In a racing situation, yes. Marginally.
However, the AWD car would start better and overtake everybody but in the end it would be overtaken by all RWD cars having less weight and less transmission losses.
Panacea
First, AWD is usually sold as a panacea, a cure-it-all
(DISCLAIMER: this post may be a long and boring one, but at least you can use the word "panacea" today).
The message is "Buy our AWD car! It will help you to dodge Bambi!".
Will you kill Bambi, that magnificent creature? (notice the evil, anti-4WD advocate Tim Wright in the back, in his superhero costume, as usual)
Well, in truth, AWD wouldn't help Bambi that much. Starting with his father being killed by a gun, not a supercar, but I digress, as usual...
... and yes, that's not Tim, it might be Richard, in his mod costume... or perhaps Greg Locock. It's the Alzheimer, I think, but I forgot.
Shut-up-and-take-my-money car: Tesla autopilot, dual motor, AWD, 691 HP electric, 0 to 100 kph in 3.2 seconds... and it can dodge Bambi: if that's not modern, I don't know what is. A hipster in disguise?
Notice the used car seller talk in the previous video: "fastest car in the world in the category of cars-with-a-pink-roof-not-previously-owned-by-a-klingon! Zero to umpteen mph in 3.3423 seconds!"
Snake oil sellers would be proud: this guy has more words than you can hang in a fence...
However, the truth is that when it comes to handling, AWD is overrated (not to mention heavier and gas guzzling).
So, what's wrong with Jersey's Tom point of view besides disagreeing with me? (if he's wrong: I might be the one).
He says "all things being equal".
Yes, it's true that AWD will give you better acceleration (and that's why it's universal in rally racing, where you have to accelerate like mad after a 180 degrees curve on a dirt road, hardly a normal situation for a supercar).
On a side note, I helped to drive an 4WD to victory many years ago, in a local rally race and it was super nice.
This is the first AWD car... not the one I drove: I'm not that old, but not by much
The sad truth is that the law of physics imply that cornering ability depends on tyres and suspension. Once you get to the grip limit, that's it.
For one thing, AWD doesn't improve the handling and it doesn't improve stop distances, either, in case you're wondering why I prefer new snow tyres.
After all, AWD is better than FWD or RWD when you have more power than you can transmit to the ground and if a snowy road it's not that, nothing is.
Besides, AWD will make you confident.
(NOTE TO PEOPLE OF WARM CLIMATES: in my hard earned, paid with cash, experience, snow banks are NOT puffy and soft).
I'd rather have a Toyota on four new snow tyres than an Audi on all season tyres
And that's why I dare (hi, Tom! sorry! apologies! it's a joke! don't tell anyone, anyway!) to contradict Jersey Tom and side with lkocev.
If the budgets are equal, it's much better to invest in better tyres than in an AWD system.
Of course, I've never seen a "supercar" (what a horrible name!) in a racing situation, because racing cars and supercars are two different propositions.
However, as bill shoe could say, do not trust supercar owners. Let's imagine for a moment that you're going to risk a one hundred thousand dollar car by putting it in the hands of an overgrown brainless risk taker with the attitude of a five years old child (a.k.a. "a racing driver").
In that case, when you're racing and not showing off (which it's like the difference between Survivor and The Bachelor), what would you pick?
I would pick this one. Angie Layton, from Survivor (I wouldn't care about winning: I prefer to lose with a smile in my face)
Now, to tell the truth, if you have to choose between AWD and tyres, get the darn tyres.
Some people (fools!) disagree with me. They say that AWD improves oversteering. However, that's not improving handling but acceleration.
That's why it's so useful in rallies: there you don't really handle the car, let's be sincere, in rallies you just point the car in the general direction of the road, grind your teeth and hope for the best.
To be even more frank, I've tried (for a few magical moments) a new Audi with improved AWD and, yes, I know, the new AWD brakes the inner wheel and gives more force to the outer wheel.
