timbo wrote:Very interesting. But I wonder whether that's a tad different these days. I think that on average modern drivers are closer to 100% now, than on JS' days. That's not to belittle greats from the past -- the cars were harder to drive, had nowhere near as much grip, and no power steering or lever shifting. So maybe not all of what he says is applicable today. Still there's a great deal of truth in being smooth = fast, and most of it is in avoiding being rushed. The best drivers always seem much more confident and consistent even at the absolute edge. That's probably what speed is -- how much potential of the car lies within your limits.
I think go-karts are different than cars to a degree. They have no suspension or differential to speak of, so driving techniques varies from cars. You might have been doing not so wrong.JimClarkFan wrote: I do a little bit of karting with mates, and look at some of the F1 pole laps in the hope that I can pick up something. After seeing that video, I now think that I might actually have been doing more harm than good.
Giblet wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... gSiK_VarK8#!
Hah, I was trying to think in my head why all of them were throwing the rear of the car into a little slide in all the corners, thinking "breaking the grip surely can't be efficient"... But actually, no diff explains it... get the rear of the car round the turn quickly, stop one side slipping, get the power applied again.Shrieker wrote:I think go-karts are different than cars to a degree. They have no suspension or differential to speak of, so driving techniques varies from cars. You might have been doing not so wrong.JimClarkFan wrote: I do a little bit of karting with mates, and look at some of the F1 pole laps in the hope that I can pick up something. After seeing that video, I now think that I might actually have been doing more harm than good.
I like the way Jackie explains it. Thanks for sharing it here Giblet.
beelsebob wrote:Hah, I was trying to think in my head why all of them were throwing the rear of the car into a little slide in all the corners, thinking "breaking the grip surely can't be efficient"... But actually, no diff explains it... get the rear of the car round the turn quickly, stop one side slipping, get the power applied again.Shrieker wrote:I think go-karts are different than cars to a degree. They have no suspension or differential to speak of, so driving techniques varies from cars. You might have been doing not so wrong.JimClarkFan wrote: I do a little bit of karting with mates, and look at some of the F1 pole laps in the hope that I can pick up something. After seeing that video, I now think that I might actually have been doing more harm than good.
I like the way Jackie explains it. Thanks for sharing it here Giblet.
Lower grip/relatively lower power cars NEED the best line through the corner in order to not lose a bunch of time as they dont have the ability to accelerate out of the corner as hard or as early. Slow down too much because you're on the wrong part of the track and pay in the time it takes to get back upto speed.raymondu999 wrote:How do you mean "momentum car?"
Which is why you see F1 cars doing finnish flicks, and rally cars taking perfectly optimal lines through corners. Wait no... that's not right.GrizzleBoy wrote:Lower grip/relatively lower power cars NEED the best line through the corner in order to not lose a bunch of time as they dont have the ability to accelerate out of the corner as hard or as early. Slow down too much because you're on the wrong part of the track and pay in the time it takes to get back upto speed.raymondu999 wrote:How do you mean "momentum car?"
A modern F1 car can simply slide its rear wheels through a turn, point its nose in the right direction, put down the RPMs and blast its way out of a less than ideal line without too much problems.
Is there any point jumping into a conversation if you're going to completely ignore the context of the text you are replying to?beelsebob wrote:Which is why you see F1 cars doing finnish flicks, and rally cars taking perfectly optimal lines through corners. Wait no... that's not right.GrizzleBoy wrote:Lower grip/relatively lower power cars NEED the best line through the corner in order to not lose a bunch of time as they dont have the ability to accelerate out of the corner as hard or as early. Slow down too much because you're on the wrong part of the track and pay in the time it takes to get back upto speed.raymondu999 wrote:How do you mean "momentum car?"
A modern F1 car can simply slide its rear wheels through a turn, point its nose in the right direction, put down the RPMs and blast its way out of a less than ideal line without too much problems.