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| ''{{flagicon|USA}} [[Speedway, Indiana]]''
| ''[[Oval track racing|Oval]], [[Oval track racing#Rovals|Roval]]''
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Revision as of 15:14, 27 August 2009

Warning: Display title "<i>IRacing</i>" overrides earlier display title "iRacing" (help).
iRacing.com
iRacing.com logo
iRacing.com logo
Developer(s)iRacing.com Motorsport Simulations
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
ReleaseAugust 26, 2008
Genre(s)Racing simulation
Mode(s)

iRacing.com (iRacing for short) is an online, subscription-based racing simulation service for Microsoft Windows created by iRacing.com Motorsport Simulations. In addition to accurately modeled vehicles and tracks, iRacing provides servers on which to race and practice and a sanctioning body to organize and oversee competition within the service.

From the start, the company behind iRacing has marketed the service not only as entertainment but also as a training tool for real life racers.[2] They have established numerous partnerships with real-world racing organizations and series, including NASCAR and Indy Racing League. Starting in 2010, iRacing will host an online racing series officially sanctioned by NASCAR.[3] Other partners include SCCA, the Skip Barber Racing School, the Volkswagen Jetta TDI Cup and the Star Mazda Championship, among others.[4][5]

The service was launched to the public on August 26, 2008. As of July 2009, more than 16,000 individual members had signed up.

Development

The company behind iRacing.com was established in Boston, Massachusetts in September 2004 by David Kaemmer and John W. Henry after the demise of Papyrus Design Group, which Kaemmer had also co-founded.[6] The iRacing service has been in development since then, using code from Papyrus' NASCAR Racing 2003 Season as a starting point. According to Kaemmer, iRacing retains the multi-body physics system of NASCAR Racing 2003 Season, as well as some of the track presentation and multi-user packet code, but everything else has been changed, or is completely new like the tire model and graphics engine.[7] The product will be constantly expanded and enhanced after the public launch.[8]

Reception

iRacing.com was launched to the public on August 26, 2008.[9] By July 2009 more than 16,000 individuals had subscribed to the service.[10] iRacing.com has received favorable reviews from automobile, racing and gaming magazines as well as websites dedicated to racing simulators.[11][12][13][14] The service has also been criticized for not yet including features often found on other racing simulators, such as dynamic environments and more advanced damage modeling and gearbox simulation.[15]

Many real life racers, including Justin Wilson, Alex Gurney and Dale Earnhardt, Jr., have subscribed to the service and given positive comments especially about the accuracy of the track modeling which makes the simulator useful as a tool for learning tracks.[16]

Overview of the service

File:Formula Mazda at Laguna Seca.jpg
A screenshot of a Formula Mazda race at Laguna Seca

The iRacing company aims to cater both to real-world racers and racing simulation enthusiasts,[17] so they are trying to offer a realistic simulation of motorsport with accurate track, vehicle and physics modeling,[18][19] and with all of the cars and tracks officially licensed.[8]

iRacing can only be driven online on servers run by iRacing.com, and participation requires a subscription to the service. There are several different subscription options available ranging from a monthly $19 fee to a year-long subscription for $156. The subscription packages include a basic set of tracks and three cars with which to practice and race, as well as a certain amount of iRacing credit that can be used, in addition to money, to buy additional car and track content, all of which is subject to charge.[20]

iRacing manages sanctioned series for the different car types. Each calendar year is divided into four 12-week seasons for standard series, and all driving sessions in a series take place only on one track each week.[21] On a given track, the drivers can participate in practice, qualifying, time trial and race sessions.[22] There can also be non-standard series, examples of which are the four-week Rookie series.[23]

The series are divided into two main categories, oval and road, which are further divided into several license levels from Rookie to Pro, and a driver must earn each license to be eligible to participate in race week sessions on that level.[24] Earning a higher license involves both participation in competitions on a driver's current highest license level and achievement of a minimum safety record. The requirements for advancing and the licenses themselves are category-specific — in other words, a driver has a separate license for road and oval categories.[25]

In addition to driving in the different race week sessions in sanctioned series, a player can use a test mode to drive alone on any track with any car, assuming he has purchased the license to use the content.[26] However, private races or leagues aren't supported yet,[27] and racing with other people is currently possible only within the sanctioned series and according to their predetermined weekly schedules.

