Rennlist iRacing thread
#7111
Agreed, it pushes unless you've got a foot on a pedal. It will turn in well if you're on the brakes and it can slide the back nicely if you're on the throttle... but it does not like coasting or light throttle. I two-foot drive it and I'm back to blending my inputs to minimize the transition time between braking down to the apex and blasting out. If you find yourself waiting for the front end to stick with no throttle and no brake, then reassess the way you entered the corner.
The bus stop is hilarious. I brake just before the 2 and that loosens up the back end enough to get it to sling left while starting to put the input for the right. I'm on the brakes all the way to the apex for the first apex on the right, then back on the throttle through the rest of the bus stop, but the car is in a micro slide pretty much the whole time. I'm all up over the curbs and dirt through there, but if I nail it, it feels like a waltz. The key is the entry like all the other corners; too much brakes too soon and you get off the brakes early and the car won't turn when you need it to; not enough brakes and you're going to shoot out towards the infield on the left, so you add more brakes and it locks wheels and you shoot out anyway.
The bus stop is hilarious. I brake just before the 2 and that loosens up the back end enough to get it to sling left while starting to put the input for the right. I'm on the brakes all the way to the apex for the first apex on the right, then back on the throttle through the rest of the bus stop, but the car is in a micro slide pretty much the whole time. I'm all up over the curbs and dirt through there, but if I nail it, it feels like a waltz. The key is the entry like all the other corners; too much brakes too soon and you get off the brakes early and the car won't turn when you need it to; not enough brakes and you're going to shoot out towards the infield on the left, so you add more brakes and it locks wheels and you shoot out anyway.
#7112
Thanks Jim! I'v walked past that spot everyday for 13 years and it just hit me a simpit would be perfect under there! Best part is the CPU tower is actually in a door behind the wall in front of the simpit. I wired it all up to a remote keyfob and can turn it on as though I'm unlocking the car doors. Yep, I'm THAT big of a geek...
Keyboard tray was off amazon of course! It's actually a tablet stand with a clamp re-purposed as a keyboard tray.
Keyboard tray was off amazon of course! It's actually a tablet stand with a clamp re-purposed as a keyboard tray.
#7113
Agreed, it pushes unless you've got a foot on a pedal. It will turn in well if you're on the brakes and it can slide the back nicely if you're on the throttle... but it does not like coasting or light throttle. I two-foot drive it and I'm back to blending my inputs to minimize the transition time between braking down to the apex and blasting out. If you find yourself waiting for the front end to stick with no throttle and no brake, then reassess the way you entered the corner.
The bus stop is hilarious. I brake just before the 2 and that loosens up the back end enough to get it to sling left while starting to put the input for the right. I'm on the brakes all the way to the apex for the first apex on the right, then back on the throttle through the rest of the bus stop, but the car is in a micro slide pretty much the whole time. I'm all up over the curbs and dirt through there, but if I nail it, it feels like a waltz. The key is the entry like all the other corners; too much brakes too soon and you get off the brakes early and the car won't turn when you need it to; not enough brakes and you're going to shoot out towards the infield on the left, so you add more brakes and it locks wheels and you shoot out anyway.
The bus stop is hilarious. I brake just before the 2 and that loosens up the back end enough to get it to sling left while starting to put the input for the right. I'm on the brakes all the way to the apex for the first apex on the right, then back on the throttle through the rest of the bus stop, but the car is in a micro slide pretty much the whole time. I'm all up over the curbs and dirt through there, but if I nail it, it feels like a waltz. The key is the entry like all the other corners; too much brakes too soon and you get off the brakes early and the car won't turn when you need it to; not enough brakes and you're going to shoot out towards the infield on the left, so you add more brakes and it locks wheels and you shoot out anyway.
I was braking pretty much right at the 2... but gently and trailing all the way through the first "left-right", into the little mini "straight" in the bus stop, and still on the pedal through the point where I'd bend the wheel back to the right for exit. Then immediately back to power for the "right-left" on exit of the bus stop.
