At the risk of being a bore, Ciro, can I suggest that the diagram you posted (I think it comes from somewhere deep within the FIA) is misleading. Put baldly, it is ridiculous to suggest that "Cars naturally separate" when "in the wake of another car". That implies that the wake of a lead car increases the drag of a following car, or a following car reduces the drag of a lead car by more than the drag reduction it experiences. Neither is tenable, I think, except through limit handling corners where just one racing line exists.Ciro Pabón wrote:It also depends on the series. The "relationship between drag and downforce" you choose in your regulations (because there IS one relationship chosen by regulators, even taking in account n_smikle, Mystery Steve and horse intelligent comments) defines how boring the series is to watch.
Why is it that the two vehicle types depending most on aero for performance are at opposite ends of the spectrum (F1 & NASCAR), or nearly so? Also, why are F3 & GP2 close to the "F1 end" of the spectrum when close following & even overtaking are not uncommon in their races?
The fact is most vehicles/tyres require a sensible suspension set-up to fall back on when the downforce reduces even when they are not limit cornering. F1, as a series, is unusual because they don't revert to a sensible "mechanical" suspension set-up at low levels of downforce (typically, front vertical spring rates used in F1 are several times those used in F3 & even GP2 - both at the wheels). As a result, tyres are quickly destroyed when following another vehicle closely. Another issue appears to be that engines can over-heat when following another vehicle closely.
Both of the above are team decisions. They "optimize" their designs to such an extent that close following is not an option. It might be interesting to speculate what the precise benefits are for this strategy, & what the costs would be of adopting a more "race-able" compromise (bearing in mind, to repeat myself, that F1 & GP2 qualifying times overlap on some circuits).