Bikes? Bike racing? Italian cars? Images? Music? Sustainable corporate environmental-ism? Ouch, my brain hurts! Just search gtveloce thanks!

Lijit Search

OffLine

For sustainability --> villages not motorways and car parks --> eco-friendly gadgets --> small cars, fast bicycles and a smaller footprint for humanity on this planet...

Thursday, February 26, 2009

IT survey reveals 40% work a 4 hour working day? #productivity

Is this really a surprise? Read the article and come back if you want, but I bet 4-5 hours a day is about right in most jobs, IT or otherwise. But it all depends, doesn't it? Do you work reactively, like a call-taker on a helpdesk or in a retail sales job? Are you still "working" when you are waiting for the next caller or customer? Do you "look busy" or start doing some online education or other admin during that downtime? Is that still "work"?

Given that most people take lunch and 2 coffee breaks - at least - and a couple of stretches to ease the RSI, plus a walk or 2 to do "something different", plus the odd snippet of gossip time, the reasonably standard 8 hour day is in fact more like 6 and a half at best. I have no survey to prove it, but it seems logical.

Yes, there are career-minded people who want to impress, and workaholics who just love what they do and tend to keep working beyond that "standard". And small business people who need to keep running in order to keep afloat. There are also badly organised people who travel and schedule poorly (perhaps because they like travelling more than scheduling or working?) and waste their working day at airports, in planes or on the road. Is a 'road warrior' working when they are driving to the next client? Do executives count airport time as "work"?

I'm sure there are construction workers who are "observed" all day and lack the opportunities to "skive off" that office workers do. But from my own observations I tend to suspect that the number of people who Tweet and update their facebook pages during so-called working hours probably balances out the "compelled" or micro-managed worker. Mind you, whilst I may be writing this when I "should" be working, I also have been known to wake at 3am and start working just because I can... so perhaps we shouldn't stress about the hours and just look at the output instead?

Labels: , ,

Chinese stimulus package trades bikes for cars #auto #bicycles

Economic stimulus packages are all the rage right now - imagine what could have been achieved with a similar global effort on global warming, instead of the lukewarm drip-fed effort we have seen so far? Anyway, the financial collapse threatens economies, and thus jobs, which would be of immediate harm to most incumbent governments... so what hurts most gets most attention.

In China's case the stimulus package includes support for car makers, effectively tying the consolidation of the industry to an economic imperative - to drive local growth by swapping bicycles and the like for locally-made cars. Now this is great for the car makers, consolidation will save costs and make for increased efficiencies, driving down per-unit cost and ultimately, once the fall-out has settled, adding jobs - but only if growth can be sustained and exceed where we are now. To do that means exporting more - many more - of those cars. Given that right now is not the right time to be exporting cars, they had better have a compelling sales pitch - and that means low-cost, as in really cheap. Hopefully they will be reliable, serviceable and efficient. Otherwise I'll stick with my bicycle.

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Blu-ray moves to an early majority? A what? #tech #marketing

I know what an early adopter phase is, but what's an 'early majority' phase? Are they just making stuff up? Well, yes, of course they are - we all make stuff up. Being human we like to categorise and label - it's how we learn and cope with our environment. Aside from labelling poisons and food stuffs for purely practical purposes, we have invented 'baby boomer' as a broad demographic label for a real surge in births and then felt compelled to continue labelling each succeeding 'generation' whether it makes sense, or correlates with real research, or not. Mostly not.

So it is with marketing speak and the phases of a product life cycle. We are getting carried away with granularity whilst mixing in some hype and spin. Yes, Blu-ray has won the HD war, yes sales are growing and prices are falling. If it becomes compelling enough we'll all buy one. Unless something disruptive comes along first, like massive, cheap broadband and Internet-enabled home A/V gear. Who needs a disc in a data-on-demand world?

In any case 'Early majority' doesn't really make any sense - either you have a majority or you don't (and Blu-ray technology has less than 10% share no matter how you look at it, so 'majority' is a hard label to pin on it). So it's a majority of what? Nothing?