Features in detail

Driving simulation

At the core of iRacing is the driving simulation. iRacing has a new, proprietary tire model that is partly based on the company's own research in a tire testing facility. They had full "shop access" to every vehicle modeled in the service to figure out physical and inertia parameters of individual parts. For aerodynamics data, they have had to rely on data collected from manufacturers and teams.[7]

The simulation is still missing several features often found on comparable products. For example, environment conditions such as temperature are static, and clutch and transmission modeling is lacking.[15]

Sanctioned racing and FIRST

Racing within the service is managed by a sanctioning body called FIRST. The detailed rules for official competition are published in a document titled the FIRST Sporting Code, which registered members of the service are expected to read.[28]

Individual championships

Competition is divided into two different categories, oval and road, which are further divided into many different series. All standard series follow a calendar of four 12-week seasons while rookie series have their own 4-week seasons. At the end of each season eligible drivers are promoted (or, in rare cases, demoted) to the next license level. At the end of each standard 12-week season FIRST crowns racing and time trial overall champions and divisional champions.[28]

Club championships

In addition to individual championships FIRST sanctions club championships, which are decided between geographically-based clubs. Starting in 2009, The World Cup of iRacing will be a year-long tournament with (in its first year) 35 clubs divided into 7 regions battling for the club championship.[29]

The following clubs are competing for the championship in its first year:[29]

Region Clubs
Northeastern Massachusetts, New England, Connecticut, New York, Eastern Canada
Mid-Atlantic Pennsylvania, Virginias, Atlantic, New Jersey, Ohio
Southeastern Georgia, Florida, Mid-South, South America, Carolina
Central US Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Midwest, Texas, Plains
Pacific West, Northwest, California, Australia/NZ, Western Canada
Western European England, Celtic, Iberia, France, Benelux
Central European Italy, International, Germany, Scandinavia

Pro Series and Drivers World Championships

On March 3rd, 2009, iRacing announced its premier series, the iRacing Pro Series and iRacing Drivers World Championships to start in 2009 and 2010, respectively. Both top series have separate contests for oval and road course racing. The two Pro Series are open to the top 250 drivers in each category and serve as feeder series to the Drivers World Championships, which will be limited to the top 50 drivers. Unlike the standard individual championships, which have four 12-week seasons per year, these top series will follow a 39-week schedule. The inaugural Pro season is an exception with a 25-week schedule.[30]

Unofficial races

Even though all on- and off-track conduct within iRacing is subject to the rules laid out in the Sporting Code, the service also has races that are not officially sanctioned by FIRST and are therefore open to members of all license levels. Currently such events include the so-called "24 Heures du Fun" races that feature different tracks and vehicles every Saturday 00:00-24:00 UTC as well as week-long unofficial series during the one-week breaks between 12-week standard seasons.

Web interface

The simulator is launched through a member website, and there is no standalone offline client. In addition to choosing the series and session to run, the member site interface can be used to browse series and driver statistics, acquire information about the cars and tracks, launch the online forums and chat, open the replay viewer, customize the virtual vehicles and helmets, purchase new content, and review and update personal account data.

Cars

Vehicles in iRacing are divided into six classes: Rookie, Advanced Rookie, Class D, Class C, Class B and Class A.[31] They correspond to the identically named driver license classes except for the two different Rookie car classes, which can both be driven with the same Rookie driver license.

The following table lists all the vehicles currently featured in the service and the license levels of the series they are used in:[32]

Note: a light blue background denotes that a car is included in the basic subscription

Car name License level
600 Racing Legends Ford '34 Coupe Oval rookie / Road class D
Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Late Model Oval class D
SK Modified (Modified racing) Oval class D
Chevrolet Silverado (Camping World Truck Series) Oval class C
C&R Racing Silver Crown (USAC) Oval class B
Chevrolet Impala SS (Nationwide Series) Oval class B
Chevrolet Impala SS (Sprint Cup) Oval class A
Pontiac Solstice Road rookie
Spec Racer Ford Road rookie
Skip Barber Formula 2000 Road class D
Volkswagen Jetta TDI Cup Road class D
Star Mazda Road class C
Radical SR8 V8 Road class B
Lotus 79 Road class B
Riley Technologies Daytona Prototype Road class A

