How relevent to road technology and the wider world demands would it be though?Jersey Tom wrote:In a single make series though.. which is more important? Designing a car with some crazy amount of aero development to squeeze out every ounce of speed... or designing a car which is race-able, affordable, and attractive?
In that respect there is no real racing series that contributes greatly to road technology.autogyro wrote:How relevent to road technology and the wider world demands would it be though?Jersey Tom wrote:In a single make series though.. which is more important? Designing a car with some crazy amount of aero development to squeeze out every ounce of speed... or designing a car which is race-able, affordable, and attractive?
If it is not, then it will have a very short shelf life.
And should.PNSD wrote: Road car technology can develop just fine without the help of racing. It has and will.
As I am fond of saying.. racing never has been, and never has the need to be relevant to consumer technology. Technology is generally developed outside of racing and brought in, not the other way around.autogyro wrote:How relevent to road technology and the wider world demands would it be though?Jersey Tom wrote:In a single make series though.. which is more important? Designing a car with some crazy amount of aero development to squeeze out every ounce of speed... or designing a car which is race-able, affordable, and attractive?
If it is not, then it will have a very short shelf life.
countersteer wrote:http://auto-racing.speedtv.com/article/ ... -notebook/
See notes on the Deltawing concept.
Just a thought... If this thing is as slippery as he says, but generates the same downforce. Then, cornering speeds would be the same but braking distances would get longer (reduced drag), all other things being the same. (Yes, I realize that the Deltawing concept is claimed to be much lighter which would offset the affect.)
Racing technology trickles down only to VERY limited-production cars -- highest end Ferraris and McLaren road cars come to mind.PNSD wrote:[No linkage here at all. In fact, production cars are ahead of race cars in terms of technology: direct injection, variable valve timing, variable valve lift, traction control and stability control, etc, etc]autogyro wrote:[I vote for race-able, affordable, and attractive]Jersey Tom wrote:In a single make series though.. which is more important? Designing a car with some crazy amount of aero development to squeeze out every ounce of speed... or designing a car which is race-able, affordable, and attractive?
How relevent to road technology and the wider world demands would it be though?
If it is not, then it will have a very short shelf life.
In that respect there is no real racing series that contributes greatly to road technology.
Road car technology can develop just fine without the help of racing. It has and will.
Calling total BS on this. If anything, I would say the opposite. I think anyone who has been in a racing car and used excessive rear brake bias would agree... when they trailbrake a corner and spin out.Giblet wrote:Other than looks, the Delta wing is starting to make a bit more sense to me, especially the brakes.
Modern race cars are front brake biased, and this is an inherently unstable condition.
The rear bias on the Delta does make some sense, moving the braking bias naturally to the rear of the car.
It's simple. With 50-50 weight dist. you need more than 50% front brake balance as the rear goes lighter under deceleration. I highly doubt that any racing car (even rear engined) would be safe to drive with rearwards brake dist.Giblet wrote:Modern race cars are front brake biased, and this is an inherently unstable condition.
So in this car, it would be the opposite, the front's would be the ones you would worry about locking the most?Pandamasque wrote:It's simple. With 50-50 weight dist. you need more than 50% front brake balance as the rear goes lighter under deceleration. I highly doubt that any racing car (even rear engined) would be safe to drive with rearwards brake dist.Giblet wrote:Modern race cars are front brake biased, and this is an inherently unstable condition.
Aren't you a simracer? You should know what happens if there's too much rear braking.
EDIT: Obviously if the DW weight distribution is extremely rearwards then the brake balance is adjusted accordingly to achieve maximum efficiency. But in any case you'll end up with an unstable condition where you have to be terribly careful not to lock the rear brakes.