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Haven't been able to test the front toe discussion properly yet - I've had a quick go in the NSX at Motegi, but not a long enough session to be able to get in to a consistent rythnm.
I can't share all the tune I'm using as it's not mine - given the limited time, I borrowed a Takata from someone on my friends list with a very good time. The tune is using a decent amount of -ve front and +ve rear toe though (> 0.10 at both ends). I felt comfortable with it straight away, it's fast and it's
reasonably stable, so it should be a great test bed.
What's absolutely clear straight away is how reducing the relative angle of rear toe makes the car turn better - be that running more -ve or running less +ve.
Reducing the +ve rear toe (net change of 0.10) made the car much easier to turn in to the 2nd part of the final chicane, but also made the car less stable when trail braking deep in to turn 1.
That was all the time I had - I only tested that because I was surprised with the level of +ve on the tune when I initially looked at it, and I wanted to feel why the original tuner had decided to run that amount (I'd usually expect him to e running -ve!).
I'll hopefully get a chance to understand the effects of front toe better tomorrow... Although I'm not a big fan of the track, Motegi actually has a good mix of corners to test the +'s and -'s of +ve and -ve
Edit
I just had an intersting 1.5 hours in the NSX at Motegi.
My starting time was a 1'46.6 from my short session last night.
Toe settings initially were -0.20 front, +0.10 rear. I left rear toe as is for the whole session and just focused on the front.
Started by running laps to get the feel back for the car, (until I was hitting regular high 46's), then changed the front to -0.10. The car didn't feel any different, but lap times became even more consistent - more as a result of running more laps than the setting change I suspect.
Increased front toe to 0.00 and almost immediately improved to 1'46.5, followed by a 46.4 a few laps later.
Increased front toe to +0.10 and improved regularly... 46.364, 46.220, 46.150, and finally a 1'46.084. During this run I hit lots of 46.2's and 46.1's.
Switched back to -0.10, and the car was definitely more difficult to drive and lap times were much less consistent. -0.10 made the turn in feel quite sudden compared to +0.10 (requiring more input to control the rear), and making the rear more suseptable to losing grip on the exits.
Had to cut the session off then as Man U v Liverpool was due to kick off.
Consulsions...
Increasing the front toe didn't feel like it increased front end grip during any phase of cornering, but it certainly made it easier to get on the gas from apex to exit. With the NSX's natural desire to rotate, there was no major downside on corner entry... I just used a
slightly narrower line during the initial turn in phase.
Following the 'amount of throttle you can apply is inversely proportional to the amount of steering lock you have applied' principle... It felt to me like +ve front toe fooled the physics engine in to thinking I had less steering lock applied, allowing me to use more gas with less fear of sudden oversteer, even though I didn't feel to be using any less lock.
So, on a sample size of one car on one track with one driver, +ve front toe did enable better exit speed 👍
Obviously this needs testing further as the NSX naturally rotates really well, and requires little help to get it to turn in, so this might be specific to this car (or to MR cars in general). I'd be interested in others opinions, particularly the effect on FR cars, which tend to have a lot more turn in and mid corner understeer than MR.
2nd Edit
I thought of another idea on testing...
Take a car that specifically suffers from understeer - such as premium the JGTC GTR on race softs. Round Suzuka, this car has almost perfect traction (it only spins in 2nd exiting the Hairpin and Casio), and the limiting factor on lap times is how much front end grip you can generate as mmost of the lap you'd be on full throttle if you weren't afraid of running wide. This should be a good test of which toe angle delivers best grip through the exit phase 👍