Survival strategy
September 2020
|Racecar Engineering
Why data and simulation are motorsport’s best friends
To say motor racing has a Jekyll and Hyde relationship with technology is an understatement. When things get tough, the technology that exists is always the first scapegoat for why things have gone awry. A recent example of this has been the banning of chassis data downloading during the races as V8 Supercars came out of Covid-19 hibernation.
However, this attitude has zero basis in fact and, as we shall see, not only is data acquisition and simulation motorsport’s best friend, it is critical to a level playing field.
First though, we need to call out the elephant in the room that inspired this article in the first place. I recoiled in horror when I learnt that when V8 Supercars resumed at Eastern Creek on June 25-26, chassis downloading for the races would not be permitted. Due to cost-cutting and ‘making the show more interesting’, they said.
Scarier was the gleesome commentators showed at this. One, who shall remain nameless, said the fans don’t care about 500 maths channels. All this does is showcase motor racing’s resident technophobia that, left unchecked, will lead us to our end.
The nail here is that while race fans may not care about 500 maths channels, they do care about their teams competing on a level playing field, and nothing delivers this better than data and simulation.
To illustrate this, let me draw on a correlation example I present at the ChassisSim Bootcamp. This is actual vs simulated data for a Supercar category of vehicle and is presented in Figure 1.
هذه القصة من طبعة September 2020 من Racecar Engineering.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Racecar Engineering
Racecar Engineering
Talk the torque
More thoughts on in-wheel motors and their effects on twisting force
6 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Rolling about
An explanation of the limitations of a previous load transfer article, bringing jacking forces into the mix
5 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
F1 breaks schedule records
The FIA has confirmed no fewer than 23 races on the 2022 Formula 1 World Championship schedule, the highest number of grands prix ever to be held in a single season, and that has led to criticism from some teams that will be on the road for eight months.
1 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Under pressure
Toyota may have finished first and second at Le Mans this year, but the effort required to overcome a fuel delivery problem and finish with both cars was Herculean
12 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Physics at work
Dutch company, Intrax, offers Racecar Engineering an insight into the technologies it employs to optimise its suspension products
4 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Williams' 2030 ambition
Williams Racing has committed to becoming climate positive by 2030 as part of an all-new sustainability strategy.
1 min
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Diff'rent strokes
Racecar looks at the different types of mechanical differential, their benefits and limitations
14 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Das Boot
A curious Twitter exchange fired up a unique, hydrogen-powered, cross-country project that will contest the Baja 1000 in November 2022
8 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Air born
Every racecar engineer's dream is a blank sheet of paper design. When Hoonigan and Subaru approached Vermont Sportscars about building the next generation of Gymkhana racer, that's just what the company was given
8 mins
December 2021
Racecar Engineering
Remote control
Called variously ‘virtual garages’, ‘mission control’ or ‘race support rooms’ is the future of race engineering sitting in the warm back at HQ?
14 mins
December 2021
Translate
Change font size

