jjn9128 wrote: ↑01 Mar 2021, 12:53
I'd argue less grip is better for racing anyway. Where's the skill in going flat through copse/abbey/eau rouge/blanchiman? The skill shows in brake application and car/throttle control. The Grosjean interview in racefans today is interesting for this reason. He actually has to drive the car again.
For those that are interested here's the article being referred to
https://www.racefans.net/2021/03/01/fru ... car-to-f1/
Moving from F1 to IndyCar means swapping one single-specification tyre supplier for another: In this case, exchanging Pirellis for Firestones. While Grosjean had been critical of F1’s rubber in the past, he described himself as “very pleasantly surprised with the Firestones”. Unlike their F1 counterparts, these have to work straight out of the garage with no pre-heating, as tyre warmers are banned.
“They’ve been great,” said Grosjean. “No tyre blanket, going out of the pit. Okay, it’s a bit more slippery but there is grip, and you can actually push for a few laps and they stay quite consistent. I was doing good laps after 25, 26 laps on the tyres and that’s something that I couldn’t do in my previous experience.”
There's lots of good stuff in this interview so well worth a read
Grosjean admitted “I don’t regret all those hours in the gym” after he “discovered the joy of not having a power steering wheel” around the short, twisty and undulating Alabama course which will host next month’s season-opening race.
“It’s very physical,” he added. “It is tough driving those cars, very much in a different way than Formula 1. The only thing you fight in Formula 1 is the G-forces. Here you actually fight the heaviness of the car physically. But I don’t mind it, it’s quite cool.”
However the veteran of 179 F1 races was pleased by the different handling sensation in the less aerodynamically-sensitive IndyCar.
“If I’m being simplistic, Formula 1 only works as aerodynamics and the rest is just here to support the car,” he explained. “An IndyCar works really with the set-up. The aerodynamics is much simpler, there’s much less downforce. So high-speed corners are a bit more fruity in an IndyCar but the low-speed corners actually feel maybe better.”
Food for thought for F1. Would it be a good thing if we reduce downforce and the low speed stuff becomes more important for extracting a good laptime? F1 cars are currently just a platform for aero to paraphrase Grosjean. The subject for another thread though.