Don't take this personally, but I honestly can't stand this --- anymore.Monster Hesh wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:02If you have a craving for great racing, just watch MotoGP. Last weeks Assen GP was one of the greatest races ever. F1 cars are too fast, wide and stop too easily.
All cars are too wide, too wide for the narrow racing line. It wasn't F1 targeted in honesty. From now I''ll rephrase it to "racing line too narrow".DiogoBrand wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:28Don't take this personally, but I honestly can't stand this --- anymore.Monster Hesh wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:02If you have a craving for great racing, just watch MotoGP. Last weeks Assen GP was one of the greatest races ever. F1 cars are too fast, wide and stop too easily.
Why is there still people complaining that the cars are too wide?
Cars were just as wide up until the 90's, yet nobody complained about it back then. In fact, in the late 90's (98 I think), then they had the idea of making cars narrower because in their minds this would somehow improve overtaking, it didn't make any difference. I would say that the added mechanical grip of wider cars actually helps with overtaking.
It's just an 11% difference from 1800mm to 2000mm, people should just stop saying this crap.
Interesting never heard of 2 speed manuals, what era/ cars were they?roon wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 09:17Interestingly, if you go back far enough you find two speed manuals in F1. Which would entail less shifting, less opportunity for error, more hands on the steering wheel. What modern afficionados would call too easy, or boring, while claiming F1 as not being like it used to be.
Drivers had one hand on the f-duct and one hand on the brake balance lever while altering the front wing in 2010, so there's precedent for complex operations in recent history. Didn't always lead to passing or crashing.
I do not think 11% is "just" anything in the F1 scheme of things!?DiogoBrand wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:28It's just an 11% difference from 1800mm to 2000mm, people should just stop saying this crap.
When you consider that a track can fit 3 or 4 cars side by side, I don't think it is that significant.garygph wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 20:45I do not think 11% is "just" anything in the F1 scheme of things!?DiogoBrand wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:28It's just an 11% difference from 1800mm to 2000mm, people should just stop saying this crap.
The racing line point is valid. In fact there was a post on this forum about making corners with more than one ideal line to aid overtaking. But the fact that you have to drive on a compromised line to be able to overtake was always a part of motorsport.Monster Hesh wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 20:34All cars are too wide, too wide for the narrow racing line. It wasn't F1 targeted in honesty. From now I''ll rephrase it to "racing line too narrow".DiogoBrand wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:28Don't take this personally, but I honestly can't stand this --- anymore.Monster Hesh wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:02If you have a craving for great racing, just watch MotoGP. Last weeks Assen GP was one of the greatest races ever. F1 cars are too fast, wide and stop too easily.
Why is there still people complaining that the cars are too wide?
Cars were just as wide up until the 90's, yet nobody complained about it back then. In fact, in the late 90's (98 I think), then they had the idea of making cars narrower because in their minds this would somehow improve overtaking, it didn't make any difference. I would say that the added mechanical grip of wider cars actually helps with overtaking.
It's just an 11% difference from 1800mm to 2000mm, people should just stop saying this crap.
When I read that my first thought was how when they moved an oil cooler on Hunts car just a few mm it turned it from a winner to a loser and when they moved it back it returned to winning. Sometimes a small change can mean a lot.It's just an 11% difference
It can. But there's still no evidence that an 11% difference in width will aid or harm overtaking.
The cars were made narrower in 1998 to reduce the aerodynamic efficiency - to make the cars (especially the floor) work worse. The idea being that the front wheel wakes would pass under the floor and reduce overall downforce. Problem is teams got wise and bargeboards became more complex, then the sidepod undercut was introduced and we end up with the problem we have now where the legacy of the car in the disturbed air is significantly wider (about a car width wider each side) than the actual car.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑03 Jul 2018, 00:04The racing line point is valid. In fact there was a post on this forum about making corners with more than one ideal line to aid overtaking. But the fact that you have to drive on a compromised line to be able to overtake was always a part of motorsport.Monster Hesh wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 20:34All cars are too wide, too wide for the narrow racing line. It wasn't F1 targeted in honesty. From now I''ll rephrase it to "racing line too narrow".DiogoBrand wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 18:28
Don't take this personally, but I honestly can't stand this --- anymore.
Why is there still people complaining that the cars are too wide?
Cars were just as wide up until the 90's, yet nobody complained about it back then. In fact, in the late 90's (98 I think), then they had the idea of making cars narrower because in their minds this would somehow improve overtaking, it didn't make any difference. I would say that the added mechanical grip of wider cars actually helps with overtaking.
It's just an 11% difference from 1800mm to 2000mm, people should just stop saying this crap.