2J question...

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2J was one of the most used cars in GT5 Time Trials. People ran it from the low 500s to 750 PP in time trials and seasonal races. It was almost an automatic choice, if the TT did not restrict race cars. I used to wish PD would restrict the 2J specifically, when race cars were allowed.
 
I posted in GT5 that it had a hidden PP advantage. Now that it is only 4.5 million credits instead of rare and 15 mill everyone can have one. Destroyed Historic Car races.
 
Much better than LMPs on a really wet track and its got a very high top speed compared to other race cars. Still got an advantage in 550-650ish events I think.
 
I posted in GT5 that it had a hidden PP advantage. Now that it is only 4.5 million credits instead of rare and 15 mill everyone can have one. Destroyed Historic Car races.
They added 50 PP to one of the updates. I think 2.03 or somewhere around there.
 
That's absurd, a 600hp+ car that weighs less than 2000lbs is going to murder a normal car in a straight line, even if it does have over 800hp.



I understand perfectly what new equipment can do. It doesn't change the fact that one is a race car and one is a roadcar.

"Hundreds of metres."

:lol: I'd like to see a 918 outbrake a 2J by over 600 feet into ANY corner. (carbon ABS breaking vs metal calippers...)

Trail braking has been a thing since the start of racing, and a car specifically designed to have a giant sucker fan on the back isn't going to be outdone by a little wing of a roadcar. Especially when the entire racecar is designed as a wing.

Nurburgring times mean nothing, but if you want to argue with that...

Just under 7 minutes on the short version, (time? car? what???) whereas the 2F did the the 2km longer version in the mid 8s in the 60s.
Subtract about 40 seconds to cover the extra distance and the times are the same.



But that's the 2F, the 2J had the extra downforce of the fan.
It was also in the 1000km race, so they weren't going on a flying lap.
Plus the track was a lot rougher and slower.
Plus the Porsche cheats anyways. (??? engine swapping and save hacking? lol)


Race cars are an entirely different breed from supercars that have to be able to run reliably day in day out.

You are bringing up 2F nordschelife laps in 2J conversation, bring the lap time from completely different version of the track, and even there you are completely wrong in subtracting .

2F did 8:42,1 on 1967-1970 on version in 1967.

For my eyes that time is very hard to use for comparisson, till 1970 there were various minor changes made to the track, but still, let's see were can we find those 'forty seconds' after rebuilding of the track.

So, let's compare changes to lap times in 1967-1970 version to 1971-1982, before and after the big changes in 1971:

Formula 2, fastest laps:
1970- 8:14,5
1971- 7:57,1

1000km Nurb, pole positions:
1970- 7:43,3
1971- 7:36,1

1000km Nurb, fastest times:
1970- 7:50,4
1971- 7:40,8

So, if 2F did 8:42,1, we can safely remove 10 sec and we see it would run around 8:32 on the 1971-1982 version. And now we're getting somewhere!

If someone can dig lap times from can-am, for a track that stayed the same and where both 2F and 2J raced, we can actually see how fast real 2J would run on Nordschleife.
 
You are forgetting lousy aerodynamics and the fan itself. Aerodynamics are really bad, firstly since its a box in the back, backwash must have been terrible
A lot of cars are a box at the back, including race cars. It's not totally bad. Sharp edges mean clean separation. The only problems at the back of the 2J are the spoiler and lack of pressure recovery surfaces, but the rear area doesn't seem terribly high. The rear wheels are also covered which is very good for areo. The wheels can't have air stagnating on them and there is no where for pressure to build up in the wheel well.

then add two fan exits and it's even worse.
Fan pushing air out the back is thrust. That's negative drag.


Now the fan will increase cornering speed, but it will also significantly reduce top speed since its constantly sucking the air from under the car.
How?
So even if the engine really was as powerful as is represented in the game, those two things will kill its output. Add already mentioned compete lack of downforce and you see that the car as represented in the game is fictional, far far from what it was.
What lack of downforce?
 
Laguna Seca

Awesome. Stumbled on a webpage with times:

http://www.racingsportscars.com/photo/Laguna_Seca-1970-10-18.html?sort=Qualifying

I'll get to it tomorrow.

