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Friday, July 31, 2020

The Lamborghini Essenza SCV12’s wheel is a thing of track-focused beauty - SlashGear

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The Lamborghini Essenza SCV12 may not be short of eye-catching details – a V12 engine with 830 horsepower is worthy of attention – but inside it’s the race car inspired steering wheel that grabs you. Leagues away from the touchscreen-heavy dashboards of most modern cars, supercars included, the Essenza SCV12 instead focuses on giving you as little reason as possible to move your hands away from the most important control.

Dashboard design has evolved over the years, and as vehicles get more complex their interfaces have had to try to keep up. We’ve seen a general shift away from a physical control for every feature to a digital interface that keeps the number of buttons and switches down.

That’s great when you’re doing the school run in your Urus, but not so practical when you’re on the track putting the Essenza SCV12’s naturally-aspirated V12 to the test. Then, not only is there no time to spend digging through settings submenus for traction control settings, even just reaching for a wiper stalk could be too far. That’s why this newest Lamborghini does away with all that completely.

Instead there’s a multifunction steering wheel with an integrated display, which the automaker says was inspired by what you’d expect to find inside an F1 single-seater race car. Much smaller than a traditional wheel, and rectangular rather than circular, it’s designed so that the driver’s hands can remain in the perfect grip at all times. When they do need to adjust something, there are buttons and dials for that right on the wheel itself.

The central display shows the current gear, engine speed, lap pace, and tire pressure and temperature. The left hand gets a wheel at the top to adjust the differential, and then buttons for the pit radio, engaging neutral or reverse gear, and triggering the built-in drink system. Another wheel adjusts the ABS.

On the right, meanwhile, there’s a wheel to adjust the power steering settings, plus buttons to engage the pit limiter, to flash the lights, the hazards, and the full course yellow. There’s also a traction control wheel. Running underneath the display are knobs for clutch adjustment, the windshield wipers, engine map modes, and cycling through the info pages. A spare button can be remapped for something else.

It all looks, at first glance anyway, pretty complicated. However over time, so the idea goes, the driver builds up muscle memory and their fingers know exactly where to go in order to get the setting or control they want. That’s not something you typically can build, at least to the level that you’d want while you’re hitting the track in earnest, with a touchscreen-based system.

The center console isn’t devoid of features, mind. There are buttons for things like engine start, locking the pedals, the indicators, and a kill switch for emergencies, plus dials for the A/C, throttle, and other settings. Again, there’s a focus on utility rather than aesthetics: they’re all sized to be easily operated when you’re wearing gloves.

Few drivers will actually get to try that out themselves, of course. Lamborghini is only making forty Essenza SVC12 cars, each one coming with a dedicated garage spot in a custom-built hanger at Sant’Agata Bolognese. They’ll also have the benefit of a team of engineers and technicians, who will follow the cars around to different exclusive tracks around the world. That, sadly, will be the only way to actually put the Essenza SVC12 to the test: unlike most cars Lamborghini builds, this V12 beast isn’t road-legal.

The Link Lonk


July 31, 2020 at 10:46PM
https://www.slashgear.com/lamborghini-essenza-scv12-steering-wheel-design-track-only-hypercar-31631562/

The Lamborghini Essenza SCV12’s wheel is a thing of track-focused beauty - SlashGear

https://news.google.com/search?q=Wheel&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Man Arrested After Found Slumped Over Steering Wheel – WBIW - WBIW.com

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(BEDFORD) – A Terre Haute man was arrested Thursday after Bedford Police officers received a report of a man slumped over the steering wheel of a vehicle at O’Reilly Auto Parts on 16th Street.

Kyle Reynolds

Officers identified the man as 33-year-old Kyle Reynolds.

“Reynolds was lethargic and unaware of his surroundings,” said Chief Terry Moore. “After exiting the vehicle officers located a glass smoking device in his pocket and a large sum of money.”

A police K-9 was requested and alerted officers to possible drugs in the vehicle.

“While searching the vehicle officers located methamphetamine and several individual bags of methamphetamine consisting with dealing and five different types of a controlled substances in various amounts that Reynolds did not have a prescription for,” Chief Moore added.

Reynolds was arrested on charges of dealing meth, possession of meth, possession of a controlled substance, public intoxication, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a device to interfere with a drug test.

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The Link Lonk


July 31, 2020 at 09:59PM
http://www.wbiw.com/2020/07/31/man-arrested-after-found-slumped-over-steering-wheel/

Man Arrested After Found Slumped Over Steering Wheel – WBIW - WBIW.com

https://news.google.com/search?q=Wheel&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

How driver Bill Basso took the wheel for the first time at 44 in the hornets division - Herald & Review

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MACON — It's never too late to start racing. 

