Yay, Chain Bear is back! WRT rallying vs F1: All tyres require a certain slip angle to generate (peak) side force; Rally tires/tyres on a loose surface generate peak grip at MUCH larger slip angles than a slick on tarmac. Plus aerodynamics work terribly when the airflow isn't from the front, so getting an F1 car sideways kills the downforce. That's most of it really. No mention of weight transfer? Might open a can of worms, but kinda important in consideration of over/understeer.
@@VIctorAbicalil It's true that weight transfer happens regardless, but F1 cars generate downforce equal to the weight of the car as slow as 80 mph, so the effect of weight transfer on handling is greatly reduced since all four tires are heavily loaded at all times.
FWIW Stiffness of suspension affects how fast the weight transfers rather than whether it does; magnitude of acceleration and centre of gravity height how much it does. True that they have wings and plenty of downforce, but then they brake harder than anything most folks ever get near. For an otherwise balanced car it will still massively effect the understeer/oversteer balance if you trail the brakes through turn in (for instance). Not driven one myself obvs, but it's still physics (and you'll find references in driver autobiogs too..)
Great to have you back! Just to deepen a bit on the subject (based on my limited sim-racing experience), when talking oversteer and understeer there's a difference between turn-in and exiting the corner. On turn-in you're typically braking and thus decelerating, which transfers weight to the front and if the front suspension is too tightly set up (esp. compared to the rear) the front wheels will start sliding and you have understeer. If the front is too soft compared to the rear, the front will happily turn in while the rear looses grip and starts sliding into an oversteer. When exiting a corner you accelerate so you want as much rear grip as possible (on rear wheel cars like in F1). If the rear suspension is too tight you get wheel spin (esp. on F1 cars with about 1000 HP) which will introduce oversteer. If it's too soft (compared to the front) on a high power car it might start sliding on the front wheels introducing understeer. This relationship between the front and the rear is usually what drivers talk about when they mention the 'balance' of the car.
Very nice video CB. There's a tricky thing to remember about oversteer, particularly in F1 cars. So, you've applied too much throttle and now you're oversteering. Reducing throttle is the primary remediation, true, but when you reduce throttle, the weight balance tends to shift forward, taking weight off the rear tires...causing more oversteer. This is called "Lift off oversteer" and it's why you have quotes from rally guys like McRae saying "When in doubt, flat out" (because lifting is also dangerous). To further exacerbate this issue in F1 cars, since the aerodynamic effectiveness of the wings is only present for certain attack angles, if you exceed that angle (by, say, oversteering), the car immediately loses all downforce, essentially pitching it entirely out of control, which is why it is rare and notable when an F1 car is saved from a big rear slide.
I’m a newbie to F1 (yay, Netflix!) so your videos have been invaluable to me because there’s so many things I just didn’t understand while watching Drive to Survive, so thank you!
So glad you're feeling better mate, lovely to have you back. I have a comment about adding/reducing power regarding turn-in oversteer, but I'm not sure if it would be welcome so I'll keep it to myself unless you want to hear it.
5:53 loved the short technical explanation on the scandinavian flick there, i'd like for you to touch more on rally topics, even if you're more knoledgeable on f1 and track racing, would like to see the input of someone that with a more technical opinion of racing, speaking on one that relies heavily on instinct.
Almost right about rally cars. There's no point sliding a corner on slicks. The reason they use their accelerative force to take a corner (as in oversteer) is because their lateral (sideways) traction is worse than their longitudinal traction (forwards and back) because the tread patterns are aligned this way. In rally, acceleration and deceleration is king so you use that acceleration to also corner fast. Another point about rally is as you say, the road surface is often quite slick. You simply cannot rely on the track surface to give you the grip you need. Instead of trying to dig further into the track to find grip, you can actually use the track as your acceleration media. Think rockets here. F = ma. Rally cars actually shoot off loose bits of track behind them as they accelerate and every action has an equal and opposite reaction. The bits you throw out the back pushes the vehicle forwards. Thus, when cornering on a loose bit of surface you want to throw the loose stuff out behind you and the consequence of this is that you also find a more solid surface to gain traction on underneath. So yes, they use their forward force to drive the corner but they don't do it just "because", they do it because that's their optimal strategy for finding traction on those surfaces. Another thing they tend to do is cut corners, dipping one of their front wheels into a rut or ditch to guide the car around a corner like it's on rails. If you listen to pacenotes you will often hear "don't cut" and that's because normally rally drivers want to dip their wheels into the inside of the corner to gain this "on rails" effect but some corners have large rocks or other obstacles that would damage the vehicle if it went into it.
