I'd luv to see them back and Montreal and in the USA Road America would be spectacluar - I dont think either Laguna Seca or Watkins glen are fast enuf circuits to produce a good F1 race.ESPImperium wrote:Id love to see the F1 Champoinship become a truly world championship again, with the guys going to Montreal and a USA circuit, for me id love to see the cars do 85 or 90 laps arround Laguna Seca or Watkins Glen. Id like to see a race in Mexico and Argentina as well. An African race arround Kyalami would be sweet. But untill that happens, some tracks will have to under go some modrenisation or Tilke-iseation and the cost of F1 will have to be reduced by such an ammount that we can have arround 20 to 22 races a year.
However, Bahrain will be the start of us getting the benchmark for the rest of the season, thats whats really intresting.
The Toyotas were faster than the Red Bull cars in Malaysia. Trulli's Q2 Malaysia times were faster than Vettel's best as well as Webber's, and Glock was as fast as Webber and Vettel in Q2 Malaysia. Q3 Malaysia Trulli had a faster lap than Vettel despite the fact Trulli was heavier with fuel. Webber had almost identical fuel to both Toyotas, and both Toyotas in Q3 were faster than Webber. Trulli's fastest lap in the Malaysia race was faster than the fastest laps of both Red Bulls.djos wrote:I doubt their testing at Bahrain will help them overcome a the RB5's & BGP01's which are clearly in a class of their own.vasia wrote:Brawn, RBR and Toyota will be fighting at the front, but Toyota may have an advantage over RBR on this track as they tested extensively at Bahrain in winter.
Reliability is also a question mark with the Red Bull cars, and their reliability will be tested in the Bahrain heat.
RedBull said they solved the relability problem they had on Saturday night, it was a bad 4 pound drive-shaft boot seal batch.
I agree with you. I think Toyota is still the strongest force after BrawnGP - I find it funny how after one odd race such as that of China - starting in the rain - everyone has quickly swapped second favourites...vasia wrote:The Toyotas were faster than the Red Bull cars in Malaysia. Trulli's Q2 Malaysia times were faster than Vettel's best as well as Webber's, and Glock was as fast as Webber and Vettel in Q2 Malaysia. Q3 Malaysia Trulli had a faster lap than Vettel despite the fact Trulli was heavier with fuel. Webber had almost identical fuel to both Toyotas, and both Toyotas in Q3 were faster than Webber. Trulli's fastest lap in the Malaysia race was faster than the fastest laps of both Red Bulls.djos wrote:I doubt their testing at Bahrain will help them overcome a the RB5's & BGP01's which are clearly in a class of their own.vasia wrote:Brawn, RBR and Toyota will be fighting at the front, but Toyota may have an advantage over RBR on this track as they tested extensively at Bahrain in winter.
Reliability is also a question mark with the Red Bull cars, and their reliability will be tested in the Bahrain heat.
RedBull said they solved the relability problem they had on Saturday night, it was a bad 4 pound drive-shaft boot seal batch.
Clearly we can see the Brawn cars struggled a bit on the Shanghai circuit, particularly in rainy cold conditions. The RB5 excelled at the Shanghai circuit. In China, Trulli's Q3 time was 7 tenths off of Vettel's, but Trulli had 20kg more fuel on board, so with identical fuel their pace was close. Trulli's Q3 time was only 4 tenths off of Webber's time, and Webber had 18kg less fuel than Trulli. The rain changed everything. It looks like Trulli's car was not set-up very well and he had bad pace in the rain. Glock was absolutely flying in the rain. Glock had 3rd fastest lap in the race, virtually the same as Vettel's fastest lap and faster than Webber's fastest lap. At some points in the race Glock was lapping at the same pace as Vettel. There were only 4 cars in the China race that managed lap times in the 1:52 range, and it was the two Red Bulls, Ruben's Brawn, and Glock in the Toyota. If Glock had not started the race last from the pitlane, he would have seriously threatened both the Brawn cars as well as the Red Bull machines during the race.
As for reliability, I meant in general. Yes Red Bull did solve their drive-shaft issue, but the issue has cropped up apparently before. What I meant was that Red Bull could have other reliability issues in the dry heat of Bahrain. BMW and Ferrari have serious issues right now so their Bahrain winter testing experience will not help them much. Toyota though had very good reliability during the Bahrain testing, they did the most laps during testing, and they have a strong car right now. Toyota covered almost 4000 kilometres and over 700 laps during their winter test in Bahrain. That will definitely help them achieve an optimal set-up with their cars.