Labels: , , ,

Interesting story about renewing water pipes #infrastructure

It's probably just me, but solutions to the infrastructure renewal problem are fascinating. Well, interesting, anyway. Infrastructure is one of those things we (a) take for granted and (b) ignore until it breaks. When it does break (or run out of capacity) then we blame someone else. Transport infrastructure is a popular example - we want more roads, better roads, smoother roads, fewer potholes, less traffic and so on but if we lose our homes, our trees or an historic building for a new road we will get onto the media and have a whinge. Conversely if no new roads are built others will get onto the media and whinge that no new roads are being built. And if we do build those roads, perhaps underground to save those trees and homes, we will be caned by someone for not spending the money more wisely - like on on public transport or bikeways. For governments, steering between the extremes is not easy.

Which brings me to water pipes. They age, they corrode, they break. They are underground. They are essential. So how do we maintain 'em? You can dig a trench and renew the pipes, causing massive disruption, or you can sleeve the pipes with other, smaller diameter pipes, typically using plastic. Obviously you can only do this so many times before you lose significant pipe capacity, but equally obviously we may get another 100 years out of a sleeved pipe, allowing us to "get away with it" and leave the problem for another generation. Here's another method, involving robots, cameras and inflatable plastic repair jobs. It's destined to be used in New York's 150-year-old wood-lined water pipes.

Well I liked it anyway.

Labels: ,

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Audiophiles are the only people who can hear well #audio


I too was a semi-audiophile, once. I know what it's like to set high expectations on music quality and to keep on justifying my high-expense actions based on "sunk costs". Once you have made that investment in time, pride and money there's no going back. Well, so I thought. In fact you don't have to go all the way back, just some of the way back and then forwards - but in a new way. Like dispensing with old-style toe-clips and straps on your bike pedals and moving onto clipless pedals - it's a testing transition at first but once you have discarded the old ways it's much, much better.

OK, my story starts almost 30 years ago. I bought some gear that was recommended by a sound engineer who had worked at Olympic Studios in London in the late '60s. (He recalled the Rolling Stones as being rather 'smelly' at their sessions, btw.) It was good stuff. A pair of big, bad Acoustic Research AR93 speakers, a Sansui amp and a TEAC turntable with an expensive diamond stylus. I added a Nakamichi tape deck a bit later. The weakest link was the vinyl. I reckon I spent more on imported pressings than I did on the audio hardware, and it still wasn't good enough. Vinyl is great stuff in theory but even your lightest needle tracking your finest groove will cause wear and tear to the record whilst suffering from all of the other mechanical problems allied to mass, velocity and force. And we haven't even mentioned static and dust. Lo, and if the pressing is not perfect to begin with then you are behind the 8-ball immediately. Physics actually matter and rotating masses and direct contact do not a happy couple make.

So - objectively, if anything or anyone is truly objective - vinyl is actually rubbish to use for audio, being a kludge, the audio equivalent of brute-force engineering (like a derailleur on a bicycle, it can work well - but it's not exactly elegant).

And so I discovered the Sony CD player in about 1985 and my life changed. Yes, some CDs are as bad as bad vinyl - the sound from my CD copy of the Who's Quadropenia is appallingly muddy, whereas my vinyl copy is bright and perfect. I blame that on the quality of the master and a poor effort to transfer from original analog to digital. Done right, it works fine - but it must be done right.

For me, CD killed vinyl; although I do still like the big sleeves and the artwork. And it's kinda fun in a retro way to occasionally do it "the old fashioned way", just like I prefer manual gearboxes to automatics. But the warped discs, the scratches... no thanks.

Around the same time as the CD player arrived I also got into personal computers. One thing led to another and now I'm thoroughly sold on highly compressed sound files and digital manipulation of both sound and vision. For an analogy look at art: I used to paint and draw with oils and pencils, now I use computer tools like Photoshop and the like. I used to process my own film and develop prints in the darkroom, but now I don't. It's not just cleaner, easier and faster, it's also better on the computer. I have more control, not less. And less waste. Sure, you can wallow in the whole complexity and difficulty of the old ways and impress your kids with your skillful, demented suffering, but there's no way it's coming back - we are going forward!

So it is with audio. You can still spend fabulous amounts on high-end audio gear - and good luck to you if that's the case - but decent sound is available with little effort and at low cost, and it's better. You can control the sound, be it music or just "audio" and manipulate - or create - it to your taste. With less waste.

