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| Red Bull Air Race World Series | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Sport | Air Racing |
| Founded | 2003 |
| No. of teams | 10 |
| Country(ies) | World Wide |
| Most recent champion(s) | Cobra (team) |
The Red Bull Air Race World Series, established in 2003 and created by Red Bull, is an international series of air races in which competitors have to navigate a challenging obstacle course in the sky in the fastest possible time. Pilots fly individually against the clock and have to complete tight turns through a slalom course consisting of specially designed pylons, known as "air gates".
The races are held mainly on airfields, but also above cities, sea or natural wonders. They are accompanied by a supporting program of show flights. Races are flown on weekends following three training rounds and one qualification round. The events generally attract large crowds and are broadcast, both live and taped, in many nations. Eight pilots compete head to head against each other in an elimination bracket format. In the head to head competition, the pilots each take a turn at completing the course in the fastest time possible without committing any rule violations. The race winner is the competitor who survives the single elimination bracket and is victorious in the final round. Pilots race on a twisted course with five groups of specially erected "spinnaker" pylon obstacles. Flying against the rules results in disqualification or in a time penalty added to the flying time. The first six ranked pilots of each race leg get points, six for the winner down to one for sixth place. The air racer with the most points at the end of the series becomes Red Bull Air Race world champion. The 2005, 2006 and 2007 series were won respectively by the American pilots Mike Mangold, Kirby Chambliss and Mangold again.
Action at Kemble airfield, Gloucestershire, England in June 2004
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The idea of the Red Bull Air Race came about in 2001, following Red Bull\'s efforts to create a new aviation event. The aim of the event was to challenge some of the world\'s best pilots in speed, precision and skill. With these criteria, Red Bull approached Péter Besenyei, then two-time World Aerobatics champion, seeking to use his skill and experience to adapt the concept in to real race situations. Two years of planning culminated in the first Red Bull Air Race being held in Zeltweg, Austria in 2003 during the AirPower show.The History. RedBullAirRace.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
In earlier seasons, 2005 and 2006, pilots first ran two qualifying rounds to determine starting order, with the fastest time starting last. The race was then run over two rounds, and the combined time of both rounds determines the winner.
Starting in 2007, a new knock-out format was introduced. During qualifying, the 12 pilots with the best course times proceed to the elimination session, and from there the top eight move on to the finals bracket. Once there, quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals followed by the Consolation final are all 1-on-1 duels between the pilots.
The championship is decided by points, which are awarded by how the pilot places at each event.
| Rank | Points |
|---|---|
| 1st place | 6 points |
| 2nd place | 5 points |
| 3rd place | 4 points |
| 4th place | 3 points |
| 5th place | 2 points |
| 6th place | 1 point |
2006 champion, Kirby Chambliss, crossing the Quatro in the prescribed knife-edge flight
The rules are simple, pilots must pass through each of the air gates correctly while completing the required aerobatic maneuvers. Three different gate types require a specific manner of crossing. Blue gates must be crossed in level flight, red gates must be crossed in "knife-edge" or vertical flight, and the slalom gates as their name implies.
Penalties are incurred for violations of the rules.
A plane slices through a pylon, resulting in a penalty
The competitors use high-end aerobatic planes such as the Zivko Edge 540X, the MXR Technologies MX2, and the Extra 300, all of which are equipped with Lycoming engines.
The series has begun to see competitors develop enhanced versions of their aircraft to better performance, and thus times. For example, Michael Goulian is flying a modified Extra which uses lighter composites and a more highly tuned Lycoming engine. However, the safety implications of engine or airframe failures mean that performance tuning by individual teams, as is commonly done in other motorsport events, is limited in scope in the series.
The Red Bull Air Race involves tricky aerobatic maneuvers.
For a picture of each maneuver see: [1]
| Red Bull Air Race World Series Air Race Locations | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country | Location | Rounds in | |||||
| 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | ||
| | Swan River, Perth | 9th | 12th | 10th | |||
| | Zeltweg | 1st | 3rd | ||||
| | Rio de Janeiro | 2nd | |||||
| | Berlin | 3rd | |||||
| | Budapest | 2nd | 2nd | 6th | 6th | 8th | 7th |
| | Rock of Cashel | 4th | |||||
| | Acapulco, Guerrero | 11th3 | |||||
| | Rotterdam | 2nd | 5th | ||||
| | Porto | 9th | 8th | ||||
| | St. Petersburg | 4th1 | |||||
| | Barcelona | 2nd | 5th2 | 9th | |||
| | Interlaken, Bern | 6th | |||||
| | Stockholm | 4rd | |||||
| | Golden Horn, Istanbul | 5th | 4th | ||||
| | Port of Mina\' Zayid, Abu Dhabi | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | ||
| Longleat | 5th | 7th | |||||
| RAF Kemble | 1st | ||||||
| River Thames, London | 7th | 6th | |||||
| | Monument Valley, Arizona/Utah | 3rd | |||||
| Reno, Nevada | 3rd | ||||||
| San Diego, California | 10th | 2nd | |||||
| San Francisco, California | 7th | 8th | |||||
| Detroit | 3rd | ||||||
Note 2: the 5th round of the 2007 season in Barcelona, Spain was cancelled.
Note 3: the 11th round of the 2007 season in Acapulco, Mexico was cancelled.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
| Red Bull Air Race World Series Pilots |
|---|
| 2007 season |
| 1 |
Red Bull Air Race World Series
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