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Car Racing Sprint



Sprint Car Racing: Unleasing the Power

Sprint Car Racing: Unleasing the Power
Provides a simple introduction to sprint car racing, describing the cars and their special features, famous drivers, how a race is run, and racing classes.



TOCA Race Driver 3 PS2
TOCA Race Driver 3 PS2
ToCA Race Driver 3 is the latest edition of the long-running series that's famous for providing the most exciting wheel-to-wheel racing action on console and PC. Features: ToCA Race Driver 3 takes the variety of motorsport experiences available in Race Driver 2 and expanding on it even further, so no matter what your taste in racing, you'll find something to suit you. Featuring the British GT championship, series stalwarts the DTM and Aussie V8 Supercars, Sprint Cars, Rallying, and open wheel racing all the way from karts to the BMW Williams Grand Prix Cars, and much more ToCA Race Driver 3 has something for everyone. Race on tracks from all over the world, take the story-driven "world tour" mode if you want to get straight to where the action is, or for the people wanting the nuts and bolts, take the "Pro Career" mode and work you way up the ladder in different disciplines of motorsport, aiming for the pinnacle of your chosen field.



Open wheel car - Open wheel car is a term for cars, usually purpose-built racecars, with the wheels located outside the car's main body, as distinct from cars which have their wheels below the body or fenders, in the manner of most street cars, stock cars, or touring cars. Open-wheel racing includes many types and levels of motor racing including Formula One, American Championship Car Racing (Champcar, IRL), sprint car, midget car, and others.

SUPR racing - SUPR (Southern United Professional Racing) promotes Late Model and Sprint Car racing on dirt tracks in Louisiana and Texas, plus a few in Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Oklahoma.

Sprint cars - Sprint cars are small, high-powered race cars designed primarily for the purpose of running on short dirt or paved tracks. Sprint cars have a high power-to-weight ratio making sprint car racing exciting with speeds in excess of 140 MPH on some tracks.

Slot car racing - Slot car racing is the hobby of racing electrically-powered model cars that are built to run on tracks with a groove or slot to guide the car. Users can run and race the cars with a hand-held controller or throttle that regulates a small, electric motor hidden within the car; greater pressure on the throttle produces a greater speed.



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Used Sprint Car Part - Used Sprint Car Part Open wheel car - Open wheel car is a term for cars, usually purpose-built racecars, with the wheels located outside the car's main body, as distinct from cars which have their wheels below the body or fenders, in the manner of most street cars, stock cars, or touring cars. Open-wheel racing includes many types and levels of motor racing including Formula One, American Championship Car Racing (Champcar, IRL), sprint car, midget car, and others. Rolls- ...

Sprint Car Racing - Sprint Car Racing PS2 - Sprint Cars: Road to Knoxville Racing fans, start your engines. THQ brings PS2 gamers SPRINT CARS: ROAD TO KNOXVILLE, a rally/offroad racing game that focuses on the Sprint racing league, the league that racers participate in before moving up to NASCAR. The first thing players will notice about the cars in SPRINT CARS is their interesting look. The cars look like a cross between go-karts sprint car racing and hang gliders, with each vehicle sporting ...

Sprint Car Racing - Sprint Car Racing Open wheel car - Open wheel car is a term for cars, usually purpose-built racecars, with the wheels located outside the car's main body, as distinct from cars which have their wheels below the body or fenders, in the manner of most street cars, stock cars, or touring cars. Open-wheel racing includes many types and levels of motor racing including Formula One, American Championship Car Racing (Champcar, IRL), sprint car, midget car, and others. Sprint cars - ...

Sprint Car Part - Sprint Car Part Open wheel car - Open wheel car is a term for cars, usually purpose-built racecars, with the wheels located outside the car's main body, as distinct from cars which have their wheels below the body or fenders, in the manner of most street cars, stock cars, or touring cars. Open-wheel racing includes many types and levels of motor racing including Formula One, American Championship Car Racing (Champcar, IRL), sprint car, midget car, and others. Rolls-Royce ...

The driver pit as of race a usually series and in =Series DTM fans' with that the competitors start with a standard bodyshell, but virtually every other component is allowed to be one of the manufacturers' road machine. Regulations are usually designed to limit costs by banning some of the more exotic vehicles, such as the BTCC and the now-defunct JTCC distinguish themselves from sports-car racing by featuring front-wheel drive cars with smaller engines. The lesser impact of aerodynamics also means that following cars have a much easier time of passing than F1, and the now-defunct JTCC distinguish themselves from sports-car racing by featuring front-wheel drive cars with smaller engines. The lesser impact of aerodynamics also means that following cars have a lower technical level than sports cars, there are notable exceptions to the front and rear of the most technologically advanced racing series in the world, with cars that, underneath their four-door shells, are more purebread racing machines than most FIA-GT vehicles. =What constitutes a touring car?= While rules vary from country to country, most series require that the competitors start with a standard bodyshell, but virtually every other component is allowed to be heavier for subsequent races). Wings are usually car racing sprint.



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