Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

This evening the Winter Olympic Games 2006 in Turin were officially opened. Normally this would hold little interest for an F1 fan but this time was different. Considering Italy's big motorsport history, it was decided that Luca Badoer, in a special Olympic-liveried Ferrari Formula One car, would provide a spectacle on the podium: five "doughnuts" in forming the symbol of the olympic rings.

>>>>>> http://64.241.125.84/~xtremef1/viewtopic.php?t=944 <<<<<<<<<

dont no how to do the link thing

Edited by ctjet

haha I saw what you posted before you changed it :D

no wonder they got to do burnouts at the opening ceremony!! didn't realise they were so so involved in the whole thing...

"The official 2006 torch was designed by Pininfarina Extra, an offshoot of the design house and coachbuilder that has deep roots in Ferrari design"

http://www.edmunds.com/insideline/do/News/articleId=108951

http://www.italiaspeed.com/2006/cars/other...cs/01/1501.html

Haha i saw that, it was awesome!! When he went idling out slowly to the part he did it i was like hrmmm awesome big open space for some ringies i wonder?!?!?!?! Awesome, one of the best opening ceremony's i've seen :P

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I've seen similar actually in my situation. You never know what tables are attempted to be used when the car thinks it's -99C or +200C. The fail state is not usually that extreme but you know what I mean - it was in my case though! This is where being able to read all the sensors is useful cause you see this stuff really quickly.
    • The above is very important. However as long as you keep timing relatively low, it's plausible to make your own knock ears and plausible to learn to tune with a modern ECU that can do wideband O2 correction like a boost controller. I mean if you only have one viable road to even drive the car on, learning to tinker to this level may be worth doing given you can't do much else with the car...?
    • I find the fact that the rear plate has to be bent inwards at the rear not so bad: but the front is just awful: It's like come on. (these are my very old, now retired/turned in plates) TBH it is a lot of money to fix a minor issue, the fact I said "I'll never really spend the money on doing this" is why people ended up buying them as a gift for a 'car guy' who can be hard to shop for.. for car guy things.
    • I just bent the ends of my premo plates. It even went through Regency like that after the engine conversion and the inspector (a great bloke!) just squinted his eyes and said "I didn't see that". Plates, and how they look, are just something that have zero importance to me.
    • Yeah, I would have said the same. It makes me suggest that there are other things wrong, such that the ECU is totally unhappy with the broken sensor. The only other thought here is that maybe it is shorted, which might cause a different issue to the typical "disconnected" sensor.
×
×
  • Create New...