Glad to have a new Chain Bear vid to watch! I hope you enjoyed some well-deserved rest and that your health is in good sorts. Looking forward to a 2019 season review (with bingo results) :)
3:23 Slight extension to the subject matter there, there is a significant difference between going too fast and lacking the overall grip to make the turn at that speed, and having an understeery car that just doesn't want to turn in properly. Understeer and oversteer are primarily an issue of grip balance between the front and the rear end. If your front end runs out of grip first, you understeer. If your rear end runs out of grip first, you oversteer. You can adjust the setup of the car or possibly change your driving technique to overcome these two. If both front and rear run out of grip at the same time, you don't over- or understeer as such, but you still won't make the corner. Unless both your front and rear are setup poorly, and just adding downforce isn't an option either, there's not really anything you can do to overcome this issue, other than slowing down more on entry.
Technically (and I do mean "technically") it still does. All tyres, whether they be on tarmac, dirt or ice, will generate maximum grip at some amount of slip. How much slip is needed for maximum grip depends on a massive variety of things (tyre construction, rubber type, tread patterns, tyre temperature, momentary load on the tyre, track material... It's nearly an infinite amount of things that have an effect, and then you factor in that tyres produce grip through multiple different methods at the same time, all of which can react differently to changes in the other things), but if you're cornering, braking or accelerating, your tyres are sliding, at least a bit. In the olden days of F1 maximum grip tended to happen at significantly higher slip angles than these days (rubber type, tyre construction, tread patterns, lack of downforce were the primary reasons), so going around a corner while sliding at a 10-15 degree angle was just the fastest way, if you could keep things under control. With modern tyres, and especially aerodynamics, which tend to drop REALLY fast when you start getting sideways, the peak cornering forces might occur at 4-8 degrees, which is really hard to see from the outside, and makes the cars look like they're on rails, but the drivers can definitely feel it.
@Chain Bear Stuart, hope you're better. Nice, simple but verinformative video to start the year. Was only looking at your channnel last night wondering when next video was going to drop. :)
Great video! The end bit about rallying was also quite interesting, and personally i'd love more videos going in depth about rallying and whats needed for it and how it works. :)
Thank you great video as always, - please follow up with explaining some of the simpler things F1 engineers might do to correct under and over steer e.g. more or less front or rear wing, tyre pressures etc. I think I've got a handle on it, but I always feel I understand it better after you've done one of your videos. Disappointing though that you didn't give us a little snippet of the song . . . ;)
My dad always asks me what understeer and oversteer is. I know what it is since I've played racing games and gone karting. Its hard to describe to someone who hasn't played a racing game or raced cars.
Lifting off to correct oversteer is most often bad advice. It will result in the weight of the car moving forwards, which decreases the traction in the rear even more, making the likelyhood of spinning out much bigger. The phenomenon is called lift-off oversteer. What should be done instead, is keeping the throttle roughly constant while correcting the slide with steering.
One important aspect not discussed here is that tires, instead of following 2 levels of traction, one for rolling and one for sliding, actually have a smooth transition from one to another. If it weren't that way, cars would fly off corners pretty abruptly whenever the limit was surpassed. There is a test where the vertical load is mantained constant and the slip angle (between tire direction and direction of travel) is varied. The side thrust is not linear with the angle, and that is what kinematically, makes the car go seb vettel.
Understeer happens because you’re Romain Grosjean and oversteer happens because you’re Pastor Maldonado and Belgium 2012 happens if your a mix of both!
