Whether you are a casual cruiser or a competitive sim racer, here is how spreadsheets are revolutionizing the AC experience. 1. The Car and Track Index
To create and manage an Assetto Corsa spreadsheet, players may use popular spreadsheet software such as: assetto corsa spreadsheet
: Use the tabs at the top (Cars, Tracks, Misc) to filter what you're looking for. Whether you are a casual cruiser or a
You don’t need to be an Excel wizard. You just need the right columns. Below is a breakdown of what a high-performance should contain. You don’t need to be an Excel wizard
: You can record lap times across different car and track combinations to visualize your progress over time.
The spreadsheet’s most profound influence, however, lies in the arcane art of . Assetto Corsa allows for granular customization of alignment, suspension, differential preload, and dampers. For the uninitiated, adjusting a bump stop from 10mm to 8mm offers no discernible difference. For the spreadsheet user, it is a variable to be tested and validated. A disciplined sim racer will create a "Setup Matrix": columns for track layouts, rows for each setup change (e.g., rear wing angle at -2 degrees, front toe-out at 0.1). Next to each change, the driver logs the resulting sector times, tire temperatures (inner, center, outer), and subjective oversteer/understeer ratings. Over a week of practice, this spreadsheet becomes a decision-making engine, using a weighted scoring system to determine whether the "Soft anti-roll bar" setup is statistically faster across ten flying laps than the "Medium" option. Without the spreadsheet, setup work is guesswork; with it, it is the scientific method applied to asphalt.