Edit: I found tons of threads with people talking about gear selection for various courses. That helped a lot. So I should probably withdraw these questions! I'll see if I can delete the thread.
We need to select the gearing for our Elva Mk6 with Alfa engine. I've now looked at quite a few different gearings that various people have on their cars. I understand that there are differences between short courses and long courses, and differences between wide torque bands and short bands, and torque curves that drop off at the top quickly. But I'm not fully understanding some of the differences.
Here are my main questions - we're trying to get to an initial gear set that we'll change as we get experience with the car on the track. But before that, we still need something to start with!
(1) I've seen gear selections that have different spacing between them. For example, measuring from speed at redline to redline, I've seen gaps from 17 mph to 28 mph. I'm assuming this is based on how long of a power band a car has. Are there any rules of thumb for determining what bands will work with a given engine?
(2) I've seen some that have equal spacing all the way up, and some that get narrower as they go up in gears, and some that have 3rd pulled down. Am I understanding this right that absent a big drop off in torque curve, it is almost always better to go up to redline than to shift up? And if that's true, does that mean that absent any other factor that equal gaps would be correct? So what factors would cause someone to have narrower gaps as they go up? Just to have the right rpm for turns at a particular track configuration? Like having to shift mid corner.
(3) I have also seen that some people push up 1st. This means the car will have slower rate of acceleration, but it will allow the car to stay in 1st longer for higher acceleration before having to shift into second - which also allows to push up the ultimate top speed, as each gear goes up. Are there any rules of thumb for setting 1st? Obviously it doesn't need to be as low as a non-race car, but you don't want it so high that it doesn't accelerate fast enough. How do we set that?
Thanks for any thoughts on any of these.