Jay Lutz
Well-known member
Less weight affects acceleration TO the max velocity for that straight segment but (materially anyway) not top speed. You REALLY saw it at Daytona last Runoffs where coming onto the oval some cars were initially pulled strongly by others.......only to pass them like they were standing still at the end of the straight. Just check out the last lap passing for the win in HP....silly, silly closing speed from the CRX. Obviously taking nothing away from Brian who drove that car like he stole it and totally deserved the win.
Top speed is primarily an aero drag issue..........when aero drag + rolling resistance(drag) equals forward thrust from the engine.......the car stops accelerating....it has reached its terminal velocity. Dirty aero, low torque but light cars (like a sprite) are generally toast against superior aero, higher torque, heavier cars (like a CRX) at high speed tracks since their top speed is always lower.....then factor in the blocking they can do in the corners.
It's simple physics and WEIGHT changes cannot resolve the base problem alone. Add inlet restrictors and you still have serious unresolved issues. 6 years on the volunteer prod car ad hoc committee taught me this.
Simply put........balancing disparate vintage and capability cars via rules is FAR too difficult for the SCCA to tackle. When do manage to get it right it's mainly dumb luck. My professional team engineer friend tells me even the most advanced and uber expensive track simulation programs run by pros can't get within 2 seconds of actual lap times. Even NASCAR can't do it with totally identical cars except engines makers (not specs)........with all of their resources!!!
So HOW can you expect an amateur/volunteer organization to succeed?????? IT'S IMPOSSIBLE. I'm not a big SCCA fan but the problem is not them.......totally equitable performance balancing is just NOT feasible.
Give up complaining about it since it will never, never happen since it is beyond practical capabilities.
Top speed is primarily an aero drag issue..........when aero drag + rolling resistance(drag) equals forward thrust from the engine.......the car stops accelerating....it has reached its terminal velocity. Dirty aero, low torque but light cars (like a sprite) are generally toast against superior aero, higher torque, heavier cars (like a CRX) at high speed tracks since their top speed is always lower.....then factor in the blocking they can do in the corners.
It's simple physics and WEIGHT changes cannot resolve the base problem alone. Add inlet restrictors and you still have serious unresolved issues. 6 years on the volunteer prod car ad hoc committee taught me this.
Simply put........balancing disparate vintage and capability cars via rules is FAR too difficult for the SCCA to tackle. When do manage to get it right it's mainly dumb luck. My professional team engineer friend tells me even the most advanced and uber expensive track simulation programs run by pros can't get within 2 seconds of actual lap times. Even NASCAR can't do it with totally identical cars except engines makers (not specs)........with all of their resources!!!
So HOW can you expect an amateur/volunteer organization to succeed?????? IT'S IMPOSSIBLE. I'm not a big SCCA fan but the problem is not them.......totally equitable performance balancing is just NOT feasible.
Give up complaining about it since it will never, never happen since it is beyond practical capabilities.