Tim.Wright wrote:gold333 wrote:So where on the friction oval would you put Senna's 4 wheel drift technique in advancing the apex?
Have a read of my post on the previous page. The fact that everyone are alluding to is the boundary of the friction circle changes depending on the state of the vehicle with respect to slip angle AND load transfer.
Senna and Schumacher have found their own unique ways of presenting the vehicle into the corner such that the friction circle of the car is greater than others.
In short, there is no such thing as "exceeding" the friction circle - instead the goal is to make your friction circle bigger than everyone elses. Obviously part of this is the car, part of this is the driver.
Tim
Isn't the friction coefficient of a tire in a particular direction (at a certain temperature, loading, PSI, asphalt condition, etc.) a set value?
I.e. a value outside of which the tyre has lost its adhesion and is sliding? That is a fact as far as I am aware.
The outer limits of these values (in forewards-backwards and side to side tire loading) create an oval. That oval is the performance limit of the grip of the tire at peak slippage as far as I am aware. The trick is to transition from complete aft coefficient (braking) to complete lateral coefficient (cornering) to complete foreward coefficient (accelerating), i.e. skirting the edge of the oval at all times.
I am sure you know this already but I'm reiterating it just in case.
The way I see it it is as if Senna and Schumacher can get closer to the edge of the (one and only) friction oval and not increase the grip coefficient values themselves and increase the oval as you say. I don't understand this enlarging the oval argument. The coefficient of grip at the edge of the friction oval for a particular tire is a given, a maximum and cannot be exceeded unless you use a different compound of tire or something.
Edit: I think I understand you, you are saying the friction oval depends not only on the tire itself but how the contact patch of the tire changes shape according to load, cornering style, etc. I am merely postulating that the friction oval is what is possible with a certain tire on a certain car period, if God himself were driving it say.
F1 car width now 2.0m (same as 1993-1997). Lets go crazy and bring the 2.2m cars back (<1992).