mariano wrote:
I think Button's line is the purple's one, and M. Schumacher's is the brokenline (geometrical's)'s one.
Ciro Pabón wrote:A high grip car, with slicks the size of my posts is not the same as Green Powered Dude Reload electric car with bicycle tyres, sure.
raymondu999 wrote:mariano wrote:
I think Button's line is the purple's one, and M. Schumacher's is the brokenline (geometrical's)'s one.
Actually you've got it the opposite way around
raymondu999 wrote:The purple line is a late apex line (Schumacher) and the dotted line is the geometric/racing line (Button)
Caito wrote:What happens with JB in my personal opinion is the following:
Given a generic lateral force vs slip angle
There's a maximum. Let's say the maximum is at 100 grip units. That would be the ideally fastest lap. But there are two ways of getting 90 grip unis. One is below best slip angle and the other is above best slip angle. I believe Button manages to stay below the maximum.At higher slip angles portions of the tire patch are sliding, and you get less increase in lateral force with an increase of slip angle. This is called the transition region. As the curve tops out, more of the contact patch is sliding and the tire produces less lateral force. After the peak of the curve, lateral force can fall off 30% within a few degrees of extra slip angle. At these high slip angles most of the contact patch is sliding, producing a lot of heat and wear.
Bye!
raymondu999 wrote:while JB brakes earlier, then carries more speed through in a more conventional racing line.
gold333 wrote:raymondu999 wrote:while JB brakes earlier, then carries more speed through in a more conventional racing line.
I don't know much but I remember clearly in an issue of F1 racing magazine that this was exactly the same as Schumacher's style (and Mansell's). That a bucket of dripping paint on their cars would draw the shortest line around the circuit. Right on the friction oval of tire grip, smooth transition from braking (long. grip) to cornering (lat. grip), right at the limit of the tire model. That was Schumacher's style on entry AND exit.
How is it that, if that is also Button's style, they are so far apart in performance (or are they?) hmm. I don't actually know.
Return to Aerodynamics, chassis and tyres
Users browsing this forum: Yandex [Bot] and 5 guests