Lead is also too soft; an F1 car's loading might deform it.Monstrobolaxa wrote:Well yes a F1 car has the weigh pulled more to the rear then to the front....the numbers I've seen say that usually it's under 60% the weigh distibuition to the rear.
About the spinning well creating more downforce to the rear will stick the car to the surface of the road! The downforce won't create major unstability problems in have speed corners...the main problem is if you have to much weigh on the rear axle! Due to inercia mass tends to continue in the trajectory it had prior to the aplication of a force....so if you have a lot of weigh (cause by mass) on the rear axle it will tend to continue in a straight line when the car is turning into a corner....this may cause a spin.
About the ballast pompelmo talked about F1 cars have around 120 kg of ballast it varies from team to team depending on the car construction. But the ballast is made from Tungsten (in most cases) a few years back Jag used Depleted Uranium...but passed to Tungsten (it's safer). The ideal material would be gold (on of the densest non-radiation metals)....but it's too expensive. Lead (like pompelmo said) is to light when compared to tungsten. (for the same volume tungsten is 65% heavier). There was an intersting article on ballast in June's issue of RaceCar Engineering.