The way I understand it is that rain makes the lap much slower which means the amount of laptime drivers can find is increased, so it allows for bigger driver differences like you said. But it being as much of an equalizer is a myth obviously, car differences are still there.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Sep 2023, 00:47That wouldn't explain Alonso qualifying P2 in Canada last year or the massive gap between teammates that can occur when it rains. We have definitely seen rain give slower cars a shot at a better starting position by virtue of weaker drivers in faster cars being exposed.
Yep. I'm curious to hear what innovations F1 has contributed to road cars. Well, active suspension might be one.... but then they banned it. Rear wheel steering? Yeah, for parking. F-duct? Well..... Seamless shift transmissions? Nice on a race car. 18" tires? Following the herd. Seriously, what useful innovation has F1 brought to road cars? These are serious sophisticated race cars that corner at 5 g's. They have no need to bring innovation to road cars. This discussion is sort of like asking what developments top fuel drag cars contribute to street cars..... Nitro?
Most/many road cars now have small ducts to create so-called ‘air curtains’ around critical high drag points (front tyres, rear wheel arches, front grill/radiator outlet); I would argue that these are the same technology as the f-duct, they just don’t have the driver operation of the system - and when ‘active-aero’ becomes a thing in mainstream cars it will owe more to double-DRS (which again is basically the same thing but more!).
Before data-logging, so pre-'80, how else would the engineers work out what a car needs if not for driver feedback? "I want more front-end", "I want more rear-end" etc?
Isn't it with good reason that "active aero" fell out of fashion on road cars in the first place?
I meant on modern times, thought it was implied. My bad.JordanMugen wrote: ↑25 Sep 2023, 12:09Before data-logging, so pre-'80, how else would the engineers work out what a car needs if not for driver feedback? "I want more front-end", "I want more rear-end" etc?
The active suspension was adopted from a ride leveling suspension for ambulances.Rodak wrote: ↑20 Sep 2023, 05:45Yep. I'm curious to hear what innovations F1 has contributed to road cars. Well, active suspension might be one.... but then they banned it. Rear wheel steering? Yeah, for parking. F-duct? Well..... Seamless shift transmissions? Nice on a race car. 18" tires? Following the herd. Seriously, what useful innovation has F1 brought to road cars? These are serious sophisticated race cars that corner at 5 g's. They have no need to bring innovation to road cars. This discussion is sort of like asking what developments top fuel drag cars contribute to street cars..... Nitro?