See, I see it as exactly why F1 needs to get it's act together and enforce track limits everwhere.After the Indycars showed what could be done by going wide I believe we may see something similar in F1 this year. Why not?
See, I see it as exactly why F1 needs to get it's act together and enforce track limits everwhere.After the Indycars showed what could be done by going wide I believe we may see something similar in F1 this year. Why not?
Bit off topic... Many years ago a car dropped out early from a race in the Infiniti Pro Series (what IRL called Indy Lights at the time). The team owner needed to complete something like 90% of the laps in the race for it to count as a finish, so he pulled the transponder from the car, stuck it in his pocket, and began casually walking over the start/finish transponder line that extended into the pit lane every time the pack of cars crossed on the track. Timing and scoring didn't notice for a long time, then they went crazy for many laps trying to see where the car was...roon wrote: ↑27 Mar 2019, 18:40These Indycar drivers are idiots. If track limits were abandoned, obviously you just need to do about a hundred donuts over the start/finish line and voila: race won. I could have entered on a bicycle and smashed all the track records, all while being applauded for using sustainable energy.
Agreed.
There is a weight difference of about 75kg, the power is lower but also no ERS-H to spool up the turbo so less lower rev torque, on aero downforce is about the same but drag is higher, there's no driver assistance...
Lack of brakes is due to lack of grip, wich comes from lack of downforcenokivasara wrote: ↑29 Mar 2019, 17:04I haven't followed Indycar lately (last decade or two ) but I think the brakes are much better in a F1 car. That alone would make a big difference in lap time.
I remember JPM saying something about the (lack of) brakes being a big difference when he went to Indycars.
Much less relevant than you may think, that´s what I did learn in this forum some time ago when someone (bhall?) told me HRT did race with steel brakes for several GPs due to lack of money, and nobody noticed any significant difference in braking perfomance. Weight penalty was obvious, but materials are much less relevant for braking perfomance than most of us usually thik
One word mate...Fademarmer wrote: ↑30 Mar 2019, 16:40End of the day as long as you have enough force to lock the wheels up at whatever the cars top speed is you have enough braking force. Providing this is meet by the material all the choice of materials makes is weight and how long they will last for.
Ideally you would want brakes that would start to get overheated at the end of a qualification lap but manageable during the race and last the race distance.
Agreed also! After Bahrain qualifying and race there were several cars with all 4 over the line with no track limits enforced.