Of course audiophiles will still say "but something is lost with digital translation" and "we can get a better sound out of high-end specialist gear" and "it should be reproduced faithfully, as the musician intended" and of course they are right on all counts. You can always do "better" and remain "faithful", even with digital, if that's your philosophy. But it's not necessarily the only way to think, is it? Now I'm not advocating lousy, buzzy, poorly reproduced sound, just that digital is the clear way to go in terms of empowerment of both the musician and the listener. And that an acceptable balance can easily be found that delivers good, crisp audio from a computer (or MP3 player or whatever) without undue compromise. If you are a musician and have tried Anvil Studio or Cubase or even just a virtual amp on your PC you'll know what I mean. Digital opens new audio doors. And you don't have to spend a bucket load in the process.

Labels: , , ,

Easy computer audio to stereo amplifier link #gadgets

I usually like what I see at the old-school specialist online music shop theMusic.com, but I'm not so impressed with this particular product: The Music Streamer+ is an ultra high performance music interface that allows a computer and a home entertainment system to become perfect partners. With its unique topology, theMusicStreamer+ provides a completely isolated path between the computer and an audio system. No more audio contamination by the computer; your music will always sound its best. There are no external power supplies to worry about because the Music Streamer+ derives its power from the USB buss while completely regenerating power for all its internal circuitry using a sophisticated set of proprietary circuits.

Now I'm not sure it's that hard, is it? Many personal computers have the required outputs and you can simply run a wire... but they do claim "unique topology" and "completely isolated path between the computer and an audio system" so there must be something more going on, eh?

Actually I'm not sure how unique the "topology" is when I already have an AV Labs Music Studio that looks pretty similar. It too has a USB output as well as RCA audio connections in and out. (I also have a older Belkin Hi Speed USB 2.0 DVD Creator device that does much the same with both audio and video but is just data-in, rather than data-out as well) All you need to do is connect the USB on one side of the Music Studio box to the computer and connect an RCA cable to the other side, not forgetting to connect the other end of your RCA cable to your amplifier on your home stereo. If you are an audiophile you'll have a whinge about the quality but that goes with the territory, doesn't it?

As for that complete isolation, I guess they mean that the audio signal is not fed through your sound card or chip (ie you select "USB audio device" in your control panel and deselect your usual audio). That may be good or bad, depending upon your preferences. Sound cards/chips may have some funky hardware that makes things faster/better, that actually enhances the sound... but arguably that's not always the case. So is that it? Doesn't seem so fancy then... the Music Studio was far, far less than half the price of this Music Streamer. So what's new here? Anything? Nothing that I can see at this stage.

Here's a quick grab of images of the AV Labs Music Studio, FWIW...

The outputs.. which include the USB on the right and an audio out.. you can connect to your home sound system from here or just use your computer speakers..







The inputs.. including a microphone input.. you can connect any audio device as an input, if it has RCAs..








The 9 metre cable that connects the computer and Music Studio box to the home audio amplifier:









And an example of just one way to connect - in this instance via the front panel of a Desay PVR (but it could just as easily be the back of the amplifier itself)..

Labels: , , ,

Friday, February 20, 2009

Broadband over power line rollout serves isolated US communities

Here's an option for isolated communities looking to get faster, cheaper broadband - use the power lines you already have. This is a rollout in progress by IBM for a group of community electricity collectives serving around 12% of the US electricity market. As a side benefit the power collectives gain computer-aided power monitoring and control functionality they wouldn't otherwise have. The big gain here is in using existing cabling, of which there is a lot, strung all around the country.

Disclaimer: my day job is with IBM, but I have nothing to do with this, I just like the potential of BPL technology! Thinking of which, BPL, or Ethernet over power in general works just fine in most house-based applications (as opposed to the longer-distance power cabling above), as long as you avoid messy interconnects like power boards. If you have a clean installation it's fast, easy and available now, off the shelf. Alas I love power boards so a "clean" install is a bit of a dream. Back to WiFi and Cat 5 for me.

