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#11
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
Well, I can't tell you if it's right or not, but I do the same thing. All
of my RC Mazda setups have had the bias set between 48 and 52 or so. I am also a power-on braker. Bear in mind we're not talking about pedal-to-the-metal throttle here. We're talking about braking and a judicious amount of throttle, both combined, to get the best turn-in out of the car and keeping it balanced at the same time. I'm better at balancing the car with both feet than one foot (brake OR throttle). For me, I think the habit started in the Skippy. The skippy is notoriously ass-happy under decelleration, and trail/power-braking is what helped me survive that car. In closing, I should also add that I am definitely NOT the right person to take RC tips from LOL -Larry > wrote in message ... >I chose to post this here first instead of the iRacing forums. This > is in hopes that we can have a real and detailed discussion of the > issue. On the iR forums the discussion will get bogged down with a > bunch of lightweights chiming in on how accurate iRacing is, and how > stupid it is to question anything. > > The issue is how a rearward brake bias combined with application of > throttle affects braking distance. > > There was a post on the iR forums yesterday with a Formula Mazda setup > attached. The post was from one of the fastest guys in iRacing. IMO > the setup is ludicrous. I think it's as bad as any exploited setup in > any previous sim - GPL, rFactor, or whatever. > > My previous official qual time for this week's track using my own > setups, and with substantial testing, was 1:06.8. I had one or two > laps in testing at .79 or so. Pole right now is 1:06 flat. I was > fairly happy with the car, but didn't see where I could possibly pick > up another 1/2 to 3/4 second. This has been standard for the last six > weeks of the Mazda series. I qualify around 10th or 15th for the > week, but I'm around a second off the pole time. > > Then came the setup post in the iR forums. Brake bias at 48% and ride > heights at around 1/2 inch front and rear. I'll just disregard the > insanely low ride heights for now. Brake bias is the bigger issue. > > So I load the setup and hit the track. First thing I notice, while > straight line braking you can't even breath on the brake pedal with > zero throttle or the car will spin. OK, well, even though I've > abandoned that style of driving, I have a good handle on the throttle- > on braking technique from years of GPL. > > Next thing I notice is that you can stop more quickly by essentially > pushing both pedals to the floor than you can by balancing your brake > bias and stopping with the brake pedal only. After a few laps I'd > beat my previous best time by a tenth. With a little more practice I > entered a qual session and layed down a 1:06.4. > > So great, right? I got a new setup for free that gained 0.4 seconds. > No, it's not great. I'm disgusted by it. > > I always assumed the gain in lap times with those rearward brake bias > settings was the result of allowing trail braking closer to the limit > during turn entry. If that was the case you could argue that driver > skill was at play. > > That doesn't seem to be the situation at all. The car just slows down > more quickly with a ton of throttle on top of braking if you use an > extremely rearward brake bias. > > There has been a lot of discussion about this exact technique on the > iR forums. I just glossed over the topic for the most part figuring > it wasn't that big of a deal. Well now it is a big deal to me. > > So what are the vehicle dynamics issues at work here? How will this > behavior be explained so that we can believe that a real car will stop > so quickly with the engine driving the rear wheels? > > I have a feeling that it can't be explained, but I'm willing to listen > with an open mind. > > -- > Pat Dotson |
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#12
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
> wrote in message
... On Sep 16, 2:08 pm, Bob Simpson > wrote: > On Sep 16, 11:34 am, wrote: > > > Next thing I notice is that you can stop more quickly by essentially > > pushing both pedals to the floor than you can by balancing your brake > > Do you mean literally full throttle and brake travel? Sounds like a > bug and I understand your frustration, but I'm sure that iRacing is > working on it. Frankly I'm surprised things like this haven't been > ironed out yet. Yes. With extreme rear brake bias set just right I think you can stop equally as fast by pressing both pedals to the floor as you can by use brake pedal only with a balanced brake bias setting. If not equal then very close. With the slightest effort in modulating the throttle you can brake more quickly with 50% to 75% throttle and 45% and lower front brake bias. Shot in the dark here Pat, but it might be a way of effectively reducing the braking force at the loaded wheels sufficiently that you do a better job of staying on the edge of the traction circle under braking. Here's my (questionable) rationale. The brakes in just about all the iR cars seem too powerful to me, as you can lock them at speed much too