2016 Rolex Daytona 24 Hour Race P5 FoxSports 720p Hevc h265 Eng Aac-M8 mkv

seeders: 2
leechers: 17
Added on February 12, 2016 by Captainwestin TV
Torrent verified.



2016 Rolex Daytona 24 Hour Race P5 FoxSports 720p Hevc h265 Eng Aac-M8 mkv (Size: 2.49 GB)
 2016 Rolex Daytona 24 Hour.Race.P5.FoxSports.720p.Hevc.h265.Eng.Aac-M8.mkv2.49 GB


Description

This is part 5 of a Six Part encode of the race, and I want to thank you for the response I have got from you, The peers who have embraced this Pack and shown a genuine appreciation for my efforts
All together the whole pack is nearly 17Gb, but it is after all a 24 Hour Race, and it is in 720p 60Fps High Quality Hevc h265 Video, so you will need some descent Graphic Hardware to play it smoothly ...... Part 6 will be available as soon as my Bandwidth is free enough to cope with uploading it, thanks for being patient ......

The 24 Hours of Daytona, currently known as the Rolex 24 At Daytona for sponsorship reasons, is a 24-hour sports car endurance race held annually at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. It is run on a 3.56-mile (5.73 km) combined road course, utilizing portions of the NASCAR tri-oval and an infield road course. Since its inception, it has been held the last weekend of January or first weekend of February, part of Speedweeks, and it is the first major automobile race of the year in the United States. It is also the first race of the season for the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.

The race has had several names over the years. Since 1991, the Rolex Watch Co. is the title sponsor of the race under a naming rights arrangement, replacing Sunbank (now SunTrust) which in turn replaced Pepsi in 1984. Winning drivers of all classes receive a steel Rolex Daytona watch.

In 2006, the race moved one week earlier into January to prevent a clash with the Super Bowl, which had in turn moved one week later into February a few years earlier.

The race has been known historically as a leg of the informal Triple Crown of endurance racing, although it suffers from an increasing isolation from international Sports Car racing regulations.

Beginnings

Shortly after the track opened, on April 5, 1959, a six-hour/1000 kilometer USAC-FIA sports car race was held on the road course. Count Antonio Von Dory and Roberto Mieres won the race in a Porsche, shorted to 560.07 miles due to darkness.

In 1962, a few years after the track was built, a 3-hour sports car race was introduced. Known as the Daytona Continental, it counted towards the FIA's new International Championship for GT Manufacturers. The first Continental was won by Dan Gurney, driving a 2.7L Coventry Climax-powered Lotus 19. Gurney was a factory Porsche driver at the time, but the 1600-cc Porsche 718 was considered too small and slow for what amounted to a sprint race on a very fast course.

In 1964, the event was expanded to 2,000 km (1,240 mi), doubling the classic 1000 km distance of races at Nürburgring, Spa and Monza. The distance amounted to roughly half of the distance the 24 Hours of Le Mans winners covered at the time, and was similar in length to the 12 Hours of Sebring, which was also held in Florida in March. Starting in 1966, the Daytona race was extended to the same 24-hour length as Le Mans.

24-hour history

Unlike the Le Mans event, the Daytona race is conducted entirely over a closed course within the speedway arena without the use of any public streets. Most parts of the steep banking are included, interrupted with a chicane on the back straight and a sweeping, fast infield section which includes two hairpins. Unlike Le Mans, the race is held in wintertime, when nights are at their longest. There are lights installed around the circuit for night racing, although the infield section is still not as well-lit as the main oval. However, the stadium lights are turned on only to a level of 30%,[citation needed] similar to the stadium lighting setup at Le Mans, with brighter lights around the pit straight, and decent lighting similar to street lights around the circuit.

In the past, a car had to cross the finish line after 24 hours to be classified, which led to dramatic scenes where damaged cars waited in the pits or on the edge of the track close to the finish line for hours, then restarted their engines and crawled across the finish line one last time in order to finish after the 24 hours and be listed with a finishing distance, rather than dismissed with DNF (Did Not Finish). This was the case in the initial 1962 Daytona Continental (then 3 hours), in which Dan Gurney's Lotus had established a lengthy lead when the engine failed with just minutes remaining. Gurney stopped the car at the top of the banking, just short of the finish line. When the three hours had elapsed, Gurney simply cranked the steering wheel to the left (toward the bottom of the banking) and let gravity pull the car across the line, to not only salvage a finishing position, but actually win the race.
This led to the international rule requiring a car to cross the line under its own power in order to be classified.

The first 24 Hour event in 1966 was won by Ken Miles and Lloyd Ruby driving a Ford Mk. II. Motor Sport reported: "For their first 24-hour race the basic organization was good, but the various officials in many cases were out of touch, childish and lacked the professional touch which one now finds at Watkins Glen."
After having lost in 1966 at Daytona, Sebring and Le Mans to the Fords, the Ferrari P series prototypes staged a 1–2–3 side-by-side parade finish at the banked finish line in 1967.
The Ferrari 365 GTB/4 road car was given the unofficial name Ferrari Daytona in celebration of this victory.

