What I wonder most is why they ditched alot of the lightweight parts already introduced?
What I wonder most is why they ditched alot of the lightweight parts already introduced?
That has baffled me as well. Maybe they can control flex better with titanium than CF?
On the other hand, Leclerc and Sainz will be driving all the more desperately around Max.
Maybe its budget cap...Silent Storm wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 19:23That has baffled me as well. Maybe they can control flex better with titanium than CF?
The Ferrari team is still a sleeping giant. Max in my mind is secure if all he needs to do is bank 3rds. Sainz and Leclerc on perfectly executed weekends have the pace to be both in front of Max. It is just that Ferrari doesnt execute. Its more about what Ferrari isn't doing, than what RB does.
They already spent the money to make those parts so why not use them unless they are contributing to an issue.Dee wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 22:57Maybe its budget cap...Silent Storm wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 19:23That has baffled me as well. Maybe they can control flex better with titanium than CF?
Ferrari are having a shocker of a season. Only 6 races where both cars have finished out of 12, there’s probably a good handful of others where there’s been a engine penalty, strategy screw up, Charles sticking it into a barrier in Monza and I can’t remember the others. That’s very few races where it has gone ‘right’ for the team on a whole.napoleon1981 wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 23:02The Ferrari team is still a sleeping giant. Max in my mind is secure if all he needs to do is bank 3rds. Sainz and Leclerc on perfectly executed weekends have the pace to be both in front of Max. It is just that Ferrari doesnt execute. Its more about what Ferrari isn't doing, than what RB does.
It appears as if Ferrari has fired it's entire strategy team and race control engineering team at base to use that money to build a fast car. It's just the race engineer sitting on the pit wall that has to do everything. When he is busy picking an alphabet to attach to "Plan <alphabet here>", he isn't looking at his monitor. Driver is also doubling up as his assistant strategist. Ferrari has pioneered this path breaking way of managing races. Because they are Ferrari, they don't need to win anything to prove anything. They are special, their opponents feel for their misery and wants to race them and feel sad when they don't. Does Red Bull do that if Mercedes suffers misfortune?chrisc90 wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 23:37Ferrari are having a shocker of a season. Only 6 races where both cars have finished out of 12, there’s probably a good handful of others where there’s been a engine penalty, strategy screw up, Charles sticking it into a barrier in Monza and I can’t remember the others. That’s very few races where it has gone ‘right’ for the team on a whole.napoleon1981 wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 23:02The Ferrari team is still a sleeping giant. Max in my mind is secure if all he needs to do is bank 3rds. Sainz and Leclerc on perfectly executed weekends have the pace to be both in front of Max. It is just that Ferrari doesnt execute. Its more about what Ferrari isn't doing, than what RB does.
They don’t have the experience of all these mega sharp pin point strategy decisions we see from the likes of red bull. Their pit wall can’t even decide when to make a basic pitstop these days. Look at sainz doing 17 laps on the hard tyre when it should have done double that. And all they had left was a medium which was going to give him a realistic 20laps of pace before needing to stop again. So they basically committed him to a 2 stop strategy at the first safety car when everyone else on hard tyres going to the end.
Vastly all red bull need to do is throw some strategy curveballs when they see the smallest things happening and it would throw Ferrari off.
Charles hasn’t got the ‘skill set’ to become a WDC just yet, he’s nowhere near as refined as Max in his driving yet.
All max needs now is to get another couple more wins under his belt with a bit of Ferrari/Charles misfortune and he will be able to ‘cruise’ to the end by simply picking up points and bringing the car home.
https://www.gpblog.com/en/news/119152/f ... Sa0Za0eABIIn a statement, the FIA have confirmed that their system had an issue during the virtual safety car period towards the end of the French Grand Prix. Guanyu Zhou stopped out on the circuit causing the VSC with four laps remaining.
In the build-up to this period, Sergio Perez and George Russell were engaged in a brilliant battle for third place. It looked like Perez had the advantage but the VSC gave Russell another chance. When the VSC is ready to end, an 'ending' message appears and the track returns to green at a random moment within a small timeframe. The ending period went on slightly longer and Red Bull questioned this post-race. The FIA confirmed that something went wrong.
FIA statement
"A second VSC ending message was sent due to a hardware issue, which led to an automated switch to backup systems that worked exactly as they should in that scenario," the statement said.