Btw, was Laguna Seca the same for 1970 and 1973 seasons? If so 2js q-times were already beaten by then:
http://www.racingsportscars.com/photo/Laguna_Seca-1972-10-15.html?sort=Qualifying
http://www.racingsportscars.com/photo/Laguna_Seca-1973-10-14.html?sort=Qualifying



What lack of downforce?

Well, stop mutiquotting and you'll find the answer to that question in the text.
 
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Awesome. Stumbled on a webpage with times:

http://www.racingsportscars.com/photo/Laguna_Seca-1970-10-18.html?sort=Qualifying

I'll get to it tomorrow.

Btw, was Laguna Seca the same for 1970 and 1973 seasons? If so 2js q-times were already beaten by then:
http://www.racingsportscars.com/photo/Laguna_Seca-1972-10-15.html?sort=Qualifying
http://www.racingsportscars.com/photo/Laguna_Seca-1973-10-14.html?sort=Qualifying





Well, stop mutiquotting and you'll find the answer to that question in the text.
You were saying that a road car is faster than a race car. So you're dropping that argument completely because I proved you were wrong, and now you're comparing new race cars to old race cars? lol
 
This thread is getting so ridiculous. Estimating times, discussing what you feel the car would do in real life. None of you drove it, none of you have a PHD in physics, none of you are race car engineers and / or designers, yet you all go into these crazy explanations trying to prove a point.

The car was real, it was modelled somehow by PD, leave it at that, because everything else is just speculation.

Now if we were talking about keyboard racing, I see some champs here.
 
This thread is getting so ridiculous. Estimating times, discussing what you feel the car would do in real life.
That's what the forum is for, seems fine.

none of you have a PHD in physics, none of you are race car engineers and / or designers
On GTP, you never know. Sometimes.
 
You are bringing up 2F nordschelife laps in 2J conversation, bring the lap time from completely different version of the track, and even there you are completely wrong in subtracting .

...

Read.


The 2F is slower than the 2J.

The 2F had to do a lap over 2km longer than the 918.

Averaging 100mph is around 40 seconds for 2km.

And if the J is faster than the F then it's pretty clear that it's faster than the 918. Plus it's a race car, not a 3,700lb hybrid.
 
They added 50 PP to one of the updates. I think 2.03 or somewhere around there.
It's in GT6 as a 663 PP car, going by weight and HP it should be a 700-720 PP car, ergo a 40-50 PP advantage. Even detuning that ad stays in there.
 
Now the fan will increase cornering speed, but it will also significantly reduce top speed since its constantly sucking the air from under the car.
I admit that I'm not particularly well read up on aerodynamics (though you're doing a good job dismissing out of hand someone in this thread who pretty much is), so can you explain how almost completely eliminating low pressure air from under the car would make it slower? All it would do is increase rolling resistance, which is a negligible factor in top speed compared to actual drag.

Add already mentioned compete lack of downforce
1000+ pounds at 0 mph. For sure, even the F1 cars by the end of the following decade had a lot more when they were up to speed. And when Group C finally rolled around, even the lowest drag Le Mans configurations of those would match the 2J past probably 140. But those were, like the 2J, race cars; and their development followed through from that.

Electronics will make you as good as physics allows at accelerating out of corners
The 2J had rear tires that were over 3 feet wide, was run through a 3 speed gearbox with an ultra wide first gear and had over a thousand pounds of downforce when you launched it from a standing start. How does wheelspin factor into this?

aerodynamics will make fan advantage low.
The McLaren P1 is claimed to be around 1200 pounds of downforce at 160 MPH (at which point the spoilers begin trimming themselves, cutting downforce, to decrease drag). The Dodge Viper ACR, which isn't technically even street legal in the high downforce configuration, also produces around 1200, only at 150 MPH (and since the Viper uses straightforward aerodynamic aids, that would only increase as it approaches its top speed). Both of those would be about in line with what the 2J would be producing at 120 MPH (though the Chaparral would have a much lower increase as speed went up). That's not counting the various "could drive upside down!" statements from companies like Saleen and Apollo. Now, for sure, those cars produce far more downforce using spoilers and the like than the Chaparral did, since not using those kinds of aerodynamics was the entire point.


