![Image](http://i1163.photobucket.com/albums/q546/gato_azul/trailbraking.jpg)
![Image](http://i1163.photobucket.com/albums/q546/gato_azul/180turn.jpg)
as for the term "V-shaping" as I said earlier, it probably refers more to the appearance of the velocity vs. distance trace in the data, then it does to the actual driving line on the track, especially in ~90° corners.
![Image](http://i1163.photobucket.com/albums/q546/gato_azul/v-shape.jpg)
Have fun with it
It's funny how it relates to my experiences in Ferrari Virtual Academy. I naturally gravitated towards V-trace, but in fact depending on the corner, the U-trace allows to have same exit, and you gain only on entry, but having a better apex speed outweights it. Also, not that to have a U-trace you have to put your foot on the throttle during max-cornering phase. Consider blow-diffuser and voila not much to look at in the V-trace.gato azul wrote:maybe some graphics will help to illustrate one point or the other.
as for the term "V-shaping" as I said earlier, it probably refers more to the appearance of the velocity vs. distance trace in the data, then it does to the actual driving line on the track, especially in ~90° corners.
Right now pretty much everyone does what Schuey did there. In fact, it seems that in modern cars that much steering imput midcorner indicates a setup/aero problem.richard_leeds wrote:This video is useful for throttle v braking and carrying speed through a corner.
Yes, that is true.gato azul wrote:as for the other point made by Timbo, let's keep in mind, that today it is quite common in F1 (and other racing series) to use variable ratio steering racks, so comparing steering angle positions from now and then or between different cars, can have his pitfalls - if we are not 100% sure about the steering ratios used etc.
One could come to "wrong" conclusions, just taking steering wheel angle as a measure/reference.
Today it is entirely possible (likely even) that two drivers of the same team, can run a different steering rack, with different ratio change/range to help their individual driving style - cater for their preferences.
It's a setup tool, just as spring dampers and ARB's these days.
Interesting that he calls it "dynamic manipulation of mass" - it sounds like a term one might encounter in vehicle dynamics, but I think he coins a lot of phrases himself sometimes as his words and phrases such as shortening corners, flatspots etc are very unconventional in their usage.raymondu999 wrote:[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKpCMWDBW6M[/youtube]
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5H_4mNeNew[/youtube]
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpVDpWI25j8[/youtube]