@@Henrix1998 I know right, how dares he trying to get rewarded for his work, smh my head it's unacceptable. He should only and exclusively work for free and SHOULD NOT get rewarded in any shape or form, especially monetary, cause we all know youtuber don't pay bills, taxes and only use pirated programs anyway. I swear, a skippable 50secs advert in a 420secs videos, utterly unwatchable. /s
Glad to hear your voice again chainbear. I do hope your health is back. I wonder what subjects of the racing world you will cover this year? I know you explain car physics, but what do you of motorcycles? Could you do a comparison video on say, Motogp vs F1 braking point/line choice? it's a suggestion. Thanks for all your awesome content and once again, congrats on the health recovery :) peace out.
Unsealed roads are also granular surfaces so as the rally car's tyres slide against the surface, it causes the stones or other aggregate to bunch up and pile around the tyre as it digs in. Produces a reaction force against the tyre. This might be why more slip angle can be controlled in rally.
6:18 Keep RPM higher to get a higher torque on wheels, is definitely an important thing in motorsport. For rally cars, using power slide to pass the corners will result exiting corners with a higher RPM. During the corners, the car also will have a relatively lower speed but more controllable than go with grip and believe that unbelievable slippery surface, and much higher speed than having a complete brake to have a low speed but much safer tho. F1, you can trust the surface will provides a lot of grip, but rally almost never. Thats the most different part that between F1 or "field racing" to the rally, in my opinion.
Welcome back from your time off. And thanks for answering a question I've been low-key wondering about: why isn't there intentional oversteering in F1?
I always love your videos, sometime i go back and benchwatch episodes for 2 hours or sth xd Hope your feeling better And i am still waiting for the 2019 predictions video :3.
Unrelated question, but still. Some circuits are universally agreed to be very boring because of small number of overtakes. Why can’t we just increase their width in several places to fix it? (Not in Monaco of course, but in France for example.) Will that have some drawbacks? Thanks for your great work!
Not being able to overtake is usually not a factor of the overtaking car running out of track. Getting alongside in the first place is the problem. Slipstreaming and/or getting a better exit onto a straight usually facilitate that but in modern F1 not so much. ua-cam.com/video/9rJaSmTAYes/v-deo.html
Often is is not how wide or narrow the track itself is. It is more the type of corners and their combination which doesn't allow to get close and in an overtaking position. As long as the first car sticks to the ideal racing line, you will have a heally bad time overtaking. But this really would make a nice video, as there are lots of aspects. Some corners and combinations allow for different lines and can mak ean opportunity to overtake for example. A simple 90 degree corner doesnt have that, it just has one, boring, line which is fastest.
Many of the super boring tracks in terms of overtaking are the high downforce ones (I.e. Russia, Singapore, Spain, etc.). So often the underlying problem in those places is dirty air, not the track width. Your idea might work for very specific locations though. Right now I’m thinking about Hungary, enabling more lines in the last three corners could maybe improve racing.
Chain Bear: "Ideally, when the track turns, you want your car to turn too."
Ferrari: *furiously scribbling notes*
Write that down!
Hockenheim turn 16 disagrees.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Grosjean disagrees
Omg haha
Understeer: "... dammit!"
Oversteer: *"HOLY SHI---"*
This
Oversteer- wheeeeee
Understeer- agh wheels turn please
Understeer - Front of car hits closest wall
Oversteer - Rear of car hits closest wall
Will there be a 2019 season review? The 2018 review was a masterpiece.
I second this....
@@DannyPlaysStuff i third this
yes please and a new predictions video with f1 word f1/e review and more people?
@@osmanyildiz3263 4th
I fully support this comment 😁👍
"Oversteer is best because you don't see the tree that kills you."
Love that episode.
Hail Lord Hammond
“When you see the tree you're driving into you have understeer, but if you can heer it you have oversteer.”
-Walter Rohrl
@aaron names *steer
Hear*
*here
@Benjamin McCann Stare*
Store*
This is a much better way of learning about understeer and oversteer than my method of being a twit until you end up in a hedge.
Glad to have you back! Hope you’re feeling better!
Did in need to know what oversteer and understeer is?
No.
