It seems that the people that know about are at more of a disadvantage. A flat power curve doesn't matter when it's wider than your gearing. If you make 350 hp from 0 to redline RPM and your gears cover 5000-8000 RPM, you will never beat a car that makes 25 hp from 0 to 5000 RPM but 400 hp from 5000 to 8000 RPM. Set your gears properly, and use manual transmission. Flat powerbands should only result as a last resort when you're trying to cram a 700 PP car into a 400 PP race.
I don't know what you're trying to argue here?????
Sure, lots of things figure into this. But if you don't know about this at all, you will be at a disadvantage.
I'm not understanding how you think knowing about this puts you at a disadvantage. That sounds crackers!
Not only that, I never said anything about flat power bands. I'm simply talking about improving torque & the power curve, in general, by using the power limiter. (Flat or not flat, or whatever, there's always an improvement over not using the power limiter.)
Here are 2 examples:
You join the Low HP League. You go about choosing a kei car to use. The restrictions are 98hp/700kg. The tracks are mostly short & tight - like Tsukuba, Madrid Mini, London.
If you upgrade your kei car with mod parts to bring it JUST to 98hp, you will NEVER have the same kind of torque the rest of the racers do by slapping on various upgrade mods, and then power limiting down to the 98hp.
You decide to race the Triumph Spitfire series... The restriction is 108hp/810kg.
If you simply upgrade the Spitfire with mods to bring it just to 108hp, you will be at a disadvantage against people who are using the power limiter.
Not only that, but 810kg is the stock weight of the Spitfire. And many of the racers weight-reduce the Spitfire below that, and then add a bit of ballast back to use ballast bias to help the car be a little more stable.
I don't care what kind of gearing you use, or if you use MT or AT. If you don't use the power limiter in these situations, you will NOT have the kind of torque... your car just won't have the "go" that people using the power limiter are getting.
So no, I don't think this power limiter "trick" just applies to cramming a 700pp car into a 400pp race. (If that's even possible or wise.)
It applies across the board.
So I don't know why anyone would say that people who know about this "trick" are actually less better off.
Why would you even say something like that?
You really think that NOT knowing the power limiter trick gives you an advantage?
