If only it were that straight forward.mep wrote:Why they can't simply crap one of these tires mount them on a tire test rig and measure out all the data’s they need.
If only it were that straight forward.mep wrote:Why they can't simply crap one of these tires mount them on a tire test rig and measure out all the data’s they need.
Hmm, if this is true, it points to the rear end of the WO1 being too cluttered to allow the smooth air flow needed to take the heat away.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:I read that apparently the W01 hot exhaust gas around the diffuser was causing some of the deficiencies. Making tyre readings near impossible...
This was the first race weekend Mercedes used the (low)exhaust driven diffuser.autogyro wrote:Hmm, if this is true, it points to the rear end of the WO1 being too cluttered to allow the smooth air flow needed to take the heat away.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:I read that apparently the W01 hot exhaust gas around the diffuser was causing some of the deficiencies. Making tyre readings near impossible...
Why not?Jersey Tom wrote:If only it were that straight forward.mep wrote:Why they can't simply crap one of these tires mount them on a tire test rig and measure out all the data’s they need.
Look at tire data (if you have it, and it doesn't suck). Run it in a sim (if you have it, and it doesn't suck). Change your car setup / ballast, and drive it.
Well, it's not only the numbers being put in. When you do a model, you assume that the world is static. I mean, you assume that all wheels are the same.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:...
Someone on this very site did allude to CFD and modeling software as "its only as good as the numbers being put in and taken out of it".
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Allowed or not, to many things in our world are not allowed. If you stick to all these rules you would never achieve anything.marcush. wrote:officially the tyre evaluation is not allowed if it is not a test performed on the car in official sessions...
so how can you legally aquire reliable data to put in your sim? you only get snapshots from wha you can gather in testing and practise sessions and try to adapt your sim to what th ereal thing does?
Absolutely agree with that.Ciro Pabón wrote: Well, it's not only the numbers being put in. When you do a model, you assume that the world is static. I mean, you assume that all wheels are the same.
In racing, that's not true. Even in karts, the change in grip and temperature characteristics between a set of tyres and a different one are abysmal. That's precisely the key to (and the purpose of) tuning a race car: to understand every set of tyres you're going to use.
In NASCAR is even more pathetic: imagine the number of tyres they use. Multiply for the number of cars. Imagine now the inhomogeneities (that is, the variability from one set to another).
So, the problem here is the size of the standard deviation of parameters... as always.
As they say down here: "when I learned all the answers, they changed all the questions".
It's the same here: you run a long set of tests, find all the numbers there is in this world about a tyre. Then you go to the track and the racing tyres you use behave differently. Aint life a b..ch?