Did I still watch this video because I love Chain Bear?
Yes, of course I bloody did!!
Yay, Chain Bear is back!
WRT rallying vs F1: All tyres require a certain slip angle to generate (peak) side force; Rally tires/tyres on a loose surface generate peak grip at MUCH larger slip angles than a slick on tarmac. Plus aerodynamics work terribly when the airflow isn't from the front, so getting an F1 car sideways kills the downforce. That's most of it really.
No mention of weight transfer? Might open a can of worms, but kinda important in consideration of over/understeer.
It is, but due to the stiff suspension on an F1 car I can imagine that it wouldn't have much of an effect
Why did you write this whole thing
@@PuncakeLena weight transfer happens regardless of suspension stiffness. And it has massive effects on performance and balance of the car.
@@VIctorAbicalil It's true that weight transfer happens regardless, but F1 cars generate downforce equal to the weight of the car as slow as 80 mph, so the effect of weight transfer on handling is greatly reduced since all four tires are heavily loaded at all times.
FWIW Stiffness of suspension affects how fast the weight transfers rather than whether it does; magnitude of acceleration and centre of gravity height how much it does. True that they have wings and plenty of downforce, but then they brake harder than anything most folks ever get near. For an otherwise balanced car it will still massively effect the understeer/oversteer balance if you trail the brakes through turn in (for instance). Not driven one myself obvs, but it's still physics (and you'll find references in driver autobiogs too..)
Great to have you back!
Just to deepen a bit on the subject (based on my limited sim-racing experience), when talking oversteer and understeer there's a difference between turn-in and exiting the corner. On turn-in you're typically braking and thus decelerating, which transfers weight to the front and if the front suspension is too tightly set up (esp. compared to the rear) the front wheels will start sliding and you have understeer. If the front is too soft compared to the rear, the front will happily turn in while the rear looses grip and starts sliding into an oversteer.
When exiting a corner you accelerate so you want as much rear grip as possible (on rear wheel cars like in F1). If the rear suspension is too tight you get wheel spin (esp. on F1 cars with about 1000 HP) which will introduce oversteer. If it's too soft (compared to the front) on a high power car it might start sliding on the front wheels introducing understeer.
This relationship between the front and the rear is usually what drivers talk about when they mention the 'balance' of the car.
Very nice video CB. There's a tricky thing to remember about oversteer, particularly in F1 cars.
So, you've applied too much throttle and now you're oversteering. Reducing throttle is the primary remediation, true, but when you reduce throttle, the weight balance tends to shift forward, taking weight off the rear tires...causing more oversteer. This is called "Lift off oversteer" and it's why you have quotes from rally guys like McRae saying "When in doubt, flat out" (because lifting is also dangerous).
To further exacerbate this issue in F1 cars, since the aerodynamic effectiveness of the wings is only present for certain attack angles, if you exceed that angle (by, say, oversteering), the car immediately loses all downforce, essentially pitching it entirely out of control, which is why it is rare and notable when an F1 car is saved from a big rear slide.
Good to have you back!
Very interesting as always!
Petitioning for a Chain Bear Rally channel
I’m a newbie to F1 (yay, Netflix!) so your videos have been invaluable to me because there’s so many things I just didn’t understand while watching Drive to Survive, so thank you!
2nd best explenation I have ever seen. Just after Richard Hammond's one
Glad to have you back Chain Boo and stay strong, you will get better!
I truly love how friendly your voice is.
Hope you are doing well health wise now Stuart, great to see you back! Awesome explanation as always! :)
Didn't learn anything new here but I always watch the whole video. Welcome back!
Understeer is when you hit the wall with the front of the car, oversteer is when you hit the wall with the back of the car.
Good to have you back!
delighted that chainbear is back!!
So glad you're feeling better mate, lovely to have you back. I have a comment about adding/reducing power regarding turn-in oversteer, but I'm not sure if it would be welcome so I'll keep it to myself unless you want to hear it.
Good to see you back with a nice vid. Hope you’re doing well. Stay healthy!
