any of you have tips for watching WEC/IMSA endurance races? Surely most if not all times you don't sit in front of your computer for the whole 6+ hours. Do you just set aside an hour or two during the race to watch it, and watch highlights to fill in the gaps, or play it in the background and do other things, or something else? I think i might try to watch some of the upcoming races, especially because my favorite motorsports babe Sophiea Floersch is racing there, and the multi-class racing seems intriguing.
You can listen to all of WEC, IMSA, ELMS, Le Mans Cup, NLS, and a fair few other endurance series through
Radio Le Mans, there's a schedule at the bottom of the homepage for you to plan out especially busy weekends - which channel and when.
What I tend to do with watching the stuff is same as Snooker, stick it to one side and work through it - only turning my head when John Hindhaugh starts getting excited by something, really.
For watching, IMSA can be watched on
IMSA TV although it is region locked due to broadcast rights for NBC in the US (And maybe Canada), the commentary on IMSA TV is RLM's voices. ELMS streams all their stuff on
YouTube again with the RLM commentary fixed into the video feed, same for
NLS.
With WEC it is different, if you want to watch the races you got to pay either for a TV channel which has broadcast rights (I think Eurosport has it in UK/Europe) - which will have their own commentary - or you can pay directly through
WEC which carries WEC's own commentary, from Allan McNish, Graham Goodwin, and Martin Haven for most of the races (Le Mans being exception due to race length, they have more people cycling through). However RLM is always free to listen to, but you won't get video there.
As for following the racing, the easiest way to do it genuinely is to try and pay attention to one particular class each hour or so (SRO events, and NLS not withstanding for different reasons) and enjoy the racing there since what you essentially have in WEC is four distinct races happening which just happen to be on the same bit of road - so spending an hour watching the race between the GTE Pro cars and ignoring what is happening overall unless there's something major makes it a lot more enjoyable in my experience as a viewing experience if you wanted to watch the whole duration 'properly'.
The other thing with following the races, is almost all broadcasters will do hourly updates - either on the clock hour or race hour - going through every classes positions, which in turn keeps you informed of the broader picture if the broadcast itself is focussing more on the top class fight.
One very good thing with endurance racing is that, thanks to multi-class, there's always some racing happening - in the NLS and Creventic's series the TCR class is almost always a source of entertainment whilst the GT3s leading the way might have ended up strung out due to issues or some other reason.
Plus if you watch it and start posting about it more I have an excuse to derail this thread from F1 to endurance racing which is nicer, in my view