No it is real. I have a good article by Gordon Blair that explains it. PM me with your Email if you want a PDF.
Brian
Not so.rjsa wrote:It's redlining, nothing more than that.
No. Because F1 engines don't even redline like your car does. When they hit the limiter along the straights they don't pulse on and off, they just sit there at 18,000 revs. Plus you can hear the revs rise AFTER the wobbling anyway!rjsa wrote:It's redlining, nothing more than that.
So why does the first clutch sound like the clutch in my car, and the second like....crazy wobbliness?hammarby88 wrote:Sure it isnt the clutches? They have dual clutches and in the start they drop one while controlling second with their hand, allowing some slip for best acceleration without stalling/spinning. So what you hear is the second clutch biting no?
This is not true. Watch the shift lights on the steering wheel.bigpat wrote:Particularly on the Petrov video, you can clearly hear the revs are higher when wheelspinning, and drop to the point when the chatter re-starts.
There is no reason the rev-limit function on his car is different than F1. We have no knowledge of how a current F1 engine limits revs.peanutaxis wrote:No. Because F1 engines don't even redline like your car does. When they hit the limiter along the straights they don't pulse on and off, they just sit there at 18,000 revs. Plus you can hear the revs rise AFTER the wobbling anyway!