Announced upcoming vehicles include the Chevrolet Corvette C6.R[33] and various Ford race cars starting with the Mustang FR500S and the Doran Ford GT-R raced in the ALMS GT2 series.[34] On August 22, 2009, iRacing announced a partnership with Indy Racing League, which will eventually bring the Dallara chassis of the IndyCar Series and the Indy Lights series to iRacing.[35]

Tracks

iRacing creates each track using proprietary Exactrac laser mapping technology to replicate the tracks with millimeter precision.[18]

The following track venues are confirmed to be in the service:[36]

Note: a light blue background denotes that a track is included in the basic subscription, a yellow background denotes that a track is not yet available

Track name Location Configuration(s)
Atlanta Motor Speedway United States Hampton, Georgia Oval
Auto Club Speedway United States Fontana, California Oval, Roval
Barber Motorsports Park United States Birmingham, Alabama Road course
Brands Hatch United Kingdom West Kingsdown, Kent Road course
Bristol Motor Speedway United States Bristol, Tennessee Oval
Chicagoland Speedway United States Joliet, Illinois Oval
Centripetal Circuit Fictional Skid pad
Concord Motorsport Park United States Concord, North Carolina Oval
Darlington Raceway United States Darlington, South Carolina Oval
Daytona International Speedway United States Daytona Beach, Florida Oval, Roval
F1 Outdoors United States East Bridgewater, Massachusetts Kart
Homestead-Miami Speedway United States Homestead, Florida Oval, Roval
Indianapolis Motor Speedway United States Speedway, Indiana Oval, Roval
Infineon Raceway United States Sonoma, California Road course
Kansas Speedway United States Kansas City, Kansas Oval
Laguna Seca United States Monterey, California Road course
Lanier National Speedway United States Braselton, Georgia Oval
Las Vegas Motor Speedway United States Las Vegas, Nevada Oval
Lime Rock Park United States Lime Rock, Connecticut Road course
Long Beach United States Long Beach, California Road course
Lowe's Motor Speedway United States Charlotte, North Carolina Oval, Roval
Martinsville Speedway United States Martinsville, Virginia Oval
Michigan International Speedway United States Brooklyn, Michigan Oval
Miller Motorsports Park United States Tooele, Utah Road course, Kart
Milwaukee Mile Speedway United States West Allis, Wisconsin Oval
Moran Raceway United States Beaumont, California Kart
Moroso Motorsports Park United States Jupiter, Florida Road course, Kart
Mosport International Raceway Canada Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada Road course
New Hampshire Motor Speedway United States Loudon, New Hampshire Oval, Roval
New Jersey Motorsports Park United States Millville, New Jersey Road course, Oval, Kart
Oulton Park United Kingdom Little Budworth, Cheshire Road course
Oxford Plains Speedway United States Oxford, Maine Oval
Phoenix International Raceway United States Phoenix, Arizona Oval, Roval
Pocono Raceway United States Long Pond, Pennsylvania Oval
Richmond International Raceway United States Richmond, Virginia Oval
Road America United States Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin Road course
Road Atlanta United States Braselton, Georgia Road course
Sebring International Raceway United States Sebring, Florida Road course
Silverstone Circuit United Kingdom Silverstone, Northamptonshire Road course
South Boston Speedway United States South Boston, Virginia Oval
Stafford Motor Speedway United States Stafford Springs, Connecticut Oval
Summit Point Motorsports Park United States Summit Point, West Virginia Road course x 2
Texas Motor Speedway United States Fort Worth, Texas Oval
Talladega Superspeedway United States Talladega County, Alabama Oval
Toyota Speedway at Irwindale United States Irwindale, California Oval
USA International Speedway United States Lakeland, Florida Oval
Virginia International Raceway United States Alton, Virginia Road course
Watkins Glen International United States Watkins Glen, New York Road course
Willow Springs International Motorsports Park United States Rosamond, California Road course, Kart
Zandvoort, Circuit Park Zandvoort Netherlands Zandvoort, Netherlands Road course