My question to you is, how much downforce do you think any of those produce at, say, 70? The Nurbugring is a fast track, but it's by no means a bunch of sweeping turns.


Well... thats... rather annoying actually. wouldnt it have been relatively easy to remove the moving aerodynamics? or am i completely misinterpreting the meaning of "moving aerodynamics?
They are referring to the 2 fans in the back. Actually, they can run the real engine without starting up the fan engine, but I guess that defeats the purpose of the 2j.
The fans get all of the headlines as being the thing banned, but remember that even though the FIA banned moveable aerodynamic devices (and did so the year before the 2J debuted, in response to everyone copying the earlier 2G) and violating the moveable aerodynamics rule was why the 2J was banned, they still allowed the more straightforward BT46 just under a decade later and the 2J was initially allowed to race. With the 2J, the main issue was the skirts, and the way they were used on the body:
RearExposed.gif


They moved dynamically in accordance with what the car was doing through a direct connection to the suspension arms, in order to keep the seal underneath the car as tight as possible to the ground (but not suffer from the stability problems that so thoroughly plagued the ground effects era of F1). They also had springs in place to push them to a certain height when the suspension was level. This was more advanced than the "sliding skirts" in the F1 cars of the late 1970s, which simply rested on the ground and moved with the motion of the car body, and thus were spared the FIA's ire for a few years. And the skirts articulating in response to the suspension motion did constitute a moving aerodynamic device, no doubt. A 2J with the skirts simply sliding like they were on the Brabus BT46B (and other contemporary F1 cars) may have worked, but removing the skirts outright would not have. Plus remember that Jim Hall became disillusioned with the politics in the sport (namely McLaren throwing their weight around despite winning pretty much everything until Porsche arrived) after he had already sunk a ton of money into the 2J's development, and decided to just leave rather than fight to make the 2J legal.
 
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It's in GT6 as a 663 PP car, going by weight and HP it should be a 700-720 PP car, ergo a 40-50 PP advantage. Even detuning that ad stays in there.
In gt5 it started as 613pp... pp is BS anyways
 
I admit that I'm not particularly well read up on aerodynamics (though you're doing a good job dismissing out of hand someone in this thread who pretty much is), so can you explain how almost completely eliminating low pressure air from under the car would make it slower? All it would do is increase rolling resistance, which is a negligible factor in top speed compared to actual drag.


1000+ pounds at 0 mph. For sure, even the F1 cars by the end of the following decade had a lot more when they were up to speed. And when Group C finally rolled around, even the lowest drag Le Mans configurations of those would match the 2J past probably 140. But those were, like the 2J, race cars; and their development followed through from that.


The 2J had rear tires that were over 3 feet wide, was run through a 3 speed gearbox with an ultra wide first gear and had over a thousand pounds of downforce when you launched it from a standing start. How does wheelspin factor into this?


The McLaren P1 is claimed to be around 1200 pounds of downforce at 160 MPH (at which point the spoilers begin trimming themselves, cutting downforce, to decrease drag). The Dodge Viper ACR, which isn't technically even street legal in the high downforce configuration, also produces around 1200, only at 150 MPH (and since the Viper uses straightforward aerodynamic aids, that would only increase as it approaches its top speed). Both of those would be about in line with what the 2J would be producing at 120 MPH (though the Chaparral would have a much lower increase as speed went up). That's not counting the various "could drive upside down!" statements from companies like Saleen and Apollo. Now, for sure, those cars produce far more downforce using spoilers and the like than the Chaparral did, since not using those kinds of aerodynamics was the entire point.


My question to you is, how much downforce do you think any of those produce at, say, 70? The Nurbugring is a fast track, but it's by no means a bunch of sweeping turns.



