- 31 May 11, 14:14#258604
Drift Cars wouldnt be a good example to use being that they use the stickiest compound they can muster and literally concentrate on beating the s*** out of them in detailed form...
IMO but I get the point....
Well he may have a point there. Obviously if you are going slower than the rest of the field, logic says your tyre degradation should be less than the rest of field. no?
Logic alone would fail you since the car could be slower simply because it's loose and therefore harsher on tired. Speed alone is not an indicator of tire efficiency. Drift cars don't go very fast but a really harsh on tires. A car that is gentler on tires does so because it's more balanced and does not put too much pressure on one corner or on the front versus the rear. When tires go they tend to either go in a corner of front or rear, being gentle on tires is when they all degrade at the same rate.
Drift Cars wouldnt be a good example to use being that they use the stickiest compound they can muster and literally concentrate on beating the s*** out of them in detailed form...


Blow it out your gearbox