I'd argue gear changing is not about driver skill. It's due to shortcomings of the RPM-range of the engine. One pedal for accelleration +/- and a steering wheel is all you need. Or maybe a separate pedal for braking. Everything else is "Nintendo".
I'd argue gear changing is not about driver skill. It's due to shortcomings of the RPM-range of the engine. One pedal for accelleration +/- and a steering wheel is all you need. Or maybe a separate pedal for braking. Everything else is "Nintendo".
Nissan Juke AWD rear diff does it... Its not beyond the F1 teams ability. I think it would even be legal under current rules as the driver already has the ability to change the diff settings. it would just be moving them to a digital-proportional trigger instead of a turn-knob.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑24 May 2026, 19:43aeroplane drivers have been doing this for 100 years ie differential braking (also differential throttling)
it seems implausible to use one MG via some weird, complicated and wasteful mechanical variable differential .....
when two (smaller) independent MGs could be used without any mechanical differential
signal arithmetic ie summing & differencing small voltages is far better than summing and differencing actual forces
that 'L.S.D' is just an active fiddle brakeZynerji wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 02:28Nissan Juke AWD rear diff does it... Its not beyond the F1 teams ability. I think it would even be legal under current rules as the driver already has the ability to change the diff settings. it would just be moving them to a digital-proportional trigger instead of a turn-knob.
That's the argument Lucid make for their double rear MG as well.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑24 May 2026, 19:43it seems implausible to use one MG via some weird, complicated and wasteful mechanical variable differential .....
when two (smaller) independent MGs could be used without any mechanical differential
signal arithmetic ie summing & differencing small voltages is far better than summing and differencing actual forces
The electromagnetic, torque vectoring differential that I used as an example is NOT a LSD...Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 11:12that 'L.S.D' is just an active fiddle brakeZynerji wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 02:28Nissan Juke AWD rear diff does it... Its not beyond the F1 teams ability. I think it would even be legal under current rules as the driver already has the ability to change the diff settings. it would just be moving them to a digital-proportional trigger instead of a turn-knob.
(manual fiddle brakes were/are eg a key part of trials driving UK-style)
it works by wasting energy
you wrote Nissan Juke AWDZynerji wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 14:31The electromagnetic, torque vectoring differential that I used as an example is NOT a LSD...Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 11:12that 'L.S.D' is just an active fiddle brakeZynerji wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 02:28Nissan Juke AWD rear diff does it... Its not beyond the F1 teams ability. I think it would even be legal under current rules as the driver already has the ability to change the diff settings. it would just be moving them to a digital-proportional trigger instead of a turn-knob.
(manual fiddle brakes were/are eg a key part of trials driving UK-style)
it works by wasting energy
And splitting between 50/50 and 0/100 doesn't seem to be much of an energy waste. (some I'm sure, but minimal if you compare the AWD vs FWD mpg statistics)
I that the vector one?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 18:10you wrote Nissan Juke AWDZynerji wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 14:31The electromagnetic, torque vectoring differential that I used as an example is NOT a LSD...Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑25 May 2026, 11:12
that 'L.S.D' is just an active fiddle brake
(manual fiddle brakes were/are eg a key part of trials driving UK-style)
it works by wasting energy
And splitting between 50/50 and 0/100 doesn't seem to be much of an energy waste. (some I'm sure, but minimal if you compare the AWD vs FWD mpg statistics)
so I looked at Nissan Juke AWD
did you mean Nissan Juke AWD-V ?
(yes there is such a thing)
this suggests a desire to use significantly the differential driving only the outer wheel (as Juke in AWD-V 0/100 mode)
I'm a hard no on electric motors at all. we have Formula E for that. Unless they move to MGU-H turbos on a Rocket Exhaust as a closed loop generator for wheel motors. then it would sound epic.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑26 May 2026, 13:43this suggests a desire to use significantly the differential driving only the outer wheel (as Juke in AWD-V 0/100 mode)
how is this control 'balancing' ie proportionate ?
the driver or his control would need be 'fiddling' the 'V' function on/off
(Nissan's competitors get the desired outcome via intelligent automatic brake 'fiddling' and a conventional diff)
is this 'V' control capability intended to be additional to the F1-conventional differential - or to replace it ?
wouldn't switching between eg 65/35 and 50/50 and 35/65 be better ?
(or a bit of electrical energy in or out via gears would give torque distribution proportionate to driver control)