The fans get all of the headlines as being the thing banned, but remember that even though the FIA banned moveable aerodynamic devices (and did so the year before the 2J debuted, in response to everyone copying the earlier 2G) and violating the moveable aerodynamics rule was why the 2J was banned, they still allowed the more straightforward BT46 just under a decade later and the 2J was initially allowed to race. With the 2J, the main issue was the skirts, and the way they were used on the body:
RearExposed.gif


They moved dynamically in accordance with what the car was doing through a direct connection to the suspension arms, in order to keep the seal underneath the car as tight as possible to the ground (but not suffer from the stability problems that so thoroughly plagued the ground effects era of F1). They also had springs in place to push them to a certain height when the suspension was level. This was more advanced than the "sliding skirts" in the F1 cars of the late 1970s, which simply rested on the ground and moved with the motion of the car body, and thus were spared the FIA's ire for a few years. And the skirts articulating in response to the suspension motion did constitute a moving aerodynamic device, no doubt. A 2J with the skirts simply sliding like they were on the Brabus BT46B (and other contemporary F1 cars) may have worked, but removing the skirts outright would not have. Plus remember that Jim Hall became disillusioned with the politics in the sport (namely McLaren throwing their weight around despite winning pretty much everything until Porsche arrived) after he had already sunk a ton of money into the 2J's development, and decided to just leave rather than fight to make the 2J legal.

Another multiquoter. Seriously, guys stop mutiquoting, it's like dissecting whole text and taking everything out of context.

I'll leave it short.
A. Car is without downforce in GT6! It has no fw, no rw points. I explained why this is bad pp and top speed wise already, and you are the second one to quote that out of context and wonder at what it means!
B. You can argue all you want about potentials, actual lap times are what matters. They are the proof to theory. And here it's only I that brings something to the table. The rest of you argue that it could stick to the ceiling...

So as promised:
 
Grandmastery of Lap Times

I'll use Nordschleife as a benchmark. Main reason for it's use is that we have lap times from all the spectres of racing. Old can-am racers, F1 racers, new supercars, family sedans, hatchbacks... All drove on a very similar track. To my knowledge this is the only case of that. And if major car companies use it for their own battling ground, so it must also adequately represent the true speed of a car.

It was not the same configuration, but as mentioned, differences can be calculated. The times will also never be exact, but we can get a vague idea of how fast these machines were. This is a lot better than pointless arguing about potential hp, acceleration and potential downforce.


Hardest part is getting 2j lap times. It was insanely brittle. From what I've found, it only 'finished' one race (three laps behind), and it only started four. So this is it for 2j lap times:

1970 Watkins Glen - 3.701 km (unfortunately 1971 already has different layout)
1:03.690, q3, after McLarens
1:05.800, r, dnf

1970 Road Atlanta - 4.056 km
1:17.420, q1

1970 Laguna Seca - 3.058 km
58.800, q1

1970 Riverside - 5.311 km
1:32.490, q1


Now we find cars that raced those tracks and raced Nordschleife. Very fortunately gran-am cars were present in interseries championships. Nor in 1970 but in 1971, I'll take Mclarens and Porche 917/10s times, as both were also present in 1971 can-am series. Later on things get a bit silly with turbos. (1700bhp silly!)
M8F was overall winner in 71' and 917/10 was top 5. I'll be always using races as close to 2j as possible, and as fast times as possible. Then we'll calculate laptimes for 2j at Nordschleife.


Watkins Glen (3.701 km)
Chap 2j - 1:03.690, q3, 70' (63.69s, 58,11m/s)
Mclaren M8F - 71' track changed
Porsche 917/10 - 71' track changed


Road Atlanta (4.056 km)
Chap - 1:17.420, q1, 70' (77,42s, 52.39m/s)
Mclaren M8F - 1:17.700, q1, 71' (77.7s, 52.2m/s)
Porsche 917/10 - 1:17.246, q2 72' (74.163s 52.51m/s)

Laguna Seca (3.058 km)
Chap - 58.800, q1, 70' (52.01m/s)
Mclaren M8F - 58.780, q1, 71' (52.02m/s)

Porsche 917/10 - 1:01.49, q5, 71' (49,73m/s)


