Indianapolis is a good example.
Compare before and after 1993.
I'm not sure I get your point, this shows Danny Sullivan in the Penske-Chev and Derek Daly driving a March-Buick at the 1988 Indy 500.
Why?
Indianapolis is a good example.
Compare before and after 1993.
Compare the 1988 picture with this one, taken roughly in the same spot. Notice the difference in run-off on the inside of the turn. The asphalt on the other side of the grass is the acceleration lane exiting the pits.I'm not sure I get your point, this shows Danny Sullivan in the Penske-Chev and Derek Daly driving a March-Buick at the 1988 Indy 500.
Why?
They also had a rule...you must not allow all four wheels below the line. If so, you got a stop-and-go penalty.Look this picture. They put grass there to avoid advantage of using the inside extra track.
Yeah, they could make a few changes in that corner, I'll give you that. Problem is, it'd be an extremely dangerous place to lose the car, so I still doubt they would consider it.I kinda disagree in the case of COTA: COTA is already one of the widest tracks out there, and making the insides of corners harder to cut (just the insides!) won't affect the racing in the way that it does in Suzuka.
I mean, I also get why the modern tracks are the way they are, there's multiple advantages there: In no small part it's simply easier to remove a crashed car from the track with all that runoff, which means you have to neutralize the race less (compare the Dubai 24h to the Spa 24h and you'll see what I mean there). But the corner Max cut? Some astroturf there wouldn't go amiss imo.