Bill Basso had all the trademark signs that we would get behind the wheel of a race car at a young age. His grandfather, "Wild Bill" Beal, raced for decades in Springfield, Basso loved spending time at the tracks around Central Illinois and he even competed in demolition derbies for many years. 

But the jump from lending a hand in pit row into the driver's seat never happened until decades later, when Basso was 44 and his friend and fellow driver Mike McKay made him an offer. 

"In the winter of 2017, Mike told me that I should race (in the) hornets (division) instead of helping them out in the pits all the time," Basso said. "I said 'Dude, I'm going to be 44 years old. What the hell do I know about racing?' (Mike) said I could run his old car that was sitting in the garage and hadn't been run for three or four years. He said to run it for a season and if I liked it, we could build a car. That's what we did. If it wasn't for the McKay family who have been in racing all their life too, I would have never started.

"It's a bug and when it gets you, you are done."

Basso, now 47, has been around tracks as long as he can remember and fondly remembers Shaheen's Speedway in Springfield. 

"My mom says I went for the first time to the track when I was six days old," he said. "I was born on a Monday and I was at the track the following Sunday to watch my grandpa race. My grandfather raced all over Central Illinois in the 50s, 60s, and 70s and that's what we did as a family: We went and watched grandpa race at Shaheen's. Back in the day he raced bombers. It was a stock car and there weren't many classes back then. He ran 1955, 56, 57 Chevys, old school stuff. 

"He has always been my idol and I was named after him. I always wanted to race because of him." 

Basso's initial car, which was McKay's first hornet car, had a hard time keeping up with some of the newer models but Basso had broader goals when he started. 

"It was way outdated and underpowered and I think I was twice as heavy as all my competitors but I was out there learning and having fun. And that is my big thing still," he said. "I'm still way under budget and I don't spend half of what the top five guys spend week-in and week-out on cars and motors."

The literal crash course he had at Macon Speedway showed Basso that some assumptions about race car driving aren't true. 

"I've learned that at Macon, it is not all about motor. You've got to be able to drive the car and put it where it needs to be," he said. "Some of the bigger tracks, it becomes more about motor and therefore I'm not as competitive. I've learned patience and I had an experienced driver tell me in my first year that I was a consistent driver. I hold my line and that was a big compliment for me and gave me some confidence."

Basso has built upon that confidence and currently sits third in points in the hornets division at Macon and in the United Midwestern Promoters (UMP) national sports compact points race, he is currently eighth. 

"My goal is to not miss a night at Macon," Basso said. "I want to stay up there in the points. At the start of the year, I said I wanted to be in the top 10 in points at both Macon and Lincoln. Now that I'm sitting in the top five, it has sort of changed my goal. I want to stay in that top five so I can't miss a night."

Basso will be in action again on Saturday at Macon as the Speedway also hosts the POWRi national midget and micro leagues during Speedweek. Racers from around the country will compete in league features on the 1/5-mile dirt oval. 

Basso keeps the racing tradition going as his Tyler, 22, will be on-hand, assisting with the car. 

"Tyler doesn't miss a race and my oldest son Scott and his wife Emily are also very supportive," Bill Basso said. "But 99% of the time, it is Tyler and I in the truck on the way to the track every Friday, Saturday or Sunday. He helps me at the track all the time and in the garage when he can."

Bill Basso is climbing the points rankings but he is still searching for that first feature checkered flag. 

"I hope I will get it someday but if I don't get it, I will keep going," he said. "I have a good time and I love the camaraderie and the sportsmanship at the tracks and I have met so many people through racing that I would never have known and it is pretty awesome. It is the thrill, it sounds like a cliche, but it is an escape. Once you strap into that car, everything else goes away. It doesn't matter if you are first or 15th, you escape reality for five or 10 minutes and you get to enjoy something you have always wanted to do."

PHOTOS: Herald & Review 100 at Macon Speedway

Contact Matthew Flaten at (217) 421-6968. Follow him on Twitter: @MattFlaten

The Link Lonk


August 01, 2020 at 03:15AM
https://herald-review.com/sports/motor-sports/how-driver-bill-basso-took-the-wheel-for-the-first-time-at-44-in-the/article_4e54bdaa-d141-5b5b-989b-1228082eb064.html

How driver Bill Basso took the wheel for the first time at 44 in the hornets division - Herald & Review

https://news.google.com/search?q=Wheel&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

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