easily - that's been a much-discussed topic, of course. By moving the bias back, you reduced total possible force applied at the fronts, while simultaneously getting dynamic, right-foot-controlled abs at the rear. That could well make it easier to threshold brake, even in a straight line. With iRacing's tire model we don't get that immediate drop-in-grip-feel right past the limit that we've gotten used to from ISI's tires, so I'd bet more wheel locking is going on under braking with your original setup than you'd expect. It'd take telemetry to really prove it, but that's what I'd be expecting the traces to tell me. I'm a left-foot-braker too, and have noticed in working on setups for ISI-based sims lately that I'm lowering the braking force to avoid excessive locking in order to save the tires, and have concurrently been moving my brake bias forward to get my stopping distances down. If I run 100% brakes in say, GTR2, I find I'm moving the bias back to keep from locking the fronts on turn-in, but if I drop the braking force a bit I can move the bias forward and get shorter stopping distances without lockups. So that sort of agrees with my suspicion about iR's killer brakes. Might be an interesting experiment with iRacing to alter your brake pedal calibration values with DXTweak to take out the last part of the travel, effectively lowering the braking force (leaving the original, full-travel in-game calibration alone). Find a value that lets you just barely lock them up and see how it affects braking and lap times... Might all be 100% off of course, but food for thought anyway. SB |
#13
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
Tim, I never use any autoclutch or autoblip.
I am coming around to the idea that this behavior might not be far from reality. Most of the stopping power comes from the front wheels. If you adjust the bias to minimize potential for front wheel lockups braking will be easier. It's a lot like lowering brake pressure in rFactor, except that in that case you don't really have to alter your driving style. I'm still surprised that the 100% brake and throttle thing seems to exceed the performance of a balanced brake bias / brake pedal only approach. It might come down to controller quality though. I've ordered one of Leo Bodnar's G25 pedal USB adapters which is supposed to improve the response of the pedals. Maybe manual braking will be more effective with smoother controller response. One thing I am thankful for is that all this has highlighted where I was losing time. I've been struggling at around a second off of Huttu's pace week in and week out. This week I'm 0.3 seconds off his qual time with only one day of using rearward brake bias with throttle- on braking, and that's with only one day practicing the techinque. Maybe I can catch him next week! -- Pat Dotson |
#14
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
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#15
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
On Sep 18, 1:46*pm, vigi > wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Sep 2008 07:45:44 -0700 (PDT), > wrote: > > >One thing I am thankful for is that all this has highlighted where I > >was losing time. *I've been struggling at around a second off of > >Huttu's pace week in and week out. *This week I'm 0.3 seconds off his > >qual time with only one day of using rearward brake bias with throttle- > >on braking, and that's with only one day practicing the techinque. > > The only thing is, he doesn't use that technique. By "technique", I meant generally a rearward brake bias with throttle- on braking - Not the full brake and throttle deal. I was running more like 60% front brake bias and it was killing me. BTW, I ended up outqualifying the original poster of the rearward brake bias setup over at the iR forums. In the end I gained 0.7 seconds from my original qual time, down from 1:06.8 to a 1:06.1. -- Pat Dotson |
#16
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
On Sep 18, 4:41*pm, wrote:
> On Sep 18, 1:46*pm, vigi > wrote: > > > On Thu, 18 Sep 2008 07:45:44 -0700 (PDT), > > wrote: > > > >One thing I am thankful for is that all this has highlighted where I > > >was losing time. *I've been struggling at around a second off of > > >Huttu's pace week in and week out. *This week I'm 0.3 seconds off his > > >qual time with only one day of using rearward brake bias with throttle- > > >on braking, and that's with only one day practicing the techinque. > > > The only thing is, he doesn't use that technique. > > By "technique", I meant generally a rearward brake bias with throttle- > on braking - Not the full brake and throttle deal. *I was running more > like 60% front brake bias and it was killing me. > > BTW, I ended up outqualifying the original poster of the rearward > brake bias setup over at the iR forums. *In the end I gained 0.7 > seconds from my original qual time, down from 1:06.8 to a 1:06.1. > > -- > Pat Dotson I cannot believe Greger... He just replied to your thread over at iR and said he did a 1:06.1 braking with his right foot when he was seemingly bored... |
#17
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
The traditional european way of braking is the heel-toe technique, i.e.
