raymondu999 wrote:Depends. How do you define reactive/responsive, versus manipulative?
It sounds (from the way you speak of it) that you're coming off the Peter Windsor dichotomy of styles. There are still a lot of things that I disagree with what he says on driving - I still believe he doesn't have a clue as to some of the things he talks about,in terms of driving - but as earlier discussed, either in this thread or its sister thread*, the dichotomy does work as a classification.
What I get from what he says is basically that manipulative is the driver telling the car what to do, based on his feel for the car. Reactive drivers, from what I understand of Peter Windsor, is about drivers who don't actually have great feel. They chuck the car in/out of corners, then react to the mistakes to correct them.
*) For sister thread discussing Peter Windsor and his buddy Rob Wilson's point of view on driving, see here: http://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewto ... =1&t=13034
Disclaimer: not a big fan of Peter Windsor, nor his "expertise" on driving. IMO he speaks a load of tosh. To quote myself:
raymondu999 wrote:To me it's sometimes clear that Peter Windsor is able to see things we can't. For example I saw Alonso and Vettel in Monza taking the straight between Ascari and Parabolica diagonal. He saw Alonso and Vettel sticking to the right hand side of the road and apparently only diagonalling the straight in the last 200 meters. Every race weekend he is able to spot something no other living human is, and apparently to his eyes it's blatantly obvious that only [insert racewinner's name] and [insert p2 finisher's name] are doing.
Ah, thanks.raymondu999 wrote:I think what JimClarkFan is referring to, is what alluded to - Mansell (in the active days) and Vettel (in the exhaust days - ie now) driving to a limit that he doesn't intuitively feel - but something counterintuitive that he is told - and their blind faith pays off.
I disagree. I actually think that reactive drivers are ones who rely more on their "feel" from the car than manipulative ones.Reactive drivers, from what I understand of Peter Windsor, is about drivers who don't actually have great feel. They chuck the car in/out of corners, then react to the mistakes to correct them.
That begs the question, if responsive drivers have better feel, why wouldn't they use it to manipulate the car when they need to. For instance, a car that has a loose rear end, some driver, don't like that and can't drive around it. Certainly nearly every driver on the F1 grid seems to need the car to act in a certain way, Button, Massa, Webber. Perhaps the only two drivers who can adapt at will are Hamilton and Alonso.timbo wrote:Ah, thanks.raymondu999 wrote:I think what JimClarkFan is referring to, is what alluded to - Mansell (in the active days) and Vettel (in the exhaust days - ie now) driving to a limit that he doesn't intuitively feel - but something counterintuitive that he is told - and their blind faith pays off.
I disagree. I actually think that reactive drivers are ones who rely more on their "feel" from the car than manipulative ones.Reactive drivers, from what I understand of Peter Windsor, is about drivers who don't actually have great feel. They chuck the car in/out of corners, then react to the mistakes to correct them.
Although I think that the lines are blurred greatly and that's just tendencies.
I think that's like asking a left handed person to write with right hand. For somebody that's going around their nature.JimClarkFan wrote:That begs the question, if responsive drivers have better feel, why wouldn't they use it to manipulate the car when they need to.
To continue my analogy, there are people who can use their both hands pretty good and there are ones who can't. IMO driver's hand/eye/feel coordination is wired very deeply.JimClarkFan wrote: For instance, a car that has a loose rear end, some driver, don't like that and can't drive around it. Certainly nearly every driver on the F1 grid seems to need the car to act in a certain way, Button, Massa, Webber. Perhaps the only two drivers who can adapt at will are Hamilton and Alonso.
Yeah, I do think there's different kinds of "feel". But the primary one which drivers rely on is the balance.Another thing, are there different kinds of 'feel.'
For instance, a feel for timing, like an internal clock that tells a person, 'this way is faster than that way?' Rather than just a feel for grip?
