autogyro wrote:
IMO short oval racing is the most skilled and under rated form of racing in this respect.
is this a loose track surface ?
or are we saying the difficulty is the circuit being mostly corner ?
'proper' circuits traditionally had about 7 corners per lap, now they have 19 in F1
some ovals (not short ones) have as much skill in cornering as the railways do
the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was designed for such 'hands-off' driving (at 90 mph)
Brooklands and Monza were designed to be hands-off at very high speeds (but became like rollercoaster riding)
do people know (with ovals) what they are watching ? (I know that I don't)
eg on old footage it's not clear what the surface is
and people see what they expect/want to see ...... a loose-surface powerslide-fest ......
when the surface is actually fairly stable and (much of the time) both ends of the car are drifting
eg ask these simple questions
do drivers brake at Indy ? (and when did they start doing this ?) or what do they do ?