Documenting camber, toe, and damper clicks for specific driving styles. Fuel Consumption:

Show you where to find for popular mods like RSS (Race Sim Studio) . Suggest apps to automate your data logging.

Set rules so that if you enter a lap time within 0.5 seconds of your Personal Best (PB), the cell turns green. If it is within 1.0 seconds, yellow. Red for slow. This gives you a visual heat map of what actually works.

Group your data visually by vehicle class (e.g., GT3, Formula, Drift, Vintage) for faster scanning.

Assetto Corsa benefits greatly from organizing car setups, lap data and telemetry in a spreadsheet. Below is a concise guide and a ready structure you can copy into Excel/Google Sheets to manage setups, compare lap times, and track improvements.

Never skip the notes. Use short, punchy tags like "Car bottoms out on Turn 3 curb," "Rear loses traction on throttle exit," or "Understeer in high-speed sweeps." This context explains why you changed a setting when you look back at the sheet weeks later. From Spreadsheet to Asphalt: The Data Workflow

| Car | Track | Lap Time | Sector 1 Time | Sector 2 Time | Sector 3 Time | Racing Result | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Ferrari 488 GTB | Monza | 1:35.6 | 23.4 | 36.2 | 36.0 | 1st | | Lamborghini Huracan | Monza | 1:36.2 | 23.6 | 36.6 | 36.0 | 2nd | | Porsche 911 GT3 | Monza | 1:36.5 | 23.8 | 36.9 | 36.0 | 3rd |

With the ease of installing mods via Content Manager, it is easy to end up with 500+ cars and 200+ tracks, many of which you may never drive. A spreadsheet serves several purposes:

Assetto Corsa Spreadsheet |work| -

Documenting camber, toe, and damper clicks for specific driving styles. Fuel Consumption:

Show you where to find for popular mods like RSS (Race Sim Studio) . Suggest apps to automate your data logging.

Set rules so that if you enter a lap time within 0.5 seconds of your Personal Best (PB), the cell turns green. If it is within 1.0 seconds, yellow. Red for slow. This gives you a visual heat map of what actually works. assetto corsa spreadsheet

Group your data visually by vehicle class (e.g., GT3, Formula, Drift, Vintage) for faster scanning.

Assetto Corsa benefits greatly from organizing car setups, lap data and telemetry in a spreadsheet. Below is a concise guide and a ready structure you can copy into Excel/Google Sheets to manage setups, compare lap times, and track improvements. Documenting camber, toe, and damper clicks for specific

Never skip the notes. Use short, punchy tags like "Car bottoms out on Turn 3 curb," "Rear loses traction on throttle exit," or "Understeer in high-speed sweeps." This context explains why you changed a setting when you look back at the sheet weeks later. From Spreadsheet to Asphalt: The Data Workflow

| Car | Track | Lap Time | Sector 1 Time | Sector 2 Time | Sector 3 Time | Racing Result | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Ferrari 488 GTB | Monza | 1:35.6 | 23.4 | 36.2 | 36.0 | 1st | | Lamborghini Huracan | Monza | 1:36.2 | 23.6 | 36.6 | 36.0 | 2nd | | Porsche 911 GT3 | Monza | 1:36.5 | 23.8 | 36.9 | 36.0 | 3rd | Set rules so that if you enter a lap time within 0

With the ease of installing mods via Content Manager, it is easy to end up with 500+ cars and 200+ tracks, many of which you may never drive. A spreadsheet serves several purposes: