autogyro wrote:Gearing for maximum exhaust blowing at gearshift points on deceleration and corner entry will leave the gearing lower, resulting in a lower maximum top speed.
This will negate full use of DRS.
It will also result in the engine rpm during acceleration being slightly higher through the gears than the other cars.
Early in the race with a high fuel load a longer time will be spent with the engine rpm further above maximum torque than the others.
The car will as a result, accelerate at a lower rate than the other cars with early race high fuel loads.
However it will hit a higher performance window somewhere around mid race.
don't we know that there is only 18 ratios (combinations of gearbox gear pair ratios and final drive pair ratios) for the season ?
at any event a car must have chosen 7 of these and use them throughout practice, qualification, and the race
despite changes in weight and grip, nominally seamless gearboxes mean that only the top gear ratio is crucially important
presumably the undergearing concept is related to that
the desired top gear ratio is unpredictable in the gamble that is slipstreaming/DRS vs. hard rev limit
but whenever driver has fuel to spare for richening he can alleviate the top speed penalty of undergearing
because richening speeds combustion and increases power by raising the efficient rpm
(no car would be so undergeared as to top out at the hard rev limit in economy mixture)
best (top) gearing for car A leading by 2 sec is lower than that best for car B making a DRS/slipstreaming pass
but car B is overgeared for closing to DRS distance on car A
so, what's undergearing anyway ?
(a given amount of) 'undergearing' must surely be better at high weights than low ?
(lower weight means the car is potentially faster than high weight, so the undergearing will impede it more)
different gearing does not force different revs (except in top), typically it will only move shift points on the track
but it's pot luck whether undergearing gains or loses this way