You still have to finish the predictions of 2019 videos
The longer he puts it off, the longer we riot
He said on Twitter the video is coming he just has other uploads to sort through first 👍
I forgot about that
@@glyndavies2828 let's lay off him for a while, he said he's been dealing with personal and/or health issues
Thanks for the video. I hope your health is much improved Stuart and that 2020 is a great year for you.
5:53 loved the short technical explanation on the scandinavian flick there, i'd like for you to touch more on rally topics, even if you're more knoledgeable on f1 and track racing, would like to see the input of someone that with a more technical opinion of racing, speaking on one that relies heavily on instinct.
I support you wanting more rally stuff but I haven't seen anything to do with the scandy flick on this video.
Sorry to hear you haven't been well. Hope all is good with your health now.
Yay! I hope you are fully recovered. I really enjoyed F1 Bingo last year, and hope for both a second season.
Almost right about rally cars. There's no point sliding a corner on slicks.
The reason they use their accelerative force to take a corner (as in oversteer) is because their lateral (sideways) traction is worse than their longitudinal traction (forwards and back) because the tread patterns are aligned this way.
In rally, acceleration and deceleration is king so you use that acceleration to also corner fast.
Another point about rally is as you say, the road surface is often quite slick. You simply cannot rely on the track surface to give you the grip you need.
Instead of trying to dig further into the track to find grip, you can actually use the track as your acceleration media.
Think rockets here. F = ma.
Rally cars actually shoot off loose bits of track behind them as they accelerate and every action has an equal and opposite reaction. The bits you throw out the back pushes the vehicle forwards.
Thus, when cornering on a loose bit of surface you want to throw the loose stuff out behind you and the consequence of this is that you also find a more solid surface to gain traction on underneath.
So yes, they use their forward force to drive the corner but they don't do it just "because", they do it because that's their optimal strategy for finding traction on those surfaces.
Another thing they tend to do is cut corners, dipping one of their front wheels into a rut or ditch to guide the car around a corner like it's on rails.
If you listen to pacenotes you will often hear "don't cut" and that's because normally rally drivers want to dip their wheels into the inside of the corner to gain this "on rails" effect but some corners have large rocks or other obstacles that would damage the vehicle if it went into it.
Glad you are back.
Welcome back Chain Bear, we've missed you!
Worth the wait. Glad you're better.
Glad ur back man love the vids!!
Great to have you back CB👍😄.
F1 predictions roundup soon?
I hope your doing well and are keeping healthy, love your work!
Glad to see you’re back Stewart, good to hear that you’ve taken time for some TLC.
“Oversteer is when you hear the tree and understeer is when you see the tree”
-Vettel quoting Walter Rohrl
Glad to have a new Chain Bear vid to watch! I hope you enjoyed some well-deserved rest and that your health is in good sorts. Looking forward to a 2019 season review (with bingo results)
:)
I've heard that rally cars also slide to clear the loose topsoil and get to more solid ground.
3:23 Slight extension to the subject matter there, there is a significant difference between going too fast and lacking the overall grip to make the turn at that speed, and having an understeery car that just doesn't want to turn in properly. Understeer and oversteer are primarily an issue of grip balance between the front and the rear end. If your front end runs out of grip first, you understeer. If your rear end runs out of grip first, you oversteer. You can adjust the setup of the car or possibly change your driving technique to overcome these two. If both front and rear run out of grip at the same time, you don't over- or understeer as such, but you still won't make the corner. Unless both your front and rear are setup poorly, and just adding downforce isn't an option either, there's not really anything you can do to overcome this issue, other than slowing down more on entry.
Welcome back Chainbear! Missed you, homie.
Glad to know you're doing better.
Yay Chainbear is back!
Chain Bear: "This is a curve"
Driver: "Dear God!"
Chain Bear: "There's more"
Driver: "No!"
And then there is 4 wheel slide which used to happen in olden olden days of F1 :D
Technically (and I do mean "technically") it still does. All tyres, whether they be on tarmac, dirt or ice, will generate maximum grip at some amount of slip. How much slip is needed for maximum grip depends on a massive variety of things (tyre construction, rubber type, tread patterns, tyre temperature, momentary load on the tyre, track material... It's nearly an infinite amount of things that have an effect, and then you factor in that tyres produce grip through multiple different methods at the same time, all of which can react differently to changes in the other things), but if you're cornering, braking or accelerating, your tyres are sliding, at least a bit.
