Great stuff mate, thanks for that.
Perhaps you could post impressions, and perhaps clarifications on where this thread has misunderstood him, if and after you do go and do those days with him?
Cheers
			
			
									
									 
														Surely I can write a small commentraymondu999 wrote:Perhaps you could post impressions, and perhaps clarifications on where this thread has misunderstood him, if and after you do go and do those days with him?

 And once again these things are setup dependent, some cars actually require aggressiveness and quick inputs to work properly, others like progressiveness. The driver has to drive in a certain rhythm that suits the car (or the other way around)…
 And once again these things are setup dependent, some cars actually require aggressiveness and quick inputs to work properly, others like progressiveness. The driver has to drive in a certain rhythm that suits the car (or the other way around)…
I guess the way you steer is dictated by the way you brake and car set-up. I think any driver's steering build-up is smooth and more quick and aggressive towards the apex pretty much because brake trace is the exact opposite. Whether you do it to "warn the car" or not I don't know... I think I turn-in when I have grip available and for as much as I have grip for.Ral wrote:"Warning the car" is something Jacky Stewart also says. As I understand it, you basically load up the tyres by turning a little bit before you want to start the actual turn, so you feel where the limit of grip is beforehand. This makes the car's behaviour during the turn predictable which means you have confidence in what's going to happen which means you will be able to commit to the turn which means you'll be faster than if you had to guess roughly what your car can put up with in that particular corner in the particular conditions when you arrive at that turn.
 
														 
														
raymondu999 wrote:I am so enjoying these posts, Sleepy Drifter.
I wonder if you'd also like to contribute to this thread specifically on driving styles: http://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewto ... f=1&t=8843
 oh no Raymond! Did you have a look at the last posts in that thread? He may take one look at that and think he wants nothing to do with this lot!
 oh no Raymond! Did you have a look at the last posts in that thread? He may take one look at that and think he wants nothing to do with this lot!   .. just joking.
 .. just joking.
My pleasurePierce89 wrote:Thanks for the comments Sleepy

Club racing is probably the best type of racing there is!Pierce89 wrote:There are a few of us here who are club racers, but I have never driven a high down force open wheeler,but I have driven a couple of cars very dependent on momentum(spec Miata comes to mind). So I can somewhat relate to what you're saying.

Thanks, matePierce89 wrote:Good luck with your F3 season.
 Luck won't hurt
 Luck won't hurt 
 but still wanted to comment on this one
 but still wanted to comment on this one  )
 ) , I would also like to point out that whatever you see on videos is not how driver wanted to drive, it’s how he dealt with the reality of the car/track combination he had on that lap. Thus unless we’re talking about big things, I generally refrain from commenting on driving based solely on onboards.
, I would also like to point out that whatever you see on videos is not how driver wanted to drive, it’s how he dealt with the reality of the car/track combination he had on that lap. Thus unless we’re talking about big things, I generally refrain from commenting on driving based solely on onboards.There are of course setup preferences each driver (including myself) has, but I'd rather not comment in that particular topic because I think it turned out very person-oriented/driver specific. I'm not in position to comment on driving of F1 drivers, their careers or [mis]fortunes they had in the past.raymondu999 wrote:I wonder if you'd also like to contribute to this thread specifically on driving styles: http://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewto ... f=1&t=8843

 
														Maybe we should create a separate thread?Sleepy Drifter wrote:I'm always willing to discuss technical or driving stuff though, to extend I feel competent at

Do you think there will be enough questions for the whole thread? I'm cool if there's gonna be another thread, however I would have to put a big fat disclaimer at the beginning of ittimbo wrote:Maybe we should create a separate thread?

Well, you obviously do your homework -- trackwalk, some data/videos etc. Like knowing gears for corners definitely saves several laps for finding them on your own.timbo wrote:I have a question that would be a bit off topic, but I hope other won't mind -- how do you search for best line(s) when learning the circuit? Is it only by gut feeling, or are there any general rules?


 Also it's obviously for cases when you struggle to build-up progressively, not as a general "track exploration" approach. You DO need to go on a track walk and analyze run offs in order to try these things during the day, as you don't wanna damage your floor by going wide and hitting some sh*t that was hiding there... then, you know, turns out the mono is f*cked which they don't have a spare for and your whole second day of testing or weekend goes to waste
 Also it's obviously for cases when you struggle to build-up progressively, not as a general "track exploration" approach. You DO need to go on a track walk and analyze run offs in order to try these things during the day, as you don't wanna damage your floor by going wide and hitting some sh*t that was hiding there... then, you know, turns out the mono is f*cked which they don't have a spare for and your whole second day of testing or weekend goes to waste   Track walks are important
 Track walks are important   
 
Well, I guess it's up to mods and raymondo to decide.Sleepy Drifter wrote:Do you think there will be enough questions for the whole thread? I'm cool if there's gonna be another thread, however I would have to put a big fat disclaimer at the beginning of ittimbo wrote:Maybe we should create a separate thread?
No problem, nice to read! Sort of continuing on that -- how much time do you think F1 drivers find over the weekend? Usually we see the times improve from practice to qualifying, how much of it from a rubber buildup, how much from using engine at max, and how much from a pure driver's improvement? I understand it may be impossible to differentiate, but what do you feel from your experience?Sorry for many words, kinda took longer to describe than I thought
 
														Eh? Why me?timbo wrote:Well, I guess it's up to mods and raymondo to decide.Sleepy Drifter wrote:Do you think there will be enough questions for the whole thread? I'm cool if there's gonna be another thread, however I would have to put a big fat disclaimer at the beginning of ittimbo wrote:Maybe we should create a separate thread?
And to carry on further - When there is no rubber buildup - ie when a track is completely new, with your car being the first car driven there in anger - how do you learn lines? My gut feel is that you get the lines via... well... gut feelNo problem, nice to read! Sort of continuing on that -- how much time do you think F1 drivers find over the weekend? Usually we see the times improve from practice to qualifying, how much of it from a rubber buildup, how much from using engine at max, and how much from a pure driver's improvement? I understand it may be impossible to differentiate, but what do you feel from your experience?Sorry for many words, kinda took longer to describe than I thought