What is it though? Small light cars which change direction quickly? Just the engine noise?? A spirit of competition and generally less over-professional atmosphere that came with genuine privateers?
What is it though? Small light cars which change direction quickly? Just the engine noise?? A spirit of competition and generally less over-professional atmosphere that came with genuine privateers?
Yes to the points made above.
I doubt it’s all nostalgia though. I can re-watch 2000-2005 races and not get bored, it’s not the same excitement as when I was a kid, but just the race start when these cars begin to scream just never fails to get me fired up, you just feel the energy, it’s really hard to describeAMG.Tzan wrote: ↑15 Dec 2020, 02:44Exactly that!
People just forget when in 2004 we were all looking back at 80s turbos or the early 90s V12s and we were all saying "wow these cars were so beautiful and powerful"!
I remember back in 2007-2008 i thought the cars looked so ugly compared to 1990-1994 cars! I thought (and I still think) that the early 90s cars were the most iconic with the sparks flying behind the front wheels! Now though I look back at the 2008 Mclaren and think "wow...what a work of art that was!"
It all has to do with nostalgia...people always tend to think that the past was always better than the present! V10s were beautiful until 2005 but not in 2020 just like V12s were beautiful in the early 90s but not in 2005!
I'm sure in 10 years time we will all look back at the 2020 Mercedes and we'll say "wow...what a work of art that was!! The fastest car in history..."
To right. I have watched a special on the effect on people watching the same scenes but with different music/sound effects.Take a movie, watch it without proper effects or soundtrack. It's a whole different experience.
All of that jjn. All of it.What is it though? Small light cars which change direction quickly? Just the engine noise?? A spirit of competition and generally less over-professional atmosphere that came with genuine privateers?
And as a musician, you didn´t care about the potential hearing damage that V10 roar could cause to you?tonmeister wrote: ↑15 Dec 2020, 23:15I think, in general, most people grossly underestimate or take for granted the importance of sound or music. Take a movie, watch it without proper effects or soundtrack. It's a whole different experience. I have been able to attend every single winter test in Montmelo since 2004. I'm a classical musician and I do no take sound for granted. I miss greatly the visceral impact of the downshifts on your chest with the V10s and to a lesser extend the V8s, the piercing high pitch of a high revving aspirated engine. Watching test with the new engines is exciting but nowhere near the sense of anticipation of getting near the circuit and feel the monsters roar. It's really not nostalgia, for me it's a fact...
As someone with tinnitus I can only agree with this point... however, there was something special about going to testing and hearing a V10 scream all the way from Silverstone village. The Mercedes V10 in particular around 1998/99 was just so different to everything else. If you wear decent earplugs you get SPL drop without frequency attenuation.Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Dec 2020, 09:10And as a musician, you didn´t care about the potential hearing damage that V10 roar could cause to you?
I loved V10 sound, but we can´t prioritize that over our health. V10 sound was several orders of magnitude over all reasonable, healthy and legal limits
I will never understand that obsession about that noise, and I´ll repeat I loved it too, but if people consider noise as an important factor for a racing engine, we have very very different concepts about what a racing engine should be or provide
On track at Spa I didn't wear earplugs for F1; that wasn't an option for F2/F3jjn9128 wrote: ↑16 Dec 2020, 11:23As someone with tinnitus I can only agree with this point... however, there was something special about going to testing and hearing a V10 scream all the way from Silverstone village. The Mercedes V10 in particular around 1998/99 was just so different to everything else. If you wear decent earplugs you get SPL drop without frequency attenuation.Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Dec 2020, 09:10And as a musician, you didn´t care about the potential hearing damage that V10 roar could cause to you?
I loved V10 sound, but we can´t prioritize that over our health. V10 sound was several orders of magnitude over all reasonable, healthy and legal limits
I will never understand that obsession about that noise, and I´ll repeat I loved it too, but if people consider noise as an important factor for a racing engine, we have very very different concepts about what a racing engine should be or provide
It has to be said though, the V6s are just soulless - at least in the broadcast... perhaps at the track they sound more characterful, in which case it's a failing by FOM to not capture that for the audience.
Volume =/= character. The turbo popping and whirring is more prominent on fan videos than the broadcast - is that at least interesting? I liked going to the WEC round at Silverstone because there was so much diversity in engine notes between NA, turbo charged, v8, v6, diesel (Audi and Peugeot at the time).
Since when was F1 about being healthy? Cmon lolAndres125sx wrote: ↑16 Dec 2020, 09:10And as a musician, you didn´t care about the potential hearing damage that V10 roar could cause to you?tonmeister wrote: ↑15 Dec 2020, 23:15I think, in general, most people grossly underestimate or take for granted the importance of sound or music. Take a movie, watch it without proper effects or soundtrack. It's a whole different experience. I have been able to attend every single winter test in Montmelo since 2004. I'm a classical musician and I do no take sound for granted. I miss greatly the visceral impact of the downshifts on your chest with the V10s and to a lesser extend the V8s, the piercing high pitch of a high revving aspirated engine. Watching test with the new engines is exciting but nowhere near the sense of anticipation of getting near the circuit and feel the monsters roar. It's really not nostalgia, for me it's a fact...
I loved V10 sound, but we can´t prioritize that over our health. V10 sound was several orders of magnitude over all reasonable, healthy and legal limits
I will never understand that obsession about that noise, and I´ll repeat I loved it too, but if people consider noise as an important factor for a racing engine, we have very very different concepts about what a racing engine should be or provide
Dear Andrés,Andres125sx wrote: ↑16 Dec 2020, 09:10And as a musician, you didn´t care about the potential hearing damage that V10 roar could cause to you?tonmeister wrote: ↑15 Dec 2020, 23:15I think, in general, most people grossly underestimate or take for granted the importance of sound or music. Take a movie, watch it without proper effects or soundtrack. It's a whole different experience. I have been able to attend every single winter test in Montmelo since 2004. I'm a classical musician and I do no take sound for granted. I miss greatly the visceral impact of the downshifts on your chest with the V10s and to a lesser extend the V8s, the piercing high pitch of a high revving aspirated engine. Watching test with the new engines is exciting but nowhere near the sense of anticipation of getting near the circuit and feel the monsters roar. It's really not nostalgia, for me it's a fact...
I loved V10 sound, but we can´t prioritize that over our health. V10 sound was several orders of magnitude over all reasonable, healthy and legal limits
I will never understand that obsession about that noise, and I´ll repeat I loved it too, but if people consider noise as an important factor for a racing engine, we have very very different concepts about what a racing engine should be or provide