In the olden days of F1 maximum grip tended to happen at significantly higher slip angles than these days (rubber type, tyre construction, tread patterns, lack of downforce were the primary reasons), so going around a corner while sliding at a 10-15 degree angle was just the fastest way, if you could keep things under control. With modern tyres, and especially aerodynamics, which tend to drop REALLY fast when you start getting sideways, the peak cornering forces might occur at 4-8 degrees, which is really hard to see from the outside, and makes the cars look like they're on rails, but the drivers can definitely feel it.
Video starts 0:54 , you're welcome
@Chain Bear Stuart, hope you're better. Nice, simple but verinformative video to start the year. Was only looking at your channnel last night wondering when next video was going to drop. :)
Great video! The end bit about rallying was also quite interesting, and personally i'd love more videos going in depth about rallying and whats needed for it and how it works. :)
6:51 when your name is so long it tries to take over someone elses name.
I hope you are better now, Stuart! Best wishes.
Thank you for choosing the picture of GV as your thumbnail.
Thank you great video as always, - please follow up with explaining some of the simpler things F1 engineers might do to correct under and over steer e.g. more or less front or rear wing, tyre pressures etc. I think I've got a handle on it, but I always feel I understand it better after you've done one of your videos. Disappointing though that you didn't give us a little snippet of the song . . . ;)
My dad always asks me what understeer and oversteer is. I know what it is since I've played racing games and gone karting. Its hard to describe to someone who hasn't played a racing game or raced cars.
Or lives on a place without snow :P
Franz Fridl we do! 😂
Lifting off to correct oversteer is most often bad advice. It will result in the weight of the car moving forwards, which decreases the traction in the rear even more, making the likelyhood of spinning out much bigger. The phenomenon is called lift-off oversteer. What should be done instead, is keeping the throttle roughly constant while correcting the slide with steering.
One important aspect not discussed here is that tires, instead of following 2 levels of traction, one for rolling and one for sliding, actually have a smooth transition from one to another. If it weren't that way, cars would fly off corners pretty abruptly whenever the limit was surpassed. There is a test where the vertical load is mantained constant and the slip angle (between tire direction and direction of travel) is varied. The side thrust is not linear with the angle, and that is what kinematically, makes the car go seb vettel.
Understeer happens because you’re Romain Grosjean and oversteer happens because you’re Pastor Maldonado and Belgium 2012 happens if your a mix of both!
These are good videos my dude.
I'm excited for f1 bingo 2019 results
You are a wealth of knowledge my friend... as always thank you for sharing.
Good to have ya back mate dont go overdoing it
So I'm guessing this video is for Vettel to stop him from spinning around?
The local go karting track named a corner after Vettel (lot of the drivers spin out at the corner)
Vettel preferred an understeer car with excessive rear downforce setup. I don't think he ever got what he wanted in a Ferrari car.
Ralph Michael De Torres exactly
Not only does he like to eat donuts, he likes to lay them down on the track as well
Welcome back chain bear.
Wow I love you with your infographics
Basic but clearly explained, thanks!
Hope you are feeling better man!
Where's the Bingo card?!!!!
Best explanation ever!
Is it just me or is the like/dislike ratio hidden?
What did you expect with that starting ad?
@@Henrix1998 I know right, how dares he trying to get rewarded for his work, smh my head it's unacceptable. He should only and exclusively work for free and SHOULD NOT get rewarded in any shape or form, especially monetary, cause we all know youtuber don't pay bills, taxes and only use pirated programs anyway.
I swear, a skippable 50secs advert in a 420secs videos, utterly unwatchable.
/s
@@Henrix1998 He did Nord before, even after the bad press. I'm confident it's not about the sponsor.
It might be because the video is still new, perhaps it doesn't show up for a while.
me too
This animations are incredible
Nice to see you back :)
Awesome video!! I learned a lot. Thank you.