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Old tech launch: Pam Am 747 bumper sticker c.1969

I keep the strangest things. When Pan American World Airways (Pan Am to you lot) launched the 747 across the Pacific to Sydney there was all of the usual hoopla. Radio stories about the wingtip vortices sucking light aircraft to their doom, TV coverage of the first landing and rants in the printed media about how the damned things would crack the concrete aprons at Sydney Airport. We even built a nice new international terminal at Sydney and almost forgot to leave enough space to fit these behemoths of the air. As an afterthought we juggled things around and made it all fit, beefed up the hard-standing and widened a few taxiways. But of course, best of all, were the bumper stickers. Can't have a decent launch w/o a bumper sticker, can we?

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Preening Cockatoos


Cockatoo pair_0902a
Originally uploaded by gtveloce
These 2 Sulphur-crested Cockatoos were hanging around my backyard most of the day, part of a larger group of 4 or 5 that came and went. (Which in turn is part of a group of maybe 50 or more that roost in a tree nearby every night.) They suddenly got together on a branch and started to preen each other. It started with the flapping of open wings from a distance of about 2-3 metres, then they came closer together and gradually got stuck into a full-on preening of feathers around the head and neck. It ended abruptly with a loud sqwark and an obvious "OK, that's enough" sort of attitude.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Fire and rain. Drought or flood? Bourke copped 197mm overnight and it's heading south and east: http://ping.fm/q66nB

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Friday, February 13, 2009

I'd never seen a Koala drinking from a cyclist's bidon - until now! http://ping.fm/Cn6G8

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Armstrong goes with Astana team's testing - why double up when you don't have to? Will ppl now say it's not independent enuff? http://ping.fm/J4qIY

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Small sample but US bike dealers report upswing in high end: http://ping.fm/xDIQZ

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Before Google we loved Altavista. There's little to stop us switching again: http://ping.fm/2j0XR

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Someone got me started on 'planned obsolescence'

I read an article about the tricks and traps of our digital age, which drifted around from planned obsolescence to tricky marketing. A comment spurred me to deconstruct the idea that planned obsolesence is "good" because it "creates jobs":

Planned obsolescence has a few flaws. With material goods it creates physical waste, up to now a hidden cost that we *all* have paid (usually by government subsidy). As externalities like waste are factored in (by for example pricing carbon emissions) the real cost of obsolescence is revealed and it doesn't look so good. Secondly, whilst obsolescence is thought to be a great idea to ensure that someone comes back for 'another one', it only works in monopoly markets or close thereto, or where loyalty or some other sticking force (like a low cost shaver and high-cost replacement blades) glues the buyer to the brand. If the market is truly "free" they only come back if they are satisfied with the first one. As soon as a competitor makes a longer-lasting, better or more serviceable product the short-lived-by-design product will fall from favour. Basically planned obsolescence relies on imperfect markets, government subsidy, marketing tricks, and/or inefficiency to actually work. If that's what you want, fine, but what about the free market, efficiency and innovation? What if we deny ourselves the better product and pay through the nose for the privilege of getting the lesser device? Is that actually generating jobs for us, or setting us up for a later catastrophic economic failure?

Oops, it may have just happened!

Labels: , ,

Flickr

This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

More photoshopping - an ancient cockatoo that's survived the heat: http://ping.fm/QRmSF

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

The state of things

The firestorm in Victoria. Clearly we would not wish such devastation upon ourselves, and seeing it happen so swiftly to others is both terrifying and a wake-up call. Now my first thought is that we should wait a decent period of time before digging into the whys and wherefores, but looking at some footage from the scene my first thought was not the sympathy I "should" have, rather it was "don't build on top of a ridgeline with forest below, especially so when a prevailing summer wind will drive a fire towards you". Too late now, but my sadness for those now suffering is tinged with a notion - why do we allow people to take such risks? We'll have to wait for the analysis to be sure but in some cases it looked like a combination of freakish weather and poorly sited housing. It may be that in such weather no amount of risk mitigation would have helped - but I do hope that some good comes of this tragedy, that we learn from it and take action to avoid repeating any mistakes.

