
- MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING FOR FREE
- MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING HOW TO
- MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING FULL VERSION
- MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING DRIVERS
I have a license, but I don’t suggest you get one. It’s $15 for an annual license, but doesn’t appear to be supported anymore.

MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING DRIVERS
The database has nowhere near as many drivers or laps as iSpeed and is poorly organized. iAnalyze Racing is a dashboard, telemetry suite, and database of fast laps.The user interface is slightly better than iSpeed I think. I haven’t bought this yet, but the cross-sim-platform support is really attractive.
MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING FULL VERSION
The free demo runs for 15 minutes at a time and the full version is about $25. There aren’t nearly as many laps stored as iSpeed, but you can find laps for sims other than iRacing, such as Assetto Corsa and rFactor 2. If you check the box to share your laps, you can also download other peoples’ laps.
MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING FOR FREE
iSpeed is donation-ware, meaning you can use it for free but $15 removes some annoying messages. iSpeed doesn’t annotate the weather, which can affect laps by more than 1 second, so when you’re comparing laps, it’s important to make sure the laps come from the same season and week of racing (which all have identical weather). The analysis software is not as pretty or complete as some professional programs and you can only compare 2 laps at a time. iSpeed is used by a lot of iRacers and there are lots of fast laps to compare. The cool thing is you can also look at other drivers’ laps. Later, you can use iSpeedLapAnalyzer to examine your laps. When you run the dashboard, it records telemetry and sends your fastest lap of the session back to a server. iSpeed is a digital dash that you can run on another monitor, a tablet, or your phone while you drive iRacing.Thankfully there are a few sources that sort of enforce sharing. Just like other forms of racing, almost nobody willingly shares their secrets. and ask people to upload telemetry data somewhere but you probably won’t get many takers. You can prowl the forums at iRacing, Assetto Corsa, rFactor 2, etc. One of the great things about simulation is that we can lock down the weather, the car, the setup, and focus completely on the driver. But even if you do have real life telemetry data, the variation from car to car and from day to day means that analyses may not be very robust. And a driver’s telemetry data is sort of their intellectual property. So where do you get these embarrassingly fast laps? Real life simulation data is hard to come by because not everyone runs telemetry in their car.
MOTEC TELEMETRY FOR IRACING HOW TO
And if you’re 10 seconds behind, let’s be frank, you really haven’t learned how to drive. All you have to do is learn how to drive. But don’t worry, they started out just like you. You may find yourself 10 seconds behind the leaders. But in order to take your driving to the next level, you have to examine the inputs and outputs of faster drivers. You can improve a lot just by comparing your laps to each other. This is the first in series of blog posts that will focus on reading telemetry data. A novel written in one month isn’t worth reading! The title is a phrase I use for being able to virtually ride along (ghosting) with the fastest drivers (aliens). No, you can’t find it on Amazon or anywhere else for that matter.

A few years ago I wrote a novel about racing called Ghosting the Aliens. It will be fun and informative.Īs you may know, this is November and therefore national novel writing month.

Click the contest link at the top for information how you can win prizes by writing for this blog. The first ever YSAR author contest ends in a couple weeks.
