Ferrari
Red Bull
Mercedes McLaren Alpine (with in 0.1-0.2)
Aston Martin AlphaTauri (with in 0.1-0.2)
Williams Sauber Haas (with in 0.1-0.2)
I suppose that buttom team away 0.8 seconds behind the leaders.
I don't. There might be some difference but nothing like it was last year.
I think Renault and Ferrari have made huge engine progress, hence we will have something closer in terms of the 4 PU
I find it incredibly hard to come up with a pecking order after the tests. Yes, the usual suspects will probably be on top (but even there: who knows?) But behind it is all impossible to tell. AM, AT, Alpine are completely dark horses to me. They could be up top or at the bottom or somewhere in-between.
We're just blowing smoke here, there isn't enough information to make that comparison. Everything except for some of those reliabvility stats are hear say. I will say that both PUs are good enough to win with.
You only have to see his posting history to see he doesn't like Mercedes. Probably not worth getting in to an argument with him about it.Artur Craft wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 14:31really? I wonder why Max seemed like a sitting duck on Brazil, Jeddah, Abu Dhabi, Doha.........
IMHO all that regs stuff never sped any car up. It was more about pulling resources off of developing the car. A distraction.
There you go using facts to upset the conspiracy theories.diffuser wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 16:14IMHO all that regs stuff never sped any car up. It was more about pulling resources off of developing the car. A distraction.
BTW BEAM wings were illegal in 2021. Nobody ran a Beam wing last year and hasn't for years. They regs were changed for 2022 to allow them again.
Can you show me those cornering speeds by any chance?Artur Craft wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 13:48The top four are quite clear in my speculative analysis:
Mercedes_ best PU since ever and an aero department that is double of Red Bull´s, so I can´t see them other than on top and I think they ran with massive sandbags on Bahrain and, despite that, Russel had cornering speeds well above Ferrari´s, and on par with Max
Red Bull_ seems a very stable car and Newey will always deliver. I guess it won´t be able to make up for the PU deficit but I see them just a few tenths behind MGP
Ferrari_ seems like they came up with a decent package but I´m skeptical where it´s enough to challenge the other two
Mclaren_ like Ferrari but doesn´t seem quite as sorted out
From 5th onwards, it´s a lottery imo. The 5th car could easily be Alpine, Toro Rosso, Force India or even the likes of Haas, Williams or Sauber
And also evidence that the Red Bull has a PU deficit. They were certainly on a par last year.LM10 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 17:00Can you show me those cornering speeds by any chance?Artur Craft wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 13:48The top four are quite clear in my speculative analysis:
Mercedes_ best PU since ever and an aero department that is double of Red Bull´s, so I can´t see them other than on top and I think they ran with massive sandbags on Bahrain and, despite that, Russel had cornering speeds well above Ferrari´s, and on par with Max
Red Bull_ seems a very stable car and Newey will always deliver. I guess it won´t be able to make up for the PU deficit but I see them just a few tenths behind MGP
Ferrari_ seems like they came up with a decent package but I´m skeptical where it´s enough to challenge the other two
Mclaren_ like Ferrari but doesn´t seem quite as sorted out
From 5th onwards, it´s a lottery imo. The 5th car could easily be Alpine, Toro Rosso, Force India or even the likes of Haas, Williams or Sauber