hi Tom you should really state what class it is applicable to and what tyres and what the rules allow and do not allow. As Dave W is probably coming from high technolgy F1 propective and you are coming from a very resrictive rule propective.Jersey Tom wrote:Diff maps are nice... except when your diff has no adjustment which is the case in many series.
Trying to play with tire temps to fix a problem of roll stiffness, camber, or steer imbalance... IMO is just putting a bandaid over an issue and not really solving the root problem. Tune the right thing with the right 'tools.'
Does changing spring rates impact your damping? Of course! That's again, why I say set your roll stiffness split and (most of) tire pressure first, to get the average corner loads right, then go to dampers to play with TLV.
It's one thing if you have designed and built the chassis (e.g. F1) and have a pretty good idea of where everything is set.. and you're just doing fine tuning. How often is that the case though? GP2, IRL, Indy Lights, NASCAR... all are supplied chassis. If I'm handed a chassis, I want to know as much about the car from a mechanical standpoint first off.
But again.. just my way of thinking about it. I live more in the K&C and F&M realm.
With Rescitive rules K&C will give you a edge when it comes to setup gains. As you can simulate the car behavious to see how the car behaves depenant on setup change.
But you could have the best setup in the world but it could also be the slowest if the driver cannot utilise it due to there driving style case point Schmacher (rear rotation) and Rosberg (???)or Button(Smooth) and Hamilton (Agressive).