Riverside (5.311 km)
Chap - 1:32.490, q1, 70' (57.42m/s)
Mclaren M8F - 1:31.960, q1, 71' (57.77m/s)
Porsche 917/10 - only 917/10 tc's entered


Nordschleife (22.835 km)
Chap - never raced
Mclaren M8F - 7:31.700, q2, 71' (451.7s, 50.55m/s)
Porsche 917/10 - 7:36.800, q1, 72' (446.8s, 49.99m/s)
F1, Jackie Stewart, Tyrell - 7:19.000, q1, 71' (example)

Now we calculate how much faster/slower 2j is on average. Then from Nordscheife times, we get 2j Nordschleife times!

2j vs Mclaren.
Mclaren faster by 0,18m/s (three times on same track, divided by 3 to get average, then compared)
So 50.55 - 0.18 = 50.37m/s on Nordschleife and a laptime of:

7:33,35

2j vs 917/10
2j faster by 1.08m/s
Average on Nordschleife of 51.07m/s gives:

7:23,13

So, everything point somewhere in the range of 7:20 to 7:35. Very good, still not nearly as crazy as some have it. If I'd be guessing, it would somewhere around 7:25. It was very even with Mclaren in lap times, but Mclaren in 71' was being pushed hard to those times, while 2j in 70' was winning poles by seconds (except WGlen), and they also knew everything could blow any moment, as well.

Now all that needs to be done, is figuring how much time 2km start/finish loop added to 22.835km Nordschleife, then we can start comparing 2j to hatchbacks.


ps. nearly all the info came from this amazing place: www.racingsportscars.com
 
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Well guess what. i bought both the 2J and the 787B, took them around apricot hill (i hate the ring!) and the 2J (661PP) did 1:10.575 and the 787B (684PP) did 1:09.364, both stock. so the answer is no, the 2J will not keep up, but if you added the stage 3 turbo to it then i will!

EDIT: yep the stage 3 turbo brought it up to 1:08.319 so yeah, it depends how you use it!
 
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Another multiquoter. Seriously, guys stop mutiquoting, it's like dissecting whole text and taking everything out of context
If there was a way to more transparently state "I can't defend the statements of fact I made earlier in the thread," I daresay I would have trouble thinking of it. Though this came close:
So even if the engine really was as powerful as is represented in the game


A. Car is without downforce in GT6! It has no fw, no rw points.
First of all, the way the car is modelled in GT6 is irrelevant to the discussion about the car's real life capabilities. Second of all, not having downforce points in the tuning menu does not mean that the car does not have downforce at all because the downforce that the 2J posesses is not comparable to the downforce every other car (including the X1) in the game posess (nor did it mean such in GT4, GT5 or GTPSP, though for those three games it was because the menu simply didn't measure downforce that wasn't adjustable).

I explained why this is bad pp and top speed wise already,
You didn't explain anything. You stated that it was bad (and you actually said the opposite of that anyway: )
Now the fan will increase cornering speed, but it will also significantly reduce top speed since its constantly sucking the air from under the car.
And both times when questioned why you were making such statements you said "stop multiquoting".


and you are the second one to quote that out of context and wonder at what it means!
Because you keep failing to actually explain what it means. The fact that the car PP does not take into account the downforce in the same way that it does for cars that have wings and spoilers does not mean that the downforce is not simulated (and any peek into GT5 hybriding would have shown that PD have multiple ways of representing downforce values that would work better than simply inaccurately representing it as being of the wings and spoilers variety), else the car would not be the absolute monster that it is.

Nor, more importantly, does that have any bearing on what the real life car could do in real life.
 
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Another multiquoter. Seriously, guys stop mutiquoting, it's like dissecting whole text and taking everything out of context.
Nothing is taken out of context. Breaking up a quote makes it clearer if anything since the link between statement and response is plainly clear.

I asked what lack of downforce because the car most certainly does not lack downforce in GT or in real life. I could think up some some explanations for what you were saying, but nothing in your post made it decisively clear.


