You literally made my point.ringo wrote: ↑11 Sep 2017, 00:41It's probably the opposite of a driver aid. The drivers have to concentrate more to eliminate any "noise" ie unnecessary and arbitrary presses of the pedals, and steering movements to get the most out of the electrical energy deployment strategy.
For example if the simulation needs the car to be 100% throttle for 5 seconds after a particular turn then it starts some kind of deployment, then the driver has to make sure he sticks to the script and not let off the pedal or turn the steering wheel nonchalantly. He has to play the "musical notes" just right to take advantage of the "tune".
This deployment schedule is like an extreme case of nursing a car.
It's nothing but a driver aid.
Put triggers above the paddles on each side of the wheel... Left trigger charges, right trigger deploys.
Get the computer out of the power delivery loop. It should only control timing and injecting.