Depends on how you define "planted" but I'd say no, not particularly.
It won't spin out, but you can get some very "lively" rotation and yaw without getting to the limit.
Maybe it helps to look at the "traction circle" in terms of forces at the (generated by the) tyre.
Like this:
What you call "the traction cycle" is the "rim of the crater" (global peak). Note, that this illustration is "normalized", which means it reference to 1 (100%) of the max. capability of the tyre. In absolute values, you would get back to your "ellipse or heart shape).
Some (most?) people will do this normalization, when assessing driver performance, as in how much the driver is able to utilize the 100% grip available.
If you go "outside" the circle, you lose force, so technically it is the same, as being a given distance from the "Circle" on the inside (same amount of force from the tyre).
To do the correct normalization, requires good tyre data, and also accounts for the increase in "grip" due to aerodynamic downforce.
But the limit is always 100%, even when the values change in magnitude (G or N)
How much the tyre will "fall off" on the other side of the maximum, will depend on the tyre and the conditions in question.
Now the throttle pedal position must map more closely the actual engine throttle position, thus if the driver is off the throttle pedal, then the engine throttles must be correspondingly closed.
Barrichello was forced to adapt to left foot breaking years ago as monocoque dimension became ever tighter and no longer allowed room to hold the left foot out of the way. This was whilst still at Ferrari I believe. Also, left foot breaking became fundamentally the quicker way to drive a modern car so he had to adapt.Intego wrote:Left foot braking is driver-dependant. IIRC Barrichello e. g. is a driver who brakes with his right foot ...
I also thought about left foot braking with the right one still on throttle for exhaust gases. I believe that the rules state that the gas flow into the engine has to be proportional to throttle position (pedal). So blowing could be inefficient mileage-wise ...
From Scarbs:Now the throttle pedal position must map more closely the actual engine throttle position, thus if the driver is off the throttle pedal, then the engine throttles must be correspondingly closed.
Not according to one Rubens Barichello, on The Flying Lap 3 weeks ago. But we digress..Coefficient wrote:Barrichello was forced to adapt to left foot breaking years ago as monocoque dimension became ever tighter and no longer allowed room to hold the left foot out of the way. This was whilst still at Ferrari I believe. Also, left foot breaking became fundamentally the quicker way to drive a modern car so he had to adapt.
Senna mentions in his own book that his method of advancing the apex (late apexing for higher exit speed) included drifting the F1 car around slow and medium speed corners from 88-91.Jersey Tom wrote:There are certainly things you can do to get the car to pivot on entry - I agree this can be advantageous - but has nothing to do with exceeding traction.gold333 wrote:There are times you must exceed the oval and break traction to get the car turned in.
From a conceptual/theoretical point of view; I kind of understand now. But could you give an example where this would happen in practice, JT?Jersey Tom wrote:I wouldn't necessarily agree with that assessment, no.
Tires are always operating at some amount of sideslip. Just because the car is a bit "hung out" doesn't mean you've exceeded the limit capacity of the tires. Just means you've done something to make one axle work at a higher sideslip angle than the other.
How many sim racing apps/games can properly simulate this though? I'm thinking the tyre modeling would be quite resource intensive - do they even have the physics engines to simulate it at a personal computer level? Or would they just have response curves which the sim would refer to? (i.e. basically it has a database of inputs vs responses - giving out a response by comparing your input to the database of inputs)Giblet wrote:Its very popular in sim racing.
Not on entry usually, but sometimes during the initial braking.raymondu999 wrote:Why would you be on the throttle on trail braking entry though?