machin wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 22:33
I just ran a few cars through Virtual Stopwatch, and most (but not all) of the round 1 cars would be quicker around Sepang if they reduce drag, compared to increasing downforce...
Keeping efficiency constant, right?
machin wrote: ↑03 Sep 2018, 22:33
...of course, that doesn't tell you whether it is easier to decrease drag compared to increasing downforce...
Reducing drag is very difficult without incurring in a huge CoP shift. For example, reducing Rear Wing for less drag is easy, but reducing Front Wing doesn't necessarily translate into less drag (given the same efficiency).
Also, if you already are at the point of maximum efficiency of your car, reducing drag will also reduce efficiency, so you don't want to exaggerate even if you were to race at Monza.
My car is currently above the point of maximum efficiency (=more downforce, more drag than ideal), but I can't tune it down too much because my CoP would shift towards the front a lot. And if I try to correct the CoP shift with less Front Wing, the car gets less efficient...
So right now I'm finding easier to gain performace translating the point of maximum efficiency upwards, thanks to new geometries that produce more downforce with similar drag.
If I had to focus on drag reduction, I'd go for front wheel covers, mirrors, canopy,... all those elements that don't have a huge impact on downforce and CoP.