Mariano, this might help a bit:
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3529
But the intrinsic idea is the same. Understeer has varying degrees of understeer and oversteer has varying degrees of oversteer.Jersey Tom wrote:
Very few things are a black and white '1' or '0'. Prefering understeer or oversteer, pointy or stable, active or passive, whatever. All of these are valid but they're all a sliding scale. When I order a steak I don't get asked if I want it 'cooked' or 'raw' - depending on the cut, thickness, and my mood I might like varying degrees of doneness.
With regard to karts... are we talking 85 mph top speed or mid corner speed? In any event, they're a unique animal given the super short wheelbase, no suspension, speeds and corner geometry. I don't know of any other major vehicle class where the goal is to lift an inside rear tire to get around a corner. Besides, going through a power-limited high speed corner you don't want the rear end to be sliding all over - it's straight up going to be slow, bleeding speed and abusing the tires.
Trust me. An appropriate dose of understeer at the right times is a good thing.
I think binary categorization can work, but only in very broad terms. @Tumba maybe you can link us to that blog post? I can only find this post: http://www.theracedriver.com/2011/03/au ... y-with-it/Tumbarello wrote:Some commentators, chief amongst them Peter Windsor, speak of another dichotomy in styles: reactionary vs manipulative.
In the reactive category he places the likes of Vettel, Alonso (and presumably though he hasn't said it himself AFAIK, Senna) and in the latter group Hamilton (he has a crush on this character!), Raikkonen, Schumacher, Moss and Clark.
Could somebody elaborate on this categorisation.
I would imagine the best analysis of a driver would be from another driver. Fisichella said the following about Alonso back in '05:gold333 wrote:I find this analysis of driving styles fascinating. But it is so rare to get informed opinions.
747heavy wrote:it´s maybe a bit more like this:
more extreme V-shape in a 180° corner
It´s not so much "short cutting" the corner, as using the stength of a car, which is maybe better in straight line braking (late braking) and in acceleration. you can be on the throttle earlier with that technique.
It´s a typical technique in cars which don´t can support high midcorner speeds due to maybe weight or/and tires or a lack on downforce.
You see this for example in V8Supercars, and other touring cars with high power and weight.
Done to extreme, pivoting the car on a too small radius, will put excessive stress on the ear tires, as you slide them sideways.
You will be slow at this point (pivoting) of the corner, but if you won time before under braking, and gain on the next staight by being early on the throttle, it can be faster.
It´s typical used in low(er) speed tight corners exiting onto a long(er) straight, or in reverse after a straigh when there is no long stright at the exit, so you try to win time under braking, but are not too concerned with the exit.
It´s not effective in high speed wide corners , because (due to limiting engine power/drag) you can´t gain that much under acceleration.