Hi, I want to make the Deutschland-Tour (Tour of Germany, Tour de Allemagne) of the year 2003 for PCM12. But I couldn't find any detailed informations about the route, besides the start and finish-locations. Do you have maybe a website which offers some details (profile, maps, videos etc.) to me? Any help is very appreciated!
Btw, I didn't know where to place this thread exactly, I hope its okay to do this here.
Thank you both for your quick help, but I'm looking for informations of the course, so I can make these stages with the PCM12-Stage Editor as real as possible. Wikipedia offers nothing regarding this, cyclingnews.com gives me at least informations about the intermediate-sprints and mountain-classifications. So Lluiiiggii, thanks for that.
bigggassi wrote:
Thank you both for your quick help, but I'm looking for informations of the course, so I can make these stages with the PCM12-Stage Editor as real as possible. Wikipedia offers nothing regarding this, cyclingnews.com gives me at least informations about the intermediate-sprints and mountain-classifications. So Lluiiiggii, thanks for that.
But besides this, it's still connecting the dots.
If you want more than that for a 2003 2.2 race, give up
For comparison purposes, when trying to figure out the routes for the 2000 Tirreno or Dauphine stages, the only thing I could find was stage name, length and a 2-paragraph article which told very little about the route. Figuring out stage routes is a considerable part of doing these 'older' stages (now think about the '91 DB which had hundreds of '91 stages!)
bigggassi wrote:
Thank you both for your quick help, but I'm looking for informations of the course, so I can make these stages with the PCM12-Stage Editor as real as possible. Wikipedia offers nothing regarding this, cyclingnews.com gives me at least informations about the intermediate-sprints and mountain-classifications. So Lluiiiggii, thanks for that.
But besides this, it's still connecting the dots.
If you want more than that for a 2003 2.2 race, give up
For comparison purposes, when trying to figure out the routes for the 2000 Tirreno or Dauphine stages, the only thing I could find was stage name, length and a 2-paragraph article which told very little about the route. Figuring out stage routes is a considerable part of doing these 'older' stages (now think about the '91 DB which had hundreds of '91 stages!)
Yeah, you probably right. My demands are a "little" too high for that kind of race. But thanks, with the informations about the intermediate-sprints and mountain-classifications I know at least which direction the route must take.