Guys. thank you so much.
Ironically, i'm rationally (in my head) up to a point in thought i was a couple of nights ago.
i think my thoughts were affected partially by an xbox game i play named f1 2011. the brakes are unrealistically powerful, to the point where you can drive down a straight at high speed and be on the brakes, off the brakes in 1 second and back on the power. when i first went karting, i naturally trail braked (i knew the concept thanks
) but on the game it was hard to trail brake in terms of late apexing - because your transition would have to be so quick.
i'd seen/read the wheel and rope concept which i understood but i didn't know the answer to this:
is it possible to go faster without using maximum combined latitudinal/longitiudinal grip..almost focusing on 2 long straight lines joined with a turn of small radiues (where only latitudinal grip is maxed out) ..forming a "v" shape in terms of line AND on the graph.
I was also confused as to why f1 drivers seem to brake to apex nearly always!
those diagrams and your explanations seem to have cleared this up..
1.so i'm correct in thinking, if you late apex, you can accelerate before the apex and get throttle down earlier? i wonder why i don't see many f1 drivers doing this - i thought senna was a fan of it and hamilton? never see hamilton do it tho.
2. if i like to late apex by driving style, i must brake first and then turn in with an element of braking...because by trail braking i am: braking later, maintaining speed higher speed for longer on corner entry and...still not sacrfificing exit speed (because i still aim to accelerate at the same point).
am i right here?
if this is correct, during track practise, would it be wise to determine the braking point (say 100m marker) and the latest turn in point (say 50m marker) for first few laps using threshold braking ...so i'm not maximising grip at first as i turn in on 50m marker...then once im comfortable, brake a little later next few laps ...say, 90 metetre marker, still turning in at the 50m marker but this time, with a little brake?
so essentially, trail braking shifts the braking point back, but doesn affect turn in or acceleration points and just requires the brakes are covered when turn in happens?
sorry if i sound blonde lol