Glad to hear your voice again chainbear.
I do hope your health is back.
I wonder what subjects of the racing world you will cover this year?
I know you explain car physics, but what do you of motorcycles? Could you do a comparison video on say, Motogp vs F1 braking point/line choice?
it's a suggestion.
Thanks for all your awesome content and once again, congrats on the health recovery :) peace out.
Unsealed roads are also granular surfaces so as the rally car's tyres slide against the surface, it causes the stones or other aggregate to bunch up and pile around the tyre as it digs in. Produces a reaction force against the tyre. This might be why more slip angle can be controlled in rally.
6:18
Keep RPM higher to get a higher torque on wheels, is definitely an important thing in motorsport. For rally cars, using power slide to pass the corners will result exiting corners with a higher RPM. During the corners, the car also will have a relatively lower speed but more controllable than go with grip and believe that unbelievable slippery surface, and much higher speed than having a complete brake to have a low speed but much safer tho. F1, you can trust the surface will provides a lot of grip, but rally almost never. Thats the most different part that between F1 or "field racing" to the rally, in my opinion.
Little late on this video, but an excellent choice to take time off for yourself Stuart. Hope you’ll be able to keep making these fantastisc videos :D
Great work!
4:18 DEJA VU, I’VE JUST BEEN IN THIS SPACE BEFORE
Welcome back!
Somebody needs to tag Grosean in this! 😂
Hope you're all better now mate. Missed the videos. F1 bingo results video hopefully will be coming soon.
You deserve a mil subs!
Time off for health reasons ?
Are you okay ? Nothing too serious , i hope.
but,if when you have oversteer.you stop the power,you will spin out,you need to.apply more
Missed your videos :D
Love your knowledge man
Ive learn a lot from you
Welcome back from your time off. And thanks for answering a question I've been low-key wondering about: why isn't there intentional oversteering in F1?
Love the title
I always love your videos, sometime i go back and benchwatch episodes for 2 hours or sth xd
Hope your feeling better
And i am still waiting for the 2019 predictions video :3.
I'm not sure many people will get the Wombles reference
I don't
Hope your health is all better!
Beautiful explanation. Hope you're in better health m8
Unrelated question, but still. Some circuits are universally agreed to be very boring because of small number of overtakes. Why can’t we just increase their width in several places to fix it? (Not in Monaco of course, but in France for example.) Will that have some drawbacks?
Thanks for your great work!
Not being able to overtake is usually not a factor of the overtaking car running out of track. Getting alongside in the first place is the problem. Slipstreaming and/or getting a better exit onto a straight usually facilitate that but in modern F1 not so much. ua-cam.com/video/9rJaSmTAYes/v-deo.html
Often is is not how wide or narrow the track itself is. It is more the type of corners and their combination which doesn't allow to get close and in an overtaking position. As long as the first car sticks to the ideal racing line, you will have a heally bad time overtaking. But this really would make a nice video, as there are lots of aspects. Some corners and combinations allow for different lines and can mak ean opportunity to overtake for example. A simple 90 degree corner doesnt have that, it just has one, boring, line which is fastest.
Many of the super boring tracks in terms of overtaking are the high downforce ones (I.e. Russia, Singapore, Spain, etc.). So often the underlying problem in those places is dirty air, not the track width. Your idea might work for very specific locations though. Right now I’m thinking about Hungary, enabling more lines in the last three corners could maybe improve racing.
Oversteer is when you hear the tree hitting the car, understeer is when you see the tree. ~Walter Röhrl
6:00 *DEJA VU*
I've just been in this place before
just putting this here to stop anyone thinking they can continue this.
NANI?!?! Rally driftoru?!?!
In simple words, understeer is the car not turning as much as you wanted, and oversteer is drifting, either in a good way or in a bad way
Great video. Noted and going to be implemented in Motorsport Manager :)
Oversteer- you hit the tree
Understeer- your ass hits the tree
4:24 THIS is KANSEI DORIFTO!
Please do a video on dry and wet racing lines
Loving the title!