If you wish you can download a word document I wrote for general knowledge:
Tire Grip for Road Designers
There, as RH1300S suggest, I made a simple calculation for a dragster, which essentially develops very little or no downforce at all. A dragster goes from 0 to 480 km/h in one quarter of a mile (410 m). Thus:
This is over twice the acceleration of gravity and implies a friction coefficient of 2.2.
I believe your professor is plainly wrong: the weight of the car is not the only thing that limits the adherence, but the interlocking and sticking you get between tires and asphalt. If you could develop a perfect interlocking (think of a "funicular" with gears) you would, in theory, get infinite "friction factor". Same consideration applies if you could develop perfect "stickiness" between the asphalt and the tire.
F1 and dragster tires "work" mainly by adhesion. Therefore, slicks. It is very important for any aspiring driver to read about it.
Perhaps your professor could find interesting the theory of friction developed by Bo Persson, that I've mentioned several times here. I give the links again:
Why Tires Grip The Road: New Theory Reduces Testing
and
Theory of rubber friction and contact mechanics
and
Elastoplastic Contact between Randomly Rough Surfaces
Essentially, what Mr. Persson proved is that if you see the asphalt as a fractal surface (remember fractals?)
the area of contact between tyre and asphalt increases proportional to the force you put on the tyre.
There are several "modes" of developing friction, from an "interlocking" mode to a "sticky" mode. The interlocking works at macroscopic scales, the stickiness work at molecular scales.
This means that the tyre "grabs" the small rocks in the asphalt and
also "sticks" to the smooth parts of the tarmac. In the following image, which I also repost, the "interlocking" occurs when you see the tyre at the 5 mm level (macrotexture) while the "stickiness" happens at the microtexture level.
[img::]
http://www.vti.se/Nordic/2-99mapp/pics/texturer.gif[/img]
Therefore, the references to the "physics of smooth bodies" don't apply: the smoother the surface, the more adhesion you can develop by chemical, electrostatic or even dispersive or diffusive mechanisms (and less macroscopical interlocking or "mechanical adhesion"), which are the five mechanisms developed to explain adhesion.
There is an optimal asphalt-and-rubber texture where the sum of the five modes of adhesion reach a maximum.
I quote from one of the links I give:
..dry-weather tires in Formula One racing ... exude resins and actually even out irregularities in the asphalt, thus considerably improving the area of contact... Racing tires are literally sucked dry.
So, F1 racing tyres work as the feet of a fly: they stick to surfaces, developing coefficients of friction well beyond 1.
Finally, next person who talks about "centrifugal force" should be chastised for not reading enough. You cannot drive properly if you believe in it.