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Monday, March 30, 2009
What the rookie needs to know
The information required by the rookie as he makes his track walk or ride is rather more basic than the info that experienced drivers seek. Obviously, a rookie needs to know where the track goes, and he also needs to get a feel for which lines to take for a corner or sequence of bends. The fastest line through a corner is essentially the shortest distance between the points of entry and apex. Getting a sight line when stationary at the beginning corner is often a good way of establishing where the cornering line is if the corner is at all complex. Picking out visual markers � a trackside advertising banner, for example �that equate to the turn-in point can be very useful. The perspective a driver gets from inside the cockpit, just a few centimetres above the ground is often inadequate for picking out fine detail. Similarly, details of the track�s surface or its camber � or the parts of the track across which streams run when it�s wet � cannot really be gleaned when travelling at high speed in the car. But a driver who already knows what he�s looking for because he�s walked the track has a big advantage that he couldn�t have obtained otherwise.
Telemetry can be a great aid for a driver learning a circuit � but obviously only after he�s driven the track. He can then look at his own data-logging traces of steering and brake and throttle input and compare them to his team mate�s. He can try a variety of approaches on a corner he�s not sure of and then compare telemetry with lap times to see which approach works best. He can then apply the lessons learned next time he takes to the track. These are Formula One drivers. Learning a track is not, in the general scheme of things, all that difficult for them. Juan Pablo Montoya, who on his Formula One rookie year of 2001 scored three pole positions and one Grand Prix win, reckoned he would know 90 per cent of what he would ever know about a new track after his first three laps of it. Drivers that only get themselves on the pace after much practice and long and detailed study probably haven�t got what it takes to be top Formula One contenders.
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a13. Getting in the Race
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