lol me? I didn't suggest to put me in it! I would bin it for sure!
Most young karters are hugely knowledgeable about mechanical workings. They spend most of the time tuning the carb, and are always on the edge... well with the ol' 100cc anyway. It's a very difficult balancing act, and a risky one. Seizing a 100cc at the end of the straight with a load of karts behind will hurt. In fact Thonon broke a leg i believe because of it the other week. You run an engine to hard it will brake! same in karts as cars
So the understanding of mechanic sympathy is there otherwise some people wouldn't let 14 year old karters out in F Renaults.
definatly, i know some fast drivers who drive in a crazy manor, i guess thats why some karters ARE good in cars, and some arent.
i think karting teaches you a certain ummm, flexability with driving and an understanding of what drivers are doing and the knowledge that you always have to learn. I think LFS helps too. Actually i think LFS is a better grass roots than karting.
Current Formula Renaults are far easier to drive than the type of single seater Tristan has given gear changes no longer require any skill and they can be driven with two feet, much more like a kart. They're also all rev limited now so you can't get too keen and push too hard, rev limiters are a relatively recent development and a lot of older cars (like I guess Tristan's) don't have them.
Now, time for a valient attempt to get this thread back on topic!
Do we think Team48 will ever appear? Supposedly Alfa have a problem with their cars being in anything other than red and both cars have been painted in green. This is, IIRC, why WSR went for BMWs. Alfa wanted their cars in red (RAC wanted orange) and SEAT wouldn't sell them to them. So they went for the 320si. Good choice, really.
But Alfa can't control what is done with their cars, if you can't buy a bodyshell from them you can just go and buy as badly treated high mileage an example as you can find of the current model and build it as a racer with no disadvantage. The only issue you might have is if you literally couldn't get the factory to supply engines, but I doubt they'd be that picky TBH.
Well turning the steering wheel fast is still going to induce understeer most of the time. In a more advanced car it isn't normally so beneficial, hence why very few racing drivers do it in optimal dry conditions.
Yup, very true. Bear in mind that I was still very very new then. Also bear in mind (which you won't know unless you trawled through the articles at the time) that my nearside rear wheel bearing had worked loose, and was giving me dynamic (and uncontrolled) rear wheel steering of quite an alarming degree!!!!!
I never got on with Rockingham. Even in the dry. I tried various wet lines (not all entirely on purpose, I admit) and none seemed to give any additional grip or confidence.
Then compare it to Mallory, where despite having never driven round the track before I qualified in 5th (sounds worse than it was, but if you ignore the 3 Dallaras you'll get a better picture of where my car is capable of finishing) in the wet...
Snetterton has some oddities in wet lines. Coram is much better round the outside, but the Bombhole is crap anywhere except on the dry racing line, even if it's completely flooded!
But no, I was crap at Rockingham, and I am the first to admit it. I'm hoping to do rather better this time around.
Alex is right as well - modern F3 or FRenault cars have to be driven much more smoothly than older style cars. Watch the 1988 UK F3 championship and see how they throw the cars into corners in nice 4 wheel drifts (even on radials). Compare that to today and see how they NEVER slide if they can help it. Wheel races of nearly double (!) go someway to explaining that.
But that doesn't change the fact that any decent driver with ability and aspiration will move on to cars as soon as they possibly can, and the rest either give up, or stay stuck in karts for ever... Who grows up aspiring to be a karter? Who grows up aspiring to be an F1 driver? Enough said.
I know of someone who did a few races in Scottish Formula Ford and I can tell you for a fact the cars are not `flimsy.` The only time the car broke on him was when he rolled it big time and took all 4 corners off it.
I mean Like When u hit the wheel u just fly up in the air but Renault a bit More Built Up and Stonger All Im saying is I Like Bumper to bumper racing With a little contact,
Uv gotta have a little contact in Motorsport Dont you think ?
Contact happens. It's unavoidable - even with super-flimsy cars (ie F1 cars) contact still happens (ie the rubbing at the Nurburgring last year) - however this contact is not necessary - it should be avoided at all costs, because if it's not you end up with driving like the BTCC, where nudging has virtually no damage on the car and is usually deemed as "ok".
Afraid to break it to you but all MSA sanctioned circuit based motorsport is strictly non-contact. I think what you're looking for is stock car racing.