bill shoe wrote:http://auto-racing.speedtv.com/article/ ... -issues/P1
This is frustrating. The 2012 Indycar has almost no legacy parts. The chassis, engine, transmission, etc. are all clean-sheet-of-paper parts. And the car, on a basic level, is too ass-heavy. And also too heavy overall.
This car was spec'd by a relatively non-technical committee which then gave the design specs (wish list?) to--> Dallara (chassis), Chevy/Honda/Judd (engine), and Xtrac (transmission). It seems there was no clear responsibility or authority for fundamental design attributes such as weight or weight distribution.
Another way to look at this situation is that IndyCar will have the Delta Wing weight distribution, but not the Delta Wing f/r tire distribution.
This also makes F1 organizations like Red Bull look more impressive for their ability to coordinate large numbers of people to achieve effective overall designs.
this is how screwed up the Moronic( Iconic) committe was , All daqllarra did was propoase a buisness plan, Lola Swift and BAT proposed a chassis paln and now they wonder why they are having problems
from Speed Robin Miller
It was way too cold to do any running Thursday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway but Tony Kanaan still spent a few hours driving the new Indy car at the world’s most famous race track.
Of course TK was at the Dallara factory in Italy on the IndyCar simulator – trying to help the longtime manufacturer work out some problems with the DW12 chassis.
The immediate concern is the disappointing performance of the Dallara at the Speedway last week, where Dario Franchitti and Kanaan tested for two days.
And, while the top speeds were only between 208-216 mph for either the Honda or Chevy-powered drivers, it was more a product of the car’s handling than a question of power.
“The focus of concern is with weight distribution,” said Will Phillips, vice president of technology for the IZOD IndyCar Series and the midwife of the first new car in a decade for this series.
“The car is too good on entry and suffers understeer on [corner] exit and it’s the same complaint from Dario and Tony that Dan [Wheldon] gave us after the first test.
“So the car isn’t going as fast as we wanted or expected and we’re trying to identify why the theoretical world doesn’t match real world at the race track. At very high speeds, we have disparity in the data.”