Notice the clever use of the word "potential" when talking about wheel grip, right at the start of this (I think) interesting and pertinent video
It actually improves (in a minuscule amount) your handling. It costs a cartload of money, so there it evaporates the premise: all things equal, that's the basis of rationality.
Moreover, in racing it would be unjust: if a system like the one showed makes its way into F1 that'll would make Hamilton as good as Alonso...
... which takes me to the history of this things in F1, hoping it will be enlightening.
AWD in racing cars
Actually, a few cars have raced in F1 with AWD. The Ferguson P99 Climax was the first Formula One car to win with AWD and last car to win with a front engine.
End of an era but not the beginning of a new one: who else but Stirling Moss could win in an AWD car? Notice he drives LIKE A BOSS
Actually, this was a clever bet by Ferguson, that should remind us that mos threads in this forum, and most discussions in engineering have a very short answer: "it depends".
It is a Climax powered car, with a front engine by choice, even when Lotus and Cooper had recently demonstrated this was an inferior solution. Why?
Well, by putting the engine where you see it, the car has an almost perfect 50-50 rear and front weight distribution and the position of the gearbox makes the position of the engine a necessity. This makes this a very good car.
Actually (oh, c'mon, J Tom... don't nag me! ) Moss said this was his favorite car and this was a man that had won with legends lik the Mercedes W196, the Maserati 250F or the Cooper T51.
Few months later, FIA (sigh, as usual) decided to change the maximum weight of engines. This made the Ferguson an oddity: it was impossible to achieve balance with the new weight. So, goodbye frontal engine.
Then, a miracle happened. Strad would be proud of living in that era (but I'm afraid it's autogyro, marcush, xpensive and me the only ones that can remember it).
Yes, it's a Cosworth DFV, and yes, it's Mario Andretti, and yes, it's a Lotus, and yes, it's Nürburgring. Allow me a moment while I dry my eyes, the tears don't allow me to see this well
However, the racing gods are cruel. Remember Taraxippus?
Well, as things went then, 1968 was one of the wettest racing years in history. So, in 1969, with the light Cosworth engine many teams gave AWD a go. The result? Well, 1968 was one of the driest years in history. Taraxippus. So, AWD became an additional weight that gave no advantage but disadvantage. It depends, many times on luck, as Nico Rosberg knows.
Now, sometimes the gods take, but sometimes the gods give.
Enter Dave Walker, Zandvoort, 1971, in one of the weirdest cars that ever existed...
... to illuminate Strad's currently somber and boring F1 world.
Ok, it's a weird car by the looks and by having an AWD drive.
However, how many of you know that this car had no gearbox, a Prat and Whitney (ermahgerd!) turbine, has no clutch, the weird among weird Ferguson transmission?
Now, Dave Walker was no Emerson Fittipaldi (its first driver) and he qualified a lowly 22nd. Taraxippus, darn.
Then, the gates of heaven opened at Zandvoort and the weird car with the regular driver started to show what an AWD transmission is good for.
In the words of no one less than Colin Chapman: "that was the one race that should, and could, have been won by a four-wheel drive".
Unlike many contenders in 1969 that, curiously for a balanced AWD transmission broke many suspensions, Mr. Walker crashed after overtaking 10 cars in a hurry.
Finally, it was the Williams FW08D which made FIA ban AWD transmission in F1...
In the words of Patrick Head, it was banned because "someone in a FOCA meeting said it would drive up costs and cause chaos during pitstops".
... and you thought FIA was to blame for everything! C'mon, FOCA existed
Yes, it's Senna, and yes, it's Donnington Park, 1983 tests, and yes, it's a test for Williams, and yes, he broke the records of Laffite and Rosberg in his first attempt and yes, Williams could not break previous contracts, and yes, Senna could not sign for Williams, which was his dream, and yes, he ended in Toleman and the rest is history
Darn, I have to go to work, but as McArthur, I will be back to nag you with my short posts now that my brother finally is out of the hospital...
NOTE to Tim: c'mon, everybody says doble-u, doble-u, doble-u (nine syllables) instead of World Wide Web (three syllables)