What Skills are Transferable from Simracing to Motorsport?

iRacing IMSA multiclass.jpg
Scott Mclaughlin credited iRacing for his win in the Sebring 12 Hours this weekend. This got me thinking, what skills are transferable from simracing to motorsport?

Image Credit: iRacing.com

This Super Sebring weekend saw an accumulation of amazing races taking place at the old airfield race track. None more so however than the headlining IMSA Sebring 12 Hours. Whilst the top class had its fair share of thrills and spills, the LMP2 category got a new, first-time class winner in the shape Scott McLaughlin.

More traditionally seen in Australian Supercars and, more recently, the Indycar championship, he has adapted very well to the unique challenges of endurance sportscar racing. In just his second race, the New Zealander claimed a class win and finished on the overall podium. After the event, he took to Twitter to credit iRacing for his win.


In the tweet, the three-time Supercars champion explained that the iRacing IMSA series helped him get up to speed for the real thing. Getting used to dealing with traffic is no small feat, with countless top level racers struggling with this unique part of motorsport. "The traffic patterns are so similar," he claims. He even goes as far as to recommend that young, up and coming racing drivers should use the game as a tool to practice for racing through traffic.

The most transferable skills from simracing to motorsport​

This all got me thinking about just how transferable the act of simracing is to real-world motorsport. Sure the seat of the pants sensation one gets from sitting behind the wheel of a real car is missing from simracing. And sure, every game has its own approach to what driving feels like. But the rest of the racing experience from race craft to strategy and even something as simple as racing lines can all be applied to the real world.

Personally, I would suggest that learning a track is the most applicable skill that can be taken from the sim and used come race day. Even the most prominent F1 drivers use simulators to learn new venues. That would certainly come in handy the first time the grid raced at the latest track, the Jeddah Corniche circuit. With a track all about getting into a rhythm and winding through the barriers at break-neck speeds, using a sim to learn the flow before arriving on-site would have been crucial.

What do you think are some of the most transferable skills form simracing to real motorsport?
About author
Angus Martin
Motorsport gets my blood pumping more than anything else. Be it physical or virtual, I'm down to bang doors.

Comments

For my track days i do practice a new track a lot. Driving lines, brake points, overall track awareness can be transferred (especially in VR) and gives you an edge to other drivers who drive on the track for the first time. A tricky corner in the sim will most likely be tricky in real life and knowing the basic layout of the track helps a lot.

I usually do a mixed class practice session with slower and faster cars. Remembering to look into the mirror at certain points and knowing where to overtake and where not to overtake.

AI in sim racing helps a lot, because they are generally stupid and that is always what you should assume the other driver is in real life.

During a track day sim practice session the goal is to make no mistakes at all and my driving is more concentrated and careful than when i do "normal" sim racing

But on the race track the driving is so much different. The fear and risk factor are on a completely different level and so are the cost involved if you make an mistake. Grip levels, cool down laps, engine and brake and tire temperatures are also different.

The difference is so big, that most of us ( at least i ), will never drive to the same limits on the track as we do in the sim.

There are track days and real racing, which put things on another level again.
 
Last edited:
great summary
did last week 2 training days with the the Porsche 991.2 gt3 cup - did the same same sim preparation and i felt more confident on the track :) - IRL is not SIM - skills can be transferred to a certain extend.
 

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