A. Car is without downforce in GT6! It has no fw, no rw points. I explained why this is bad pp and top speed wise already, and you are the second one to quote that out of context and wonder at what it means!
So it has downforce, but not front/rear bodywork downforce. This is in general good for top speed (although incorrect, as the rear of the car clearly has a spoiler, and if I remember correctly GT6 now should show downforce for fixed devices) and has no bearing on PP if the fan is included in PP.

B. You can argue all you want about potentials, actual lap times are what matters. They are the proof to theory. And here it's only I that brings something to the table. The rest of you argue that it could stick to the ceiling...
They are supporting evidence, and I like the attempt at objective numbers, but I don't think they can be called complete proof until the two cars in question run side by side on the same day. The 2J was at a point in development where it wasn't clear if it was running to its potential and the design of the car would make its performance compared to other cars vary wildly with track. In general, the slower the track, the better the 2J would be expected to do because as mentioned, it has a crushing downforce advantage at low speeds. On contemporary tires, it won't make as much use of that downforce as it could with modern tires, but there is no modern road car that can match that low speed advantage.
 
If there was a way to more transparently state "I can't defend the statements of fact I made earlier in the thread," I daresay I would have trouble thinking of it. Though this came close:




First of all, the way the car is modelled in GT6 is irrelevant to the discussion about the car's real life capabilities. Second of all, not having downforce points in the tuning menu does not mean that the car does not have downforce at all because the downforce that the 2J posesses is not comparable to the downforce every other car (including the X1) in the game posess (nor did it mean such in GT4, GT5 or GTPSP, though for those three games it was because the menu simply didn't measure downforce that wasn't adjustable).


You didn't explain anything. You stated that it was bad (and you actually said the opposite of that anyway: )

And both times when questioned why you were making such statements you said "stop multiquoting".



Because you keep failing to actually explain what it means. The fact that the car PP does not take into account the downforce in the same way that it does for cars that have wings and spoilers does not mean that the downforce is not simulated (and any peek into GT5 hybriding would have shown that PD have multiple ways of representing downforce values that would work better than simply inaccurately representing it as being of the wings and spoilers variety), else the car would not be the absolute monster that it is.

Nor, more importantly, does that have any bearing on what the real life car could do in real life.

Add already mentioned compete lack of downforce and you see that the car as represented in the game is fictional, far far from what it was.
If there was a way to more transparently state "I can't defend the statements of fact I made earlier in the thread," I daresay I would have trouble thinking of it. Though this came close:




First of all, the way the car is modelled in GT6 is irrelevant to the discussion about the car's real life capabilities. Second of all, not having downforce points in the tuning menu does not mean that the car does not have downforce at all because the downforce that the 2J posesses is not comparable to the downforce every other car (including the X1) in the game posess (nor did it mean such in GT4, GT5 or GTPSP, though for those three games it was because the menu simply didn't measure downforce that wasn't adjustable).


You didn't explain anything. You stated that it was bad (and you actually said the opposite of that anyway: )

And both times when questioned why you were making such statements you said "stop multiquoting".



Because you keep failing to actually explain what it means. The fact that the car PP does not take into account the downforce in the same way that it does for cars that have wings and spoilers does not mean that the downforce is not simulated (and any peek into GT5 hybriding would have shown that PD have multiple ways of representing downforce values that would work better than simply inaccurately representing it as being of the wings and spoilers variety), else the car would not be the absolute monster that it is.

Nor, more importantly, does that have any bearing on what the real life car could do in real life.

I'll try some of your undecipherable gibberish that is multiquoting, to maybe get you to understand a thing or two.

quoth me:
"It has both front splitter and back wing. Game just will not register ether and the car behaves as no drag wonder."
"Add already mentioned compete lack of downforce and you see that the car as represented in the game is fictional, far far from what it was."

quoth you:
Add already mentioned compete lack of downforce

1000+ pounds at 0 mph. For sure, even the F1 cars by the end of the following decade had a lot more when they were up to speed. And when Group C finally rolled around, even the lowest drag Le Mans configurations of those would match the 2J past probably 140. But those were, like the 2J, race cars; and their development followed through from that


Now, why on earth are you arguing as if I was saying real 2j has no downforce???

