Ok... sit down and take some coffee as this is long...
For a start, a big thank to all for your nice words, I’m more than happy to share things that I have and that possibly can help the discussion.
Couple of people asked about method and accuracy, if you don’t care about this boring stuff, you can jump straight to next paragraph.
The method of audio analysis I’ve explained a few times already, there’s also a thread I made years ago you might want to search (title was something like “car speed from engine sound”), but Blanchimont made a basically correct summary, only thing to be adjusted is that from the frequency you get directly rpm (which obviously is proportional to speed, minus wheel slippage etc).
So, in reference to Ogami’s remark, it’s not a model, it’s more like a measure.
Obviously it’s affected by an error but I never bothered doing a proper estimate of it, simply because I don’t have access to an easily manageable complete sets of real data to do an accurate comparison (and anyway it’s all a work done more for personal use).
In the years though I made several, “more qualitative”, comparisons using the on screen data when available and my results are always a very good match for these. Very good match means, for example, that when, after having analyzed “blindly” the audio of a qualifying lap, I compare “my” derived speed data with the reference points (apex, end of straights etc) of FOM graphics, the difference is within 1km/h, more than good enough for me. (BTW, in favorable light conditions, like at night, the speed data shown on some drivers’ dash display are visible, and a few times I verified these match exactly the FOM graphics data, so I consider FOM graphics a reliable reference).
For older data I can’t do similar verifications, but the reference speed data available for speed traps, plus the comparison of total distance travelled, sector differences and similar, allow to keep a reasonable confidence in the results.
As for how I estimate lateral acceleration, that too I explained couple of times already when I posted similar data, repetita iuvant though (and there goes the once per year usage of Latin to justify the 5 years wast... err... happily spent enhancing my education level by studying it...), I made a program which calculates a plausible racing line, by minimizing an opportune fitness function of lateral acceleration, velocity and other parameters, using as limits the track borders from satellite image.
Again, that’s obviously not 100% accurate reproduction of the racing line followed, but it’s close enough that small divergences from the real one would hopefully only cause limited change of estimated lateral acceleration. Good enough for my needs.
End of general stuff, back to specific thread related things.
I’ve to make a small correction/addition to my previous post in relation to 2006 car not being capable of matching 2005 car at Turkey’s T8.
In doing that reasoning I just took Artur Craft mention of the 2005 car approaching 5g level and expecting 5.5 for 2006, without watching the video, so I only compared these claims with the 2006 data I had already analyzed years ago and found lower lateral acceleration.
Now I did a sound analysis of that video too and found out that the 2005 speed at the first apex of T8 was actually slower than 2006’s (and consequently lower is peak lateral acceleration):
The reasoning that for cornering of 2006 car vs 2005 the lower power was an important factor is still valid mind you, the only difference is that contrarily to what I previously said, the power available in 2006 was still enough to beat 2005 in T8, at least for the first apex.
The importance of power you can see by how much quicker the black line climbs thru the corner and basically keeps increasing at only slightly reduced rate even at the second apex (around 2850m or so), while the red line increases more slowly and stops growing for a while at the apex itself.
In term of theoretically available lateral force, going by what seen at first apex, the 2006 car should have enough to take also the second part at higher speed than 2005’s, but power doesn’t allow to, so the 2005 car can match it there.
I’m sorry for the small inconvenience that caused a not completely accurate comparison the first time, I should have checked the data from the 2005 video before.
Finally, a few direct answers to quotes, hoping I didn’t miss any direct question (if so, let me know).
These results I post come from calculations done, making/uploading images for all though would take too much time and make even longer an already very long post, so here I just post the resulting numbers, if required I can post more detailed results later.
Artur Craft wrote:
Mario Theissen already said they recorded 6Gs in 130R(around the 2004 era) and Barrichello already said they reached 6Gs in Barcelona's T3 in 97.
[...]
For instance, Suzuka's 130R was taken at 290-295kmh in 2001/2002(before it got slightly modified), which required a 5G lateral acceleration.
The name 130R refers to the (original) geometrical radius of the centerline, racing line is obviously not the centerline, its cornering radius is lot larger, something like 210-215m or so now (the 2014’s 310+ from Rosberg mean close to 3.5g), 195-200 before the reshaping of early ‘00s.
Already “just” 5g is absurd as would need a speed higher than these cars could reach at Monza’s speed trap, let alone 6.
Similar reasoning for Barrichello’s claim of 6g at Catalunya T3 in 1997.
Both MS in 2004 and Webber in 2010 reached there a peak acceleration of roughly 4g at about 250km/h, full throttle for Webber, MS slowing down a bit from the 260-265 reached shortly before the apex (apex of T3 is relatively close to T2 exit, not leaving much room to accelerate). 6g would require speed at the apex in excess of 300km/h. Hard to believe, to say the least.
Blanchimont wrote:
I just had quick at the qualifying lap of Hamilton at Sochi. At the end of turn 3, he does 286km/h. With an estimated corner radius of 180m taken from Google Earth this gives a lateral acceleration of:
(286/3,6 m/s)^2 / 180 m = 35,06 m/s² = 3,57 G
I too get 3.2-3.3g basically constant for the whole corner. It’s in absolute the highest lateral acceleration on that track, but a not much lower level of roughly 3g is seen in other parts of lap, at some 160km/h already, like in turns 7 and 8.
mrluke wrote:Juzh wrote:Ogami musashi wrote: It was during one of those exchanges that he told me those 5g's were overestimated and that anything higher than 3,5G (sustained) was unlikely. Years later, again IIRC, i mailed a pirelli F1 engineer which told me about the same thing.
RB6 last corner, 4+ pure lateral sustained troughout with 1 hand on the f duct.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiNIDaC ... a76rouC_SA
From google earth I get a radius of ~105m for the last turn cant see the speed for the RB6 but the RB9 exits at 245-250km/h
(245/3.6 m/s)^2 / 105 m = 44.11 m/s² = 4.5 G
Using the myth busters scale I would go with "plausible"
Also in my analysis of the 2013 pole the lateral acceleration in various instances thru the lap touches 4 and bit more.
4 and above is/was definitively feasible, I’ve seen it plenty of times in my estimates. Actually this year too, with all limitations of higher weight, power not necessarily available all time, limited aero rules, level in the range 3.5-4 is reachable.
Way more suspicious are the sometimes said “easily over 5”, let alone 6, especially when people mention that level in reference to the “old” era of ‘90s.
The more back in time we go then, the more we should be wary of the “fisherman effect”... be it for lateral acceleration, downforce, power or any other figure, especially as less “sure” data were available back then so the reported data are based on arbitrary recollection and as such tend to be enhanced/misremembered (accidentally or not...)
It’s like the story of the BMW 4-cyl turbo engine, it’s been out of duty since decades yet it keeps gaining power as time goes by... any day now we will probably celebrate it breaking the 2000hp barrier.