So long as I was on the brake pedal throughout all the steering inputs, the car turned fine.
Same with T1. Cross S/F down at the apron, start heading straight towards the wall. On the brakes just before I bend the wheel to the left (to avoid hitting the wall) and heading back down into T1. Stay on the brakes allll the way through, PAST the tires on the left. A breath or so past the tires, off the pedal and back on the throttle.
Through all of that it took minimal steering input. Nice and tidy when on the brakes, and it unwound itself when on the power.
Have to be gentle enough on the pedal that when you hit it right, at ~44.5 brake bias, you get zero lockup from the fronts through the entire braking event.
#7114
Agreed, it pushes unless you've got a foot on a pedal. It will turn in well if you're on the brakes and it can slide the back nicely if you're on the throttle... but it does not like coasting or light throttle. I two-foot drive it and I'm back to blending my inputs to minimize the transition time between braking down to the apex and blasting out. If you find yourself waiting for the front end to stick with no throttle and no brake, then reassess the way you entered the corner.
The bus stop is hilarious. I brake just before the 2 and that loosens up the back end enough to get it to sling left while starting to put the input for the right. I'm on the brakes all the way to the apex for the first apex on the right, then back on the throttle through the rest of the bus stop, but the car is in a micro slide pretty much the whole time. I'm all up over the curbs and dirt through there, but if I nail it, it feels like a waltz. The key is the entry like all the other corners; too much brakes too soon and you get off the brakes early and the car won't turn when you need it to; not enough brakes and you're going to shoot out towards the infield on the left, so you add more brakes and it locks wheels and you shoot out anyway.
The bus stop is hilarious. I brake just before the 2 and that loosens up the back end enough to get it to sling left while starting to put the input for the right. I'm on the brakes all the way to the apex for the first apex on the right, then back on the throttle through the rest of the bus stop, but the car is in a micro slide pretty much the whole time. I'm all up over the curbs and dirt through there, but if I nail it, it feels like a waltz. The key is the entry like all the other corners; too much brakes too soon and you get off the brakes early and the car won't turn when you need it to; not enough brakes and you're going to shoot out towards the infield on the left, so you add more brakes and it locks wheels and you shoot out anyway.
#7115
I think it really requires a bit of seat time to "get it" as it's so different from the other cars.
That said, I think once you DO "get it" the lessons learned can be applied to all the other cars with good results.
That said, I think once you DO "get it" the lessons learned can be applied to all the other cars with good results.
#7116
If only they offered it with the Bosch ABS kit!! It's mastering the threshold braking and release without the ABS on this particular car I find really tough... Well that and seeing the back end in front so often I can actually throttle steer the Ferrari, I try in the 991 but it usually disagrees with me... LOL
#7117
Same with T1. Cross S/F down at the apron, start heading straight towards the wall. On the brakes just before I bend the wheel to the left (to avoid hitting the wall) and heading back down into T1. Stay on the brakes allll the way through, PAST the tires on the left. A breath or so past the tires, off the pedal and back on the throttle.
#7118
How was Ross's class? Sounded interesting, but I couldn't justify the price when the only data acquisition I use is VRS. I have done some of his other webinars, and his 101 and 201 class. I'm also signed up for his weekly e-mail. Usually has some pretty good stuff.
#7119
I missed the live presentation but have the links to the recording. Haven't watched it yet.
#7122
VIR should be challenging next week.
#7123
Rolling starts are needed for Daytona since you start on the banking.
Rolling starts everywhere else are tough because most tracks make you do a FULL LAP at 40mph. In my other league, we've found rolling starts tend to be more crash-happy than standing ones.
Rolling starts everywhere else are tough because most tracks make you do a FULL LAP at 40mph. In my other league, we've found rolling starts tend to be more crash-happy than standing ones.
#7124
Are we Texas tonight? Holy crud getting her slowed down for left hander after the banking is tricky!!