To me that's just an example of how pointless and useless form of communication multiquoting is. You saw someone question my statement of 2j being without of downforce. Then you assumed I'm talking about real 2j and bought it into conversation of 'potential' 2j speed. When in the first place, my point was directed at virtual 2j and it's performance. Something that would be perfectly clear if you quoted my post as a whole, not just dissect it and assume everything at will.

Still anyone wondering why I deem multiquoting so low?

Oh, and while you are still bringing up my statement of fans lowering top speed. It was an estimation, same thing that you are doing. It looks perfectly logical to me. Put a vacuum cleaners hose on floor, have it turned off and move it. Turn it on and move it. And before you go and play with that statement as well, let me make it perfectly clear again. Cornering speed is so much better, that fan is always a better option, but top speed will suffer.
 
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Add already mentioned compete lack of downforce and you see that the car as represented in the game is fictional, far far from what it was.
You first said that in the exact same post where you claimed that the power numbers in the game were also made up.


So.

Now, why on earth are you arguing as if I was saying real 2j has no downforce???
Because you said so multiple times before jumping off to the real life comparisons you started making.

To me that's just an example of how pointless and useless form of communication multiquoting is. You saw someone question my statement of 2j being without of downforce. Then you assumed I'm talking about real 2j and bought it into conversation of 'potential' 2j speed. When in the first place, my point was directed at virtual 2j and it's performance. Something that would be perfectly clear if you quoted my post as a whole, not just dissect it and assume everything at will
I assumed you were talking about the real 2J because you've spent the entire time comparing the 2J's real life performance on tracks not in the game to other real life cars' performance on tracks not in the game.

Still anyone wondering why I deem multiquoting so low?
Because if people do it the statements of fact that you make that are erroneous stand out, I'm guessing. I note how deftly you attempted to avoid responding to any of the specific things in the post you quoted above, too.

Oh, and while you are still bringing up my statement of fans lowering top speed. It was an estimation, same thing that you are doing. It looks perfectly logical to me. Put a vacuum cleaners hose on floor, have it turned off and move it. Turn it on and move it. And before you go and play with that statement as well, let me make it perfectly clear again. Cornering speed is so much better, that fan is always a better option, but top speed will suffer.
And I already explained why this statement was false. Rolling resistance has an effect on top speed so low that it could be considered negligible; far far less than the drag that would be in place if the car was producing 1000+ pounds of downforce with traditional aerodynamics.
 
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Nothing is taken out of context. Breaking up a quote makes it clearer if anything since the link between statement and response is plainly clear.

I asked what lack of downforce because the car most certainly does not lack downforce in GT or in real life. I could think up some some explanations for what you were saying, but nothing in your post made it decisively clear.



So it has downforce, but not front/rear bodywork downforce. This is in general good for top speed (although incorrect, as the rear of the car clearly has a spoiler, and if I remember correctly GT6 now should show downforce for fixed devices) and has no bearing on PP if the fan is included in PP.


They are supporting evidence, and I like the attempt at objective numbers, but I don't think they can be called complete proof until the two cars in question run side by side on the same day. The 2J was at a point in development where it wasn't clear if it was running to its potential and the design of the car would make its performance compared to other cars vary wildly with track. In general, the slower the track, the better the 2J would be expected to do because as mentioned, it has a crushing downforce advantage at low speeds. On contemporary tires, it won't make as much use of that downforce as it could with modern tires, but there is no modern road car that can match that low speed advantage.

Yes, naturally it has downforce. Ether there is some hidden downforce present, or the fan is actually simulated. And I certainly have nothing against how it drives, I quite like it actually, it has certain unique feel.

While how it went then, I'm really looking at it worse and worse. Before I stumbled on it's times and results, I had no idea that it really was so bad in races. I always imagined that it at least won some. But no, only one finish laps down and failures and no shows on other events. It was quick in qualifying, that is certain. 3 poles of 4, all poles with at least a two second advantage. That is very good in my book, but then it only finished one race, had problem even starting one and having breaks failure in one and fan failures at others. Now that points to something fundamentally wrong with the car. It was so ahead in innovation, that probably everything just didn't fit together. With time that could be ironed out, but it certainly wasn't while it ran.
 
