That thing's intended to be more qualitative than quantitative.xpensive wrote:Indeed SZ, when looking at an F1 race on TV, I try to notice the thing on the screen showing the Rpm during accelleration,
when it seems that the useful band is typically between 15 and 18 kRpm, sometimes not even all the way up?
Given that you can trust that thing.
Spectral analysis of acoustic properties at any rate is nice, but likely more hype than actual practice. You'd need decently long sample size (very long straights at max. power) to be able to discern anything useful; even then practically whatever you can do in discerning exacting differences is limited, when you consider sample rates and lengths against what spectral conditions you'd need to run an exacting (e.g. to the nearest 100RPM with good confidence) analysis.
More likely a combination of qualitative comparative analysis (differences in max frequencies car to car, or race to race under similar acoustic conditions)... coupled with some discreet industrial espionage to give exacting numbers