I don't follow. You'd say they what?Clew wrote:I'd say Kimi, Shumy and Alonso. They delivered consistency with at least 3 teams
raymondu999 wrote:[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQbqeyNaU7I[/youtube]
Interesting that Hamilton keeps his nose tucked in a lot tighter in the T1-2 complex, whereas Alonso seems to drift wide towards the left to open up the entry to 2 and 3.
Seems to me that Alonso is quite kerb-shy too in this video, or the Ferrari when driven on-limit perhaps exhibits understeer - which would seem to match Mark Hughes' assessment of Alonso's preferences. Perhaps he could have been P2 on the grid had he clipped the apex kerbs?
The video is not working so I can only go by what you guys are saying.Sevach wrote:Interesting comparison, Alonso lost a lot of time in sector 1 it seems to me that if the front end is good enough to keep it tight that's the way to go.
They also drive T8-9 (the S turns) quite differently from one another this time with Alonso keeping it tighter while Hamilton opens up and then comes back for the braking zone of T9.
Yes I had assumed it was quali.raymondu999 wrote:It seems the video has fallen prey to the copyright hounds.
JCF - thing is though, the video was showing both drivers drive their qualifying laps. Not laps from the race - so I'm not buying the tyre conservation argument. The qualifying margins nowadays are way too tight to even consider tyre saving.
You know what I mean. Stop stilling the pot materaymondu999 wrote:I don't follow. You'd say they what?Clew wrote:I'd say Kimi, Shumy and Alonso. They delivered consistency with at least 3 teams
The 2 posts right before yours were discussing differing technique and lines into Turn 1:Clew wrote:You know what I mean. Stop stilling the pot materaymondu999 wrote:I don't follow. You'd say they what?Clew wrote:I'd say Kimi, Shumy and Alonso. They delivered consistency with at least 3 teams
raymondu999 wrote:[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQbqeyNaU7I[/youtube]
Interesting that Hamilton keeps his nose tucked in a lot tighter in the T1-2 complex, whereas Alonso seems to drift wide towards the left to open up the entry to 2 and 3.
Seems to me that Alonso is quite kerb-shy too in this video, or the Ferrari when driven on-limit perhaps exhibits understeer - which would seem to match Mark Hughes' assessment of Alonso's preferences. Perhaps he could have been P2 on the grid had he clipped the apex kerbs?
The one before it was discussing how drivers feel grip:Sevach wrote:Interesting comparison, Alonso lost a lot of time in sector 1 it seems to me that if the front end is good enough to keep it tight that's the way to go.
They also drive T8-9 (the S turns) quite differently from one another this time with Alonso keeping it tighter while Hamilton opens up and then comes back for the braking zone of T9.
So forgive me for being f*cking rude... but what in the name of f*ck is this:timbo wrote:I think that's like asking a left handed person to write with right hand. For somebody that's going around their nature.JimClarkFan wrote:That begs the question, if responsive drivers have better feel, why wouldn't they use it to manipulate the car when they need to.
To continue my analogy, there are people who can use their both hands pretty good and there are ones who can't. IMO driver's hand/eye/feel coordination is wired very deeply.JimClarkFan wrote: For instance, a car that has a loose rear end, some driver, don't like that and can't drive around it. Certainly nearly every driver on the F1 grid seems to need the car to act in a certain way, Button, Massa, Webber. Perhaps the only two drivers who can adapt at will are Hamilton and Alonso.
Yeah, I do think there's different kinds of "feel". But the primary one which drivers rely on is the balance.Another thing, are there different kinds of 'feel.'
For instance, a feel for timing, like an internal clock that tells a person, 'this way is faster than that way?' Rather than just a feel for grip?
And once again all people are different in what they feel -- for example, if I'm not using my eyes I can't align things vertically or horizontally with my hand, but I have very good eye for sizes and shapes and can use that to control my coordination. Whereas my father has very good "hand feel" but not very good eye.
[/quote]Clew wrote:I'd say Kimi, Shumy and Alonso. They delivered consistency with at least 3 teams