- 1,510
- United Kingdom
- StirlingMoose
While tuning for the 380PP Miata seasonal, I noticed something about the forced SRF. It gave the cars an undesired amount more understeer, more stability. I had to overtune for oversteer just to get them to turn in well. Sure the SRF would kick in mid corner and hold the grip, but turn in was a bigger issue than the already understeery PD physics.
I took one of my Miata SRF seasonal tunes for some offline non SRF testing and whoo was it a handful. I toned it back down to a normally balanced car and was able to turn faster laps than in the SRF seasonal.
From my perspective, forced SRF was just another useless aid that I had to tune around to get the car to do what I wanted it to do.
This kinda validates my assertion that for some expert drivers SRF might slow them down. Most drivers will be quicker with SRF, and I know I am, but this is because it rewards sloppy driving not because it actually improves the normal handling.
Where it does offer a huge advantage is in races rather than TTs, where you can pull-off the most ridiculous dive-bomb manoeuvres, braking and turning in far too late, and still stay on the track.