As an example, Turn 9 Barcelona is a right hander, connected by the straight to the Turn 10 left hander. Or how Turn 7/8 in Sepang is going to the right but Turn 9 is then a left hander. Or how the Ascari chicane exits on the right hand side of the track but drivers have to go left for the Parabolica entry.
Given a racing line usually consists of a wide exit and wide entry at some point, that means that at some point in that straight you have to move across from one side of the track to the other.
When is the optimum time to perform this move?
I read Peter Windsor's blog quite a bit; I love his writing and his style of prose is very "story like" making all the pieces very enjoyable reads with their eloquent wording. However I do know better than to trust him on technical matters; or even factual for that matter. He makes a lot of mistakes in his articles factually; so much so that it's quite dangerous; given that a lot of people are entrusting him to write factual pieces and will trust what he says. (For example he was saying how Vettel's 22.6 lap in Monza was the lap on which he did the Ascari powerslide; when the powerslide happened AFTER the 22.6 lap)
His technical knowledge seems like a lot of guesswork for someone who is not really technically learned (I'm not criticizing him for lack of technical knowledge; I'm criticizing him for including it in his writings; such as he was saying how a car with more downforce will be better able to maximize its use of the option tyres; because the car with less downforce will not have enough downforce to maximize it; which is baloney to me. He also states how this, in reverse, means that the harder a tyre is; it will nullify the differences between aero of different cars as they can't "maximize the use of their downforce" as the tyre doesn't have enough grip to do that.)
Anyways; I digress. He's been saying for quite a while now; that on corners such as I say above; you should keep the car dead straight on these exits (it supposedly "drains the engine of any g load) and will cost you revs. I assume he is talking about the friction acting longitudinally on the car when the frontal tyres have some steering lock applied to them; more commonly known as tyre "scrub" or "drag" I believe. He says that you should keep the car dead straight and accelerate for a bit before you begin to move across.
When I think of it more however, as the car accelerates, there should be more downforce pushing the front tyres into the tarmac; and hence with the same degree of steering lock, there should be more friction produced as such. Which would be affecting the car more, no?
Would it not be better to immediately point the car at the next braking zone, AND THEN go straight from there? I do do some amateur track races and track days; but I'm not a professional racing driver; nor am I schooled in racing lines/techniques. Hence I would like to ask those who are better in the know regarding this.
Or should I just regard this as I do any technical knowledge I find on his site?
Cheers folks
