OHW Solutions LiDAR Precision · 14Pt/mm Licensed Access Only

Brasileirinhas Big Macky 3 Rmvb Cena1 Bruna Ferraz Rip By Piratex Access

This is not a standard rFactor 2 mod. This track is built from 14 Pt/mm raw LiDAR point cloud data captured Q4 2025 — with tyre contact computed directly from the raw point cloud stream, bypassing mesh approximation entirely. A license is required to access this track, available exclusively to verified professional organisations.

Request License View Gallery
14pt/mm
LiDAR Precision
4.318km
Track Length
10
Turn Corners
2026
Specification
Location

Red Bull Ring · Austria

The Red Bull Ring 2026 rFactor 2 track is a professional-grade, laser-scanned version of the Red Bull Ring, developed for rFactor 2. Built from 14 Pt/mm LiDAR data captured in Q4 2025, this 2026 specification delivers real-world surface fidelity for motorsport simulation, driver training programmes, and racing teams requiring repeatable, telemetry-grade accuracy .

Licensed Track  ·  A license must be acquired to access this simulation asset.  ·  Not available as a free download.
Why Choose OHW

Professional-Grade Features

LiDAR Precision

  • 14 Pt/mm point cloud density
  • RAW surface data fidelity
  • Real telemetry correlation
  • 2026 specification dataset

Track Accuracy

  • Brand-new track model
  • Multi motorsport series details
  • Compatible with rFactor 2
  • Optimised surface mesh

Professional Use

  • Motorsport team training
  • Driver development programmes
  • Simulator validation & correlation
  • Telemetry analysis support

OHW UI Integration

  • Raw LiDAR point cloud tyre impact
  • Direct surface-to-contact patch stream
  • No mesh interpolation layer
  • Multi-class telemetry channel support
  • Real-time data overlay
Platform Support

Optimised for rFactor 2

rFactor 2

rFactor 2

Full compatibility with standard rFactor 2

rFactor 2

rFactor 2

Professional edition optimisation

Brasileirinhas Big Macky 3 Rmvb Cena1 Bruna Ferraz Rip By Piratex Access

When a user types this exact string into a search engine, they are looking for a very specific "Cena 1" (Scene 1) from the third installment of the Big Macky series. The specific volume of the series. Cena 1: Specifies the opening segment of the film. Bruna Ferraz: The featured star. RMVB: The preferred lightweight file format. The Legacy of the "Legacy Search"

During this era, "release groups" or individual uploaders gained reputations for the quality of their encodes. "Piratex" was a ubiquitous tag in the Brazilian torrent and Warez scene (often found on sites like TorrentBrazil or various Orkut communities). Seeing "rip by piratex" was, for many users, a hallmark of a file that was guaranteed to work. Decoding the Search String

The search term is a classic example of a "long-tail" search query that acts as a digital time capsule for the Brazilian internet of the mid-to-late 2000s. When a user types this exact string into

is the most prominent adult film production company in Brazil. Founded in the 1990s, it gained mainstream notoriety by casting celebrities and "sub-celebrities" in high-profile productions.

remains one of the most iconic figures from this era. Known for her charisma and crossover appeal into mainstream media (appearing on various talk shows at the time), her films were highly sought after during the peak of the DVD-to-digital transition. The "Big Macky" series was one of the many themed franchises produced under the Brasileirinhas umbrella during her tenure. The Format: RMVB and the "Piratex" Era Bruna Ferraz: The featured star

In the 2000s, bandwidth was limited. RMVB was a revolutionary codec because it allowed for decent video quality at incredibly small file sizes. A full-length movie could be compressed down to 200MB or 300MB, making it perfect for the "Discagem" (dial-up) or early "Banda Larga" (broadband) connections common in Brazil.

Today, searching for "RMVB" files is largely an exercise in nostalgia. Modern streaming uses H.264 or H.265 (HEVC) codecs, which provide 4K quality at manageable sizes, rendering the compressed, blocky look of 2006-era RMVB files obsolete. "Piratex" was a ubiquitous tag in the Brazilian

The inclusion of and "rip by piratex" tells a story of how media was consumed before the age of high-speed streaming services like Netflix or modern adult platforms.

However, these specific keywords persist in search databases because they represent a specific moment in Brazilian digital culture—a time of Orkut forums, "RapidShare" links, and the Wild West of the early Brazilian internet.