We were running toe out (half degree) in the rear, -2 degree camber in the rear. Front was -1.5 degrees toe in with -1 degree of caster, and -4.5 degree camber. This was the base that we just massaged from track to track.godlameroso wrote: ↑17 Feb 2020, 04:44F1 cars already run a fair bit of toe out on the front, a hint of toe in at the rear, and as much camber as Pirelli lets them get away with. What is not known to me is caster angles, although I'm guessing looking at some of these pictures that 6-10 degrees wouldn't be out there.Zynerji wrote: ↑17 Feb 2020, 04:22FRIC suspension is banned (front/rear interconnect), but I'd imagine FFIC could still be used.
Maybe that's how it can "know" which way it's turning, but Im just speculating.
PS: Concerning caster. In sim racing about 2007ish, my friend and I did a ton of setup mapping in rFactor. Now, obviously, it is a game, but we found tons of time with the toe/caster settings. Oddly, whenever I've spoken about going slight negative on caster with high camber and slight positive rear toe, people don't believe it is a good thing. I watched him win the 2007 and 2008 league championships with that setup philosophy. My friend called it the Snap and Hold setup (smooth), as it was a bunch of small, quick steering maneuvers. He disliked it at first, as he was a very "stair step" corner entry driver (choppy), and it took hours for him to adapt, but it was worth 1.3s in the end.
With modern machine learning, we will probably see lots of "rules of thumb" be overturned with "wacky" setups.
2018 tires had wear marks on the inside of the front tires which is common signs of having tons of toe out. Probably like half a degree.
I had the Caroll Smith books helping us at the time, and we found that what he recommended was definitely NOT the fastest lap time. We just figured the tyres model simply didn't calc the true wear, so we got away with it, but who knows?