Notes

  1. ^ "System Requirements". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  2. ^ "iRacing.com Introduces Next-Generation Training Tool for Racers: Simracing Highlighted as Foundation for Newest Branch of Motorsport". iRacing.com. July 21, 2006. Retrieved 2009-04-10.
  3. ^ "NASCAR and iRacing to Partner in Online Racing Series: Official NASCAR Series to Begin at iRacing.com in 2010". iRacing.com. May 17, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  4. ^ "Volkswagen announces partnership with iRacing.com for Jetta TDI Cup driver training and candidate identification". Volkswagen of America. April 25, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-26.
  5. ^ "Corporate Partners". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2009-04-10.
  6. ^ "Company Overview". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2008-06-13.
  7. ^ a b Denton, Jon (August 2008). "The Masters of Mass" (PDF). AutoSimSport. 4 (4): 21–34. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  8. ^ a b Denton, Jon (February 15, 2008). "iRacing.com Announce: Revolution" (Flash). AutoSimSport. 4 (1): 19–30. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  9. ^ "iRacing Launches Advanced Motorsport Simulation and Internet Racing Service: Driver Development Tool Now Available to Auto Racing Community and General Public". iRacing.com. August 26, 2008. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  10. ^ Eric Fisher (July 27, 2009). "Taking aim online". SportsBusiness Journal. Retrieved 2009-07-28.
  11. ^ Lerner, Preston (December 23, 2008). "Virtual Car Racing - iRacing". Automobile Magazine. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  12. ^ Lear, Scott R. iRacing Demo (Flash video). Grassroots Motorsports Magazine. Retrieved 2009-01-09. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |date2= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Toivonen, Ismo (February 2009). "iRacing.com: Kumartakaa uutta mestaria". Pelit (in Finnish). 2009 (2): 36–39. Retrieved 2009-04-13.
  14. ^ Lindblad, Jens (June 9, 2008). "iRacing". SimHQ.com. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  15. ^ a b Vasilakos, Aristotelis (June 2008). "iRacing: The Physics" (PDF). AutoSimSport. 4 (3): 33–38. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  16. ^ Kirby, Gordon (December 22, 2008). "The Way It Is/ Exploring iRacing with Gurney, Wilson and Villeneuve". Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  17. ^ "Is this a game?". iRacing.com FAQ. iRacing.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  18. ^ a b "Track Tech". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  19. ^ "Car Tech". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  20. ^ "Subscription Packages". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  21. ^ "4.2. Sanctioning". FIRST Official Sporting Code (PDF). iRacing.com. August 7, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  22. ^ "4.5. Sessions". FIRST Official Sporting Code.
  23. ^ "4.2.5. Rookie Series". FIRST Official Sporting Code.
  24. ^ "2.9. Series Eligibility". FIRST Official Sporting Code.
  25. ^ "2.2. Earning a FIRST License". FIRST Official Sporting Code.
  26. ^ Cole, Shaun (Director). Preview - iRacing (Flash video). SRT Media Productions. Retrieved 2009-04-09. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |date2= ignored (help)
  27. ^ "Will iRacing.com support private leagues, allowing groups of friends to run invitation-only races?". iRacing.com FAQ. iRacing.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  28. ^ a b FIRST Official Sporting Code.
  29. ^ a b "The World Cup of iRacing 2009 Official Guidelines" (PDF). iRacing.com. 2009-01-19. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  30. ^ "The iRacing Pro Series and iRacing Drivers World Championships" (PDF). iRacing.com. 2009-07-29. Retrieved 2009-08-02.
  31. ^ "2.10. Vehicle Classes". FIRST Official Sporting Code.
  32. ^ "Cars". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
  33. ^ "Ultimate Corvette Racer Coming to iRacing: Virtual Version of Le Mans & ALMS-Winning C6.R Available in New Year". iRacing.com. December 05, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-11. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  34. ^ "iRacing.com Announces the Addition of Ford Race Cars to its Virtual Fleet: Mustang FR500S and Ford GT First to be Added". iRacing.com. April 14, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-14.
  35. ^ "iRacing.com to Put IndyCar Series Fans in the Driver's Seat: Virtual Indy 500 Next May Highlights Partnership with Indy Racing League, Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Dallara". iRacing.com. August 22, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-23.
  36. ^ "Tracks". iRacing.com. Retrieved 2009-02-08.

Further reading