by Jad on Mon Oct 27, 2014 10:42 am
Forgive me if this sounds a bit negative, but at the TT I talked a lot to a Zone/National guy about this and these are my takes. First the bad.
1. He said don't worry about the speed of new cars, you can get hurt just as badly going 60 as 150.
2. Don't worry about the lack of safety equipment, he has seen such badly built cages that they wouldn't help anyway and new cars have lots of airbags and safety equipment.
3. You are in charge, so just don't let the student do anything dangerous, you are in control.
OK, so those are all very week arguments and heavily flawed in my opinion. Now the better:
1. He seemed to like the speed limit idea.
2. History shows, it is safe to instruct. Injuries are extremely rare despite the occasional news story. 99.99999999% of the time it is safe.
3. The PCA insurance is excellent for protecting the instructor from ANY liability for anything that happens.
4. They are open to suggestions.
5. They are planning on having an open forum, meeting to discuss this further and get input and ideas. Date still TBD.
Now my further thoughts...
At first I liked the speed limit idea, but upon further thought it seems flawed. The best marker for improvement is lap time. If you can't go fast on the straight, lap time is meaningless. So what do you work on? Line of course, being smooth, looking ahead, but how to you judge this and show improvement. Also, a speed limit would tend to just encourage maximizing corner speeds. Is a 120 mph limit in 2 at Willow really a goal for a newbee?
What about making them drive in ~5th gear. Simplifies things by eliminating shifting, encourages smooth, momentum driving, effectively limits the cars to a fraction of their HP and thus speed. The clock could still show their improvement. As they improve more, you can go to forth, then 1-2 shifts be lap. Thoughts?
Does anyone know if there is a way to stop the PDK from downshifting. Everything I have tried fails. If you floor it, it downshifts regardless of settings.