This has been racking my brain for a while now guys. Can someone give me some insight?
My understanding is as follows:
Increasing brake bias means the front brakes get more braking force from the master cylinder than the rear. By ramping up the brake bias too far, the rear will lose a lot of its traction as the weight transition during braking will predominantly sit at the front. Decreasing rear contact patch and weight and Hence decreasing the overall braking efficiency. My understanding tells me we want an even and consistent braking experience to reduce wear on both the front and rear so by throwing on front and rear wings, we can increase the downforce on the rear and front to help maintain relatively even weight distros. By having too high of a downforce, we become limited on the straightaway so we would want to minimize that while also having as much as we can in the corners to maintain contact amd traction.
I know that the setup will depend on drivetrain so let's say we have an s2000. Can we decrease front downforce to help achieve speed but ramp up the brake bias to help cornering entry. Or will this just result in more understeer? I know things like this can be hard to predict on track so what are we looking at theoretically?
My understanding is as follows:
Increasing brake bias means the front brakes get more braking force from the master cylinder than the rear. By ramping up the brake bias too far, the rear will lose a lot of its traction as the weight transition during braking will predominantly sit at the front. Decreasing rear contact patch and weight and Hence decreasing the overall braking efficiency. My understanding tells me we want an even and consistent braking experience to reduce wear on both the front and rear so by throwing on front and rear wings, we can increase the downforce on the rear and front to help maintain relatively even weight distros. By having too high of a downforce, we become limited on the straightaway so we would want to minimize that while also having as much as we can in the corners to maintain contact amd traction.
I know that the setup will depend on drivetrain so let's say we have an s2000. Can we decrease front downforce to help achieve speed but ramp up the brake bias to help cornering entry. Or will this just result in more understeer? I know things like this can be hard to predict on track so what are we looking at theoretically?
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