You first said that in the exact same post where you claimed that the power numbers in the game were also made up.


So.


Because you said so multiple times before jumping off to the real life comparisons you started making.


I assumed you were talking about the real 2J because you've spent the entire time comparing the 2J's real life performance on tracks not in the game to other real life cars' performance on tracks not in the game.


Because if people do it the statements of fact that you make that are erroneous stand out, I'm guessing. I note how deftly you attempted to avoid responding to any of the specific things in the post you quoted above, too.


And I already explained why this statement was false. Rolling resistance has an effect on top speed so low that it could be considered negligible; far far less than the drag that would be in place if the car was producing 1000+ pounds of downforce with traditional aerodynamics.

See, you're doing it again. I've certainly no Idea what you are trying to say this time. So, I'll quit. If you bring a lap time or two, we can continue discussing it, if not, you can call me quitter. Would that make you feel better?
 
In two posts you went from "Add already mentioned compete lack of downforce" to "Yes, naturally it has downforce. Ether there is some hidden downforce present, or the fan is actually simulated." It cannot be both things.
 
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Well guess what. i bought both the 2J and the 787B, took them around apricot hill (i hate the ring!) and the 2J (661PP) did 1:10.575 and the 787B (684PP) did 1:09.364, both stock. so the answer is no, the 2J will not keep up, but if you added the stage 3 turbo to it then i will!

EDIT: yep the stage 3 turbo brought it up to 1:08.319 so yeah, it depends how you use it!
You've demonstrated the 2J runs similar lap times to an LMP, a little slower. Showing that hidden 40pp is there. Now compare to a 650pp race car.
 
Oh, and while you are still bringing up my statement of fans lowering top speed. It was an estimation, same thing that you are doing. It looks perfectly logical to me. Put a vacuum cleaners hose on floor, have it turned off and move it. Turn it on and move it. And before you go and play with that statement as well, let me make it perfectly clear again. Cornering speed is so much better, that fan is always a better option, but top speed will suffer.
This comparison doesn't really work. The vacuum is moving so slowly that there is no drag, the "engine" powering it (a person) is many times weaker than a car engine, and the surface may be much softer which makes rolling resistance stronger.

600 HP is equivalent to a few hundred pounds of force at 200 mph. Rolling resistance, even with a large amount of downforce probably won't ever go over, or get to, 100 lbs. With aero drag, the major divisions for a sports car are pressure drag and induced drag, and the latter can easily match the former with enough high lift devices.

If you wanted to say that the fan doubles the 2J's rolling resistance, that's probably only worth a couple mph in top speed at worst. The drag savings by not having wings could potentially halve aero drag and could be worth 10 times the cost of the fan or more. You also need to consider that the fans pushing air out the back is good for drag.
 
I'm enjoying this conversation, despite the quibbling, because it conjures fond memories of cars and people I have actually seen and heard back in the day.

A couple of minor points I can add:

1) In 1969 Can-Am cars and F1 cars ran on both Mosport and Watkins Glen, with many of the same drivers and all on Goodyear tires.

At Mosport in June, Bruce McLaren qualified his M8B-Chevrolet on pole at 1:18.2 (113.2 mph).
At Mosport in September, Mclaren qualified his M7C-Cosworth in 9th at 1:18.5, with Ickx on pole with 1:17.4.

At Watkins Glen in July, Bruce qualified his Can-Am M8B on pole at 1:02.21 (133.1 mph).
At Watkins Glen in October, Bruce qualified his M7C in 6th at 1:04.22, with Rindt on pole at 1:03.62.

What I take from this was that in 1969 the F1 car was quicker on the narrow, twisty, swooping circuit, while the Can-Am machine was quicker on the wider, flatter, faster course. With 7 liters displacement compared to 3, this makes sense.

2) Back then, mechanical reliability was much worse than it is today, and circuit & car safety conditions were far, far worse. These factors had an understandably inhibiting influence on how much various drivers were willing to push their luck.
 
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