Porsche repeated this show in their 1–2–3 win in the 1968 24 Hours. After the car of Gerhard Mitter had a big crash caused by tire failure in the banking, his teammate Rolf Stommelen supported the car of Vic Elford and Jochen Neerpasch.[clarification needed] When the car of the longtime leaders Jo Siffert and Hans Herrmann dropped to second due to a technical problem, these two also joined the new leaders while continuing with their car. So Porsche managed to put 5 of 8 drivers on the center of the podium, plus Jo Schlesser and Joe Buzzetta finishing in 3rd place, with only Mitter being left out.

Lola finished 1–2 in the 1969 24 Hours of Daytona. The winning car was the Penske Lola T70-Chevrolet of Mark Donohue and Chuck Parsons.
Few spectators witnessed the achievement as Motor Sport reported: "The Daytona 24-Hour race draws a very small crowd, as can be seen from the empty stands in the background."

In 1972, due to the energy crisis, the race was shortened to 6 hours, while for 1974 the race was cancelled altogether.

In 1982, following near-continuous inclusion on the World Sportscar Championship, the race was dropped as the series attempted to cut costs by both keeping teams in Europe and running shorter races. The race continued on as part of the IMSA GT Championship.

The regular teams were expanded to three drivers in the 1970s. Nowadays, often four or five drivers compete. Many of these additional drivers are known as "gentleman racers"; people with the personal means to buy their place in the cockpit. The winning entry in 1997 featured as many as seven drivers taking a turn in the cockpit.
image
image
Venue Daytona International Speedway
Corporate sponsor Rolex
First race 1962
Duration 24 hours
Previous names Daytona 3 Hour Continental (1962–1963)
Daytona 2000 (1964–1965)
24 Hours of Daytona (1966–1971, 1973, 1975–1977)
6 Hours of Daytona (1972)
24 Hour Pepsi Challenge (1978–1983)
SunBank 24 at Daytona (1984–1991)
Rolex 24 At Daytona (1992–)
Most wins (driver) Hurley Haywood (5)
Scott Pruett (5)
Most wins (team) Chip Ganassi Racing (6)
Most wins (manufacturer) Porsche (18)

No Copyright Infringement Intended.I Do Not Own The Videos. All Rights Belong To the Artists Featured. Please Support The Artist.

You may need to Update your PC software so it can playback Hevc x265 Files,
Unless you are trying to play it back on an old Pentium III .. lol

A Core Duo or better is recommended, with the latest Codec Package and
or Media players installed that support Hevc playback, and a Descent Graphics Card will help quite a lot.

Your Humax or USB Port on your Tv etc..etc.. will not be capable of playing
such new technology yet, but in the future playback support will be widespread, it just takes time for it to filter through to the Consumer.

You may recall that this was also the case with nearly all the Video Codecs
that we have become accustomed to using today, like AVC x264 etc..etc...

Here is a list of Media players with links to them, you do not need all of them,
the list is there to provide you with variety so that you can chose the player that suits you ...

Note: Please be wary of any extra bloatware that may be incorporated into any of the installers,
which normally comes with a few extra boxes that are pre - ticked at some point during the install process, but if you un - tick those boxes you can skip the Bloatware, which is what you really want anyway ?? True?

1. Daum Pot Player -

2. Light Alloy -

3. Kodi - [works in Multi Platforms like linux and Windows ...etc..etc..]

4. VLC Player - [works in Multi Platforms like linux and Windows ...etc..etc..]

5. Gom Media Player -

6. KM Player -

7. k-Lite Codec -

Please be aware of the need and be sure to SEED !!!
If I have to do all the Seeding I cannot Up-Load all this other new stuff so Seed Until You Bleed .......

This is a very rare treat to all you Speed Junkies, so show your appreciation and leave a nice comment, All The Best from Captainwest !!!

Related Torrents

torrent name size seed leech

Sharing Widget


Download torrent
2.49 GB
seeders:2
leechers:17
2016 Rolex Daytona 24 Hour Race P5 FoxSports 720p Hevc h265 Eng Aac-M8 mkv

Screenshots


2016 Rolex Daytona 24 Hour Race P5 FoxSports 720p Hevc h265 Eng Aac-M8 mkv screenshot
2016 Rolex Daytona 24 Hour Race P5 FoxSports 720p Hevc h265 Eng Aac-M8 mkv screenshot
2016 Rolex Daytona 24 Hour Race P5 FoxSports 720p Hevc h265 Eng Aac-M8 mkv screenshot

All Comments

(UPLOAD 10)

THANK YOU AGAIN