They are not the only people they warn though is it? The same warnings are for all drivers new to Nurburgring.
Overconfidence old or young, sim racer or not is going to be a big poential problem for someone new to the track in real world.
Drivers are preped at every circuit abd before every event, so yes its does cover everyone regardless of experience (right the way to F1, etc). However certain groups will always be seen as a higher risk and young male drivers have always been one of he highest, sim racers are now heading that way as well.
It does from what I read of it. First article critizing a driver for overconfidence and thinking he has learnt track already. Second is criticizing a driver for going at his safe limit to learn the track and car that is both very new to him.
The second article does nothing of the sort at all, it clearly points out the danger of believing you know a track from a sim regardless of your skill level as a driver and the importance of 'sighting' laps and building up speed rather than going for an all out attack.
The driver in question was not within his safe limits at all, as is quite clearly stated in that article...
But his track knowledge is dangerously poor. Check out the early entry at 7m20s... he catches the notorious crest and camber change just wrong and AT SPEED. Put 9/10 average tourist session drivers in that slide and the red lights would be on before you could say "Attention, attenion! Zee track ist now closed. Please return to your parking places!"
My point is its not the professional driver in him that's making him enter the corners too fast; it's the illusion that he has 'learnt' the track already!
That's not someone driving a car within the safe limits of his ability with the car and track at all.
Point is though a racing driver should have a good idea of braking distances and brake pressure, how high or low. It will translate to normal real world driving. Most of top racing drivers are already racers before having a normal driving licence. It doesn't make them do something resembling emergency stops at normal stops when they first start taking any lessons, if they even do take lessons that is.
Quite the opposite idea is not coming through in your posts in my opinion.
You may want to actually read the entire chain of comments before posting as the point I rebutted was that that all of the skills required for racing can be directly applied to the street, not that none of them can be transfered from the track to the road.
You can learn so much from GT5 I feel that could be applied to real world as it is after all what the textbooks will try and explain in general. You get to try out theory in a competitive environment, people who are best at it are now racing drivers through GT Academy program.
That you 'feel' is the operative word here, you actually have no real frame of reference for this.
I am not out to defend GT5 at all costs but if that is the case, then you must be out to criticize GT5 at all costs.
I've gone out of my way in this thread to make sure its understood that I am referring to all sims, and have said as much a number of times.
If I were out to criticize GT5 at all costs I would not have posted repeatedly (both here and at FP) how impressed I am with the changes made to the suspension model with the 2.09 update.
Odd that isn't it.
They are very raw in this sense as the racing experience like final race up to the stage is they do a Karting race with their competitors and a passing challenge. That maybe a significant degree of learning and practice in your view but it certainly isn't in my opinion. Some might have other experience before GT Academy but for majority I don't think that is the case. It is also not like they are taught everything to do, they have to do it on their own accord mostly and are constantly being judged. It is quite a lot of different things they have to do, very new to most of them.
No they did not just get a karting racxe and a passing challenge.
The information is here at GTP for all to read, multiple sighting laps with instructors and then instructor guided laps were completed before they were allowed to run time trail laps and autocross events, only then did they move onto the Kart event.
That was day one of five for this year.
So no they didn't just do a Kart race and a passing challenge before going out and competitively racing each other, mainly because neither Sony, PD or Nissan want the press resulting from an unprepared driver being injured in an accident.
Even when all that's completed and they have a winner they don't just throw them into a car and let them race, but rather they have a very grueling and challenging series of month ahead of them as they train intensively to enter their first professional race.
I have the upmost respect for the finalists and winner of the GTA, and am getting wholeheartedly sick of those who underplay the work involved in getting them through the bootcamp and the winner into a race seat.
In claiming that most of what they need to know comes from GT5 you are doing a massive disservice to the drivers themselves and the instructors who guide them through all of this.
You seem to also happy gloss over massive selection of the people who take part in it are filtered out by the game too.
You could simply go back and re-read it from my older posts in a number of different threads. This is after all not the first time I've been through this with you.
However, once again, just because they are quick in a sim that alone doesn't mean they are quick/safe/competitive in a real car on a real track. That's not a slight to any of them, its a simple and basic observation.
Yes I am aware of his hyperbole. However you seem to be suggesting he is lying about saying the speedometer at 20MPH, maybe with higher quality video it will be possible to see if it is the truth or not. I doubt he is that far out with the reading of the speedometer.
No I'm saying he's exaggerating considerably. Will one go sideways on a track at 20mph? Yes the tyres are shot, its below 6 degrees celcus or you massively unsettle it. Will one step out from power-over on the road at 20mph? Well the two I've been in (driven one and passengered another) didn't.
Watch the video at the following link....
http://www.evo.co.uk/videos/planetevovideos/281431/video_toyota_gt_86_quick_test.html
....for a track test that is a lots less dramatic (less POWWWWAAAAAAAHHHHH) and a lot more informative. You can't just to a corner and mash the throttle to get it to oversteer (it simply doesn't have the torque), rather you have to work it to get the back out. Notice in the video the little Scandinavian flicks to get the rear to pop out he uses a number of times.