braking with your heel as you throttle with your toe. The traditional american way of scrubbing off speed is just to stomp the brakes, and pick your exit gear as the speed gets low enough to do so. As a sidenote I would think that the historical reason for this is that the americans have always raced heavier cars, and ditto strong transmissions, with ensuing more awkward shifting. In europe, and britain in particular, race car drivers have used the throttle while braking to ensure that the car brakes in a straight line without oversteer over a wide range of racing conditions. The use of the throttle while braking would be limited to, I'd guess, about 10-15% engine power. We're talking a very fine addition of power to the rear wheels. If you have to brake over a hill, you'd use additional throttle, if you have to brake at the bottom of a hill, you'd use none. In a non aero-downforce racing car there is no more efficient way of braking than being as close as possible to the adhesion limit of each tyre. If you cross the slip-angle/grip curve efficiency is impaired, as being to far on the "safe" side would. You can take out a racing car on a scratchpad and try and see how short braking distance you can get by stomping the brakes while free coupling with the clutch and compare it to doing the same thing while downshifting and throtteling without using your clutch. You will always find that the distance will be shorter without downshifting and throtteling. Using the throttle while braking is only performed in order to control the over/understeer of your car (and of course matching up the input shaft speed with output shaft speed), never to increase the braking efficiency. If you depend on your downshifting to control the braking power, you'd wear out the clutch/box in 10 laps, and you'd achieve no consistency whatsoever since it is next to impossible to change gears in a way that would ensure constant braking. I would think that iRacing need to have a look at more than the internal wear to fix this, given that "this" being the case as described here. I cannot come up with any racing class on the planet where it is efficient using engine-braking to this extent. --A-- On 16.09.2008 21:49, * wrote: > On Sep 16, 2:08 pm, Bob Simpson > wrote: >> On Sep 16, 11:34 am, wrote: >> >>> Next thing I notice is that you can stop more quickly by essentially >>> pushing both pedals to the floor than you can by balancing your brake >> Do you mean literally full throttle and brake travel? Sounds like a >> bug and I understand your frustration, but I'm sure that iRacing is >> working on it. Frankly I'm surprised things like this haven't been >> ironed out yet. > > Yes. With extreme rear brake bias set just right I think you can stop > equally as fast by pressing both pedals to the floor as you can by use > brake pedal only with a balanced brake bias setting. If not equal > then very close. With the slightest effort in modulating the throttle > you can brake more quickly with 50% to 75% throttle and 45% and lower > front brake bias. > > >> Also, doesn't the very low ride height help with downforce? That >> would shorten the braking distances too, I think. > > Low ride height will increase downforce, but you shouldn't be able to > corner with the bottom of the chassis on the ground. The track this > week is extremely bumpy. The car is bottoming out all over the place > but doesn't seem to be affected. I remember the late model used to > slide up the track at Irwindale if it bottomed out in the turns. The > Mazda doesn't seem to be affected. > > -- > Pat Dotson |
#18
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iRacing - Throttle-On Braking with the F-Mazda
Simulating a bottom-out situation is extremely difficult since you go
from a well-controlled physics environment (suspension movement being controlled in a predictable and "calculatable" way), to a unknown state where you cannot calculate the grip reduction etc. In practice, I'd think it would be impossible to real-time simulate this situation, since the tiniest of details and time spans would cause devastating effect on grip and balance. Bottoming out is something that would never take place under normal racing conditions because the racing would become so erratic, so I would guess that reducing grip heavily on the tire bottoming out would suffice to prevent racers from taking advantage of low ride height while not having to pay the bill for it. If a light race car bottoms out it should become uncontrollable, and if a simulation fails to implement this it lacks a very important part of simulating race cars IMV. --A-- On 16.09.2008 22:18, * wrote: > On Sep 16, 11:34 am, wrote: >> Then came the setup post in the iR forums. Brake bias at 48% and ride >> heights at around 1/2 inch front and rear. I'll just disregard the >> insanely low ride heights for now. > > I'm a little encouraged now on the ride height issue. The good news > is I took my original setup with ride heights over 1 inch, changed > brake bias to 48%, and went faster than I did with the setup from the > iR Forum. Got down to a 1:06.3 in testing. That's just a couple > tenths off the setup owner's qual time. > > So while excessively low ride heights don't seem to negatively impact > the car as they should, low RH's don't appear to give any great > advantage either. > > -- > Pat Dotson |
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