Hmmm. Coulda...woulda...shoulda. Common seriously. If every race or session was analysed by what people could have done we would have 10 WDC every season. The variability of what people actually do is what makes this sport interesting. How many times do you hear people say they did the perfect lap (apart from Lewis).vasia wrote:The Toyotas were faster than the Red Bull cars in Malaysia. Trulli's Q2 Malaysia times were faster than Vettel's best as well as Webber's, and Glock was as fast as Webber and Vettel in Q2 Malaysia. Q3 Malaysia Trulli had a faster lap than Vettel despite the fact Trulli was heavier with fuel. Webber had almost identical fuel to both Toyotas, and both Toyotas in Q3 were faster than Webber. Trulli's fastest lap in the Malaysia race was faster than the fastest laps of both Red Bulls.djos wrote:I doubt their testing at Bahrain will help them overcome a the RB5's & BGP01's which are clearly in a class of their own.vasia wrote:Brawn, RBR and Toyota will be fighting at the front, but Toyota may have an advantage over RBR on this track as they tested extensively at Bahrain in winter.
Reliability is also a question mark with the Red Bull cars, and their reliability will be tested in the Bahrain heat.
RedBull said they solved the relability problem they had on Saturday night, it was a bad 4 pound drive-shaft boot seal batch.
Clearly we can see the Brawn cars struggled a bit on the Shanghai circuit, particularly in rainy cold conditions. The RB5 excelled at the Shanghai circuit. In China, Trulli's Q3 time was 7 tenths off of Vettel's, but Trulli had 20kg more fuel on board, so with identical fuel their pace was close. Trulli's Q3 time was only 4 tenths off of Webber's time, and Webber had 18kg less fuel than Trulli. The rain changed everything. It looks like Trulli's car was not set-up very well and he had bad pace in the rain. Glock was absolutely flying in the rain. Glock had 3rd fastest lap in the race, virtually the same as Vettel's fastest lap and faster than Webber's fastest lap. At some points in the race Glock was lapping at the same pace as Vettel. There were only 4 cars in the China race that managed lap times in the 1:52 range, and it was the two Red Bulls, Ruben's Brawn, and Glock in the Toyota. If Glock had not started the race last from the pitlane, he would have seriously threatened both the Brawn cars as well as the Red Bull machines during the race.
As for reliability, I meant in general. Yes Red Bull did solve their drive-shaft issue, but the issue has cropped up apparently before. What I meant was that Red Bull could have other reliability issues in the dry heat of Bahrain. BMW and Ferrari have serious issues right now so their Bahrain winter testing experience will not help them much. Toyota though had very good reliability during the Bahrain testing, they did the most laps during testing, and they have a strong car right now. Toyota covered almost 4000 kilometres and over 700 laps during their winter test in Bahrain. That will definitely help them achieve an optimal set-up with their cars.
True, unless you are speaking about tire management, which is half of it.ISLAMATRON wrote:They push the cars the hardest in qualifying and all three quals so far have been dry.
It really is quite amusing how some are so quick to jump to conclusions without first fully looking at all the facts.NDR008 wrote: I agree with you. I think Toyota is still the strongest force after BrawnGP - I find it funny how after one odd race such as that of China - starting in the rain - everyone has quickly swapped second favourites...
My response was in regards to what djos said about the Brawn and RB5 being "clearly in a class of their own". The Brawn currently is, that is correct. The RB5 clearly is NOT in a class of it's own. It's also not in the same class as the Brawn. Maybe in the rain it is in the same class, or slightly better. All anyone has to do is bother to take a look at the race data. Bahrain shall give us a better picture exactly where the RB5 stands.paused wrote: Hmmm. Coulda...woulda...shoulda. Common seriously. If every race or session was analysed by what people could have done we would have 10 WDC every season. The variability of what people actually do is what makes this sport interesting. How many times do you hear people say they did the perfect lap (apart from Lewis).
Since Toyota are already running a DDD I am sure RBR have much greater scope for improvement and will beat them over the course of this year.
I think you would find that every non DDD technical director on the grid would disagree. Otherwise what was the point of the last month if there is no extra downforce to be gained? Logically if you already have a DDD then those without it have more scope to find extra downforce if relation to current level thereby improving comparitive performance.vasia wrote:Also there is no guarantee that Red Bull has greater scope for development in terms of the diffuser since they are modifying an existing car design to work with a new diffuser concept. Toyota's car from the ground up was designed to work with their trick diffuser.