Labels: , , ,

Doing my photoshopping - here's an orb weaver despatching a bee for lunch: http://ping.fm/skCgp

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

More photoshopping - an ancient cockatoo that's survived the heat: http://ping.fm/QRmSF

Doing my photoshopping - here's an orb weaver despatching a bee for lunch: http://ping.fm/skCgp

Sunday, February 08, 2009

Harvard blog on 'smart' vs 'dumb' growth: http://ping.fm/b9lTf

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Harvard blog on 'smart' vs 'dumb' growth: http://ping.fm/b9lTf

On conspiracy and obesity

Obesity? It's all a conspiracy by massive food corporations!

My reading has led me to believe this; Middle aged spread is a natural consequence of over-consumption of processed carbohydrates much earlier in life. Our bodies produce a great deal of insulin to deal with these processed carbohydrates and in time the insulin receptors become resistant. This forces our body to produce more and more insulin. The end result is that we now experience wildly fluctuating blood sugar levels which causes us to crave simpler and simpler carbohydrates to correct the low blood sugar levels, and the cycle repeats. The processes of the brain making us crave sugars is exactly the same process that causes smokers to crave cigarettes and David Duchovny to crave sex. The challenge faced by sufferers of this hyperinsulinism is similar to those faced by smokers. Telling them to eat less is an obvious solution in the same way you might tell a smoker that the answer to all his woes is to simply stop smoking or an alcoholic to drink Gatorade instead. History has shown this to be ineffective advice. Telling sufferers of hyperinsulinism to eat low GI foods or restrict caloric intake is like telling a smoker to smoke pencils.


Interesting theory, but OTOH we could just crave sweet and fatty food because it tastes good and evolution has made us that way.

And the food corporations simply play - or prey - upon our human nature. (Which doesn't make it right, but it's nice and simple.) Perhaps something else held our cravings back in the past, too? Maybe we have become wealthier over recent times (on average) and are now able to afford - and thus have the luxury to crave - more "stuff", including junk food, takeaways, packaged food and 'enrobed' bars, regular restaurant food and so on. Post WWII we have shifted a lot of our working class into so-called "middle class" whilst simultaneously making almost everything cheaper (via mass production, computerisation and other economic efficiencies). It's empowered and enriched more people whilst offering far more choice in foodstuffs, including what we may consider poor food choices. And food makers have set about making those poor food choices more easily available in order to tap the market. The rise of cravings and impulse eating is thus explained: it's just that saturated fat and sweet things taste good and we have the money and access to buy and eat such junk anytime we want. 60 years ago (or less) it was much, much harder to sustain a craving - it was even harder to find shops open on Sundays let alone 24x7; and of course food wasn't as glorified in the mass media like it is now. There's good and bad in there of course.

The other point about the last 60+ years or so is the proliferation of labour-saving devices, especially cars but also every electrical appliance and accessory you can think of....it goes hand-in-hand with industrialisation, globalisation and mass marketing and in many ways is a wonderful thing, but in a very short period of time we have almost totally eliminated every major manually-powered household cleaning or kitchen tool, wiped out the hand mower, removed the need to walk down the street to have a chat (we SMS instead) and largely (in Oz at least) rendered the bicycle a novelty item for the well-off. Whereas pre-WW2 cars were relatively rare ; few had phones; walking or riding to the tram stop or to the shops, work or school was "normal"; the washing machine, ice-cream maker and the meat grinder took actual physical effort; and bicycle racing drew 30,000 people to Henson Park, Marrickville on a Saturday night. Significantly many of us now shop weekly by car at big centralised outlets rather than walk daily to the local shops. And our working lives have similarly been robbed of physical effort. We have simply tipped the world on its head in just a few generations. These "little" things have been the big behavioural changes in our lives.

That leaves scope for exceptions, people who exercise their butts off, watch their diet religiously yet still gain weight for whatever reason; but for the most part increased wealth + decreased daily exercise = increased obesity. Do we thus tax junk food, promote cycling, educate or legislate? How we deal with this, and how quickly, will be an interesting test for our society.

Labels: ,

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Google and IBM offer to WiFi your medical devices and store data globally: http://ping.fm/j4FVa

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Google and IBM offer to WiFi your medical devices and store data globally: http://ping.fm/j4FVa

Phew. The Channel Billed Cuckoos have fledged and left: http://ping.fm/OVtM7

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

In denial: UK motoring magazine thinks 30mpg is good enough for a bloated fast 1.5tonne medium/small car: http://ping.fm/cOwvN

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

In denial: UK motoring magazine thinks 30mpg is good enough for a bloated fast 1.5tonne medium/small car: http://ping.fm/cOwvN

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Behavioural change in car buyer's habits?

