Belatti wrote:Some food for thought here:
A month ago I saw data acquisition from a steel frame / 120HP / 550Kg-driver included openwheeler. It called my attention that the car entered a 200m radius corner, pedal to the metal at 210Km/h. Full throttle. The exit speed? 185 Km/h...
The driver barely turned the steering wheel. The tyres are a little bit over sized for that car... from my humble point of view.
Why that much steering drag? I dont know the steering geometry in detail, but the first thing that came to my head was and odd ackerman.
I have some data on something close to this, a FF going through the Kink at Road America, which is just over 200m from entry to exit and is flat out. The Kink is also flat (the road that is) and flat out (all the way through) in a well handling car. Typical size FF tires. 0 ackerman. The car set a track record on this lap, and scrubbed 7.9 mph off the speed of the car in this corner (entry to exit). The car has a little more horse than your car. Before setup changes were made to this car, the scrub was 9.6 mph (still flat out). None of the changes involved steering toe changes...but roll, pitch and ride height as the differences. BTW, the lateral G average is 1.6 for this car, in this corner
I would say that if the tires were larger, that the car scrub would also be greater, as an assumption probably around 10-11 mph as there's just not enough horse available to over come the footprint of the tire, let alone the air drag on the straights, at least at RA.
A 15 mph loss seems a bit much, are you positive that the throttle is absolutely flat and a solid flat line with no waver? A driver lightly holding the throttle against the throttle stop and hitting a bump or curb could end up without full throttle and not know it. IE. Going from 100% to 95% for a brief instant could knock a 100 to 200 rpm out of the car. Seen this happen many times.
Also the driver's use of the steering wheel, even though the steering angle is slight, I've seen many times driver's that have what I call a "nervous" steering wheel, where theres a lot of small movements during cornering and scrubs 1-2 mph just with those movements. The only cure is to slow his hands down.
You could have both going on. If not, you might have some mechanical issues, engine? drive train drag? IMHO..
"Driving a car as fast as possible (in a race) is all about maintaining the highest possible acceleration level in the appropriate direction." Peter Wright,Techical Director, Team Lotus