, at times, be an annoyance for the rest of the Americas.
Actually, the strict north-south centerline of the Americas is in Mexico, and so those countries are about as far south of the line as Austin is north of it. And if you factor land mass into your definition of 'center', then I believe the centerline would actually be north of Austin. Canada is big.Nando wrote:I would say Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala and Panama would be slightly more centered.
Central-America for example.
Actually, the southern most tip of america is at about 55° south, the northernmost at about 83° north. That makes the middle 14° north, that line goes through nicaraguar, honduras, el salvador and guatamala.Pup wrote:Actually, the strict north-south centerline of the Americas is in Mexico, and so those countries are about as far south of the line as Austin is north of it. And if you factor land mass into your definition of 'center', then I believe the centerline would actually be north of Austin. Canada is big.Nando wrote:I would say Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala and Panama would be slightly more centered.
Central-America for example.
My preference is to just turn the continents until I can draw an arbitrary centerline through CotA itself. I'm offended by a Polarcentric world view.