Have Aussie car buyers finally realised that they don't actually need - or even want - big cars? http://www.drive.com.au/…etail.aspx

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

How about an Indian-built laptop for $20 now, hopefully $20 later? http://ping.fm/XHLm1

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Google's Latitude maps and tracks your presence: http://ping.fm/OU59D

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

How about an Indian-built laptop for $20 now, hopefully $20 later? http://ping.fm/XHLm1

Google's Latitude maps and tracks your presence: http://ping.fm/OU59D

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Desperately flakey uptake figures on Blu-ray takeup in Oz, 80% of which are actually PS3 sales: http://www.smh.com.au/…94763.html

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Desperately flakey uptake figures on Blu-ray takeup in Oz, 80% of which are actually PS3 sales: http://www.smh.com.au/news/digital-life/home-entertainment/articles/bluray-takes-off-as-prices-drop/2009/01/30/1232818694763.html

Enhanced GPS stalking tools, or a reassuring way to keep track? http://ping.fm/OvajI

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Enhanced GPS stalking tools, or a reassuring way to keep track? http://ping.fm/OvajI

What I could do with 20 Petaflops... well video editing would be quicker: http://ping.fm/uVagf

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

What I could do with 20 Petaflops... well video editing would be quicker: http://ping.fm/uVagf

Rudd stimulates language lab and boom gate industries with $A42B gift: http://ping.fm/CyVnp

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

wordy insightful piece on crime, punishment and US cyclist Jock Boyer: http://ping.fm/GWtta

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

wordy insightful piece on crime, punishment and US cyclist Jock Boyer: http://ping.fm/GWtta

Sunday, February 01, 2009

Instant cred. New pre-worn guitars from Fender: http://ping.fm/jfdgG

Mobile post sent by gtveloce using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Instant cred. New pre-worn guitars from Fender: http://ping.fm/jfdgG

blog comments powered by Disqus

-->

These posts represent my opinions only and may have little or no association with the facts as you see them. Look elsewhere, think, make up your own minds. If I quote someone else I attribute. If I recommend a web site it's because I use it myself. If an advert appears it's because I affiliate with Google and others similar in nature and usually means nothing more than that... the Internet is a wild and untamed place folks, so please tread warily. My opinions are just that and do not constitute advice or legal opinion of any sort.
All original material is copyright 2008 by myself, too, in accord with the Creative Commons licence (see below).



QuickLinks: Addicted2Wheels Autoexpo 2000 GTVeloce Automotive Gallery GTVeloce.com GTVeloce Image Library Fort Street High School Class of 75 All purpose Chatroom Userplane Chat Fortian Image Gallery 1975 Flora Gallery Miscellaneous Image Gallery Bike Racing Gallery Airliner Gallery Airline Postcard Gallery Gerry's Gallery GTVeloce rave on Alfa Romeos Alfa Gallery Automotive How-to Index Staying Alive Handling 101 Handling 102 Handling 103 Tyrepressures Camber Toe Caster Polar Moment Roll Oversteer Understeer Weight transfer Coil springs Wheels and Tyres Pitch Heel and Toe Double Declutch Offset Rollbars BMEP calculator Cornering load calculator GTVeloce Blog Offline Blog Out Out Damned Blog Addicted2Wheels Blog The Spiel on business MBA Resources HR Resources KM Reframed Bike Racing forum KlausenRussell Com-munity Chain Chatter Unofficial RBCC info Official RBCC info Unofficial CCCC info Official CCCC info Rob's Guide to Road, Crit and Track Racing Rob's Guide, part 2 Track race tips Sydney's Velodromes What do those lines mean? Automobile links Mustknow links Philosophy links Music Links Images of the Russell, Matthews, O'Brien and Brown families in Australia Rob's Amateur Art Gallery The GTVeloce GiftShop The GTVeloce Shopfront Rob Russell's images at Image Tank



Creative Commons License