Nando wrote:Please expand on the double edged sword, i think i know what you mean but a more expanded view on why it´s that is always nice.
So more camber until i start seeing the lateral acceleration decrease?
Do you think running on a centripetal circuit? (basically a round parking lot that is perfectly 100% smooth)
Edit: skid pad is the word i´m looking for.
Is that a good place to tweak setups on or is it better to tweak setups at the actual track?
Is there anything i can learn about the setup or generally make it better by running there?
What type of functionality would that be more specifically?
In no particular order...
ATLAS functionality - like I was getting to, you can use ATLAS to view live streaming telemetry (as opposed to previously acquired data). Go through data straight off the car during a session. Don't quite get that aspect from sim racing. Otherwise, viewing historical data.. you can do it in any number of different programs. Plotting Y vs X is plotting Y vs X is plotting Y vs X.
Double edged sword... to my point earlier, you can learn things in the real world which don't apply in the sim world. You can learn things in the sim world which don't apply in the real world. You can read other opinions of the real world and car performance which may or may not be applicable to what you're doing.
10 degrees across the surface of a tire. Why? Why is 10 the magic number? Is that the same for open wheel cars as opposed to sports cars? Stock cars? If you took the exact same car setup and ran it on a Figure 8 track (lot of cornering, little or no straights) and compared it to a run on a track like Indy (lot of straights with brief bits of cornering)... do you think you'd get the same average temps? Did the iRacing developers dive into the n-th level of physical tire modeling and somehow 10 deg spread is the best for their model? Or did they, knowing that your average racer is going to try and tune pressure and temp to hit some spread bogey intentionally tweak their tire model to have that behavior?
What to look for... is a skidpad better than a full circuit? Maybe. Is a circuit better than a skidpad? Maybe. Is lateral acceleration a good performance indicator? Maybe. I offered it as an idea. The point is that these are all
choices that you have to make or things you have to explore. A good engineer keeps a notebook, certainly. A key performance indicator might be temperature spread across a carcass - but you have to figure out what that best number is. 10-15 deg might be the number circulated by amateur and semi-pro guys, but is that good enough? Is that even relevant to your specific use? Same could be said of symmetric damper histograms or any number of things. All items which warrant further exploration - and ATLAS may be a tool to meet that end. Going in with preconceived notions of what's best.. that's where you can get bit in the rear.
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.