- 01 Apr 14, 13:24#397225
2014 Monster 26x Bookie Mugger
2015, 2016 WDC: LH44
This is Lewis talking about how to manage the 2014 cars effectively
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/26767232
I must say, to me this is the clearest and simplest put explanation that I have heard so far from countless others including Mcnish, Coulthard, Brundle, Rosberg, Wilson. In fact I would go as far as saying the cleverest combination of technical and 'feel' explanation I ever heard from a driver.
Has Lewis been sandbagging Brundle and other commentators? Is he really super intelligent in a way that academics find it hard to be?
I mean anyone can learn from books or learn languages and pass exams, it doesnt make them intelligent just more axcademically learned. The clue is when they can explain and teach the things they have learnt clearly to others and not just recite by rote
Check these snippets out
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/26767232
I must say, to me this is the clearest and simplest put explanation that I have heard so far from countless others including Mcnish, Coulthard, Brundle, Rosberg, Wilson. In fact I would go as far as saying the cleverest combination of technical and 'feel' explanation I ever heard from a driver.
Has Lewis been sandbagging Brundle and other commentators? Is he really super intelligent in a way that academics find it hard to be?
I mean anyone can learn from books or learn languages and pass exams, it doesnt make them intelligent just more axcademically learned. The clue is when they can explain and teach the things they have learnt clearly to others and not just recite by rote
Check these snippets out
You save most fuel by lifting and coasting in the heavy braking zones at the end of long straights into slow corners.
When you're driving absolutely flat out, such as on a qualifying lap, you would brake at, say, 80m from the corner, come straight off the throttle and get on the brakes, almost instantly together.
But on a fuel-saving lap in the race you'll lift at, say, 200m, and coast to the braking zone. In an F1 car, just lifting off the throttle decelerates the car by 1G, so you still slow down quite a lot.
That means you start braking at a different place - you have to brake later than before or you'll slow down too much.
So the trick is to know how much later you have to brake depending on where you lifted.
It's really difficult to put into words exactly how you judge when you need to short-shift, because it's all done on feel.
From experience, you know where the car's limitations are, you know where it breaks traction, you know if you go aggressively on the throttle, or past a certain percentage, that you're going to break traction in first, second and third gear.
Your mind sets those limits and you're always trying to push them.
You want to pull out of the corner with a little bit of slip, but not so much it unsettles the car. Getting that exactly right is what makes us good drivers.

2014 Monster 26x Bookie Mugger
2015, 2016 WDC: LH44