Were Red Bulls managing even more? Or does Aston really has potential to be on par with Red Bulls??
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Max was being asked to drive to 37s by his race engineer, IIRC. Surely could have gone much faster.majki2111 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 18:27I had some free time and watched Alonsos race onboard. After passing Sainz he was on par or even half a second to a second faster than Red Bulls. Bulls were in low to mid 37s, other in high 37s. He was in high 36s. He was in 7/10 tyre management avoiding curbs and managing sliding in turn 12 I think.
Were Red Bulls managing even more? Or does Aston really has potential to be on par with Red Bulls??![]()
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Both RB and AMR were heavily managing towards the end. Imo, we didn't see either car's true potential in Bahrain. Unfortunately it all ended when Alonso fell back on the opening lap.majki2111 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 18:27I had some free time and watched Alonsos race onboard. After passing Sainz he was on par or even half a second to a second faster than Red Bulls. Bulls were in low to mid 37s, other in high 37s. He was in high 36s. He was in 7/10 tyre management avoiding curbs and managing sliding in turn 12 I think.
Were Red Bulls managing even more? Or does Aston really has potential to be on par with Red Bulls??![]()
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Didn't see the real pace of either carmajki2111 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 18:27I had some free time and watched Alonsos race onboard. After passing Sainz he was on par or even half a second to a second faster than Red Bulls. Bulls were in low to mid 37s, other in high 37s. He was in high 36s. He was in 7/10 tyre management avoiding curbs and managing sliding in turn 12 I think.
Were Red Bulls managing even more? Or does Aston really has potential to be on par with Red Bulls??![]()
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.majki2111 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 18:27I had some free time and watched Alonsos race onboard. After passing Sainz he was on par or even half a second to a second faster than Red Bulls. Bulls were in low to mid 37s, other in high 37s. He was in high 36s. He was in 7/10 tyre management avoiding curbs and managing sliding in turn 12 I think.
Were Red Bulls managing even more? Or does Aston really has potential to be on par with Red Bulls??![]()
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Thanks very much KimiRai- much appreciatedKimiRai wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 18:05After passing Sainz he was +26 seconds off Perez. After some laps he got to +24 seconds off, then again in the end finished +26 seconds off. You can check telemetry + Alonso's radio hereMansell89 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 17:12Any idea where Alonso would have been in race trim in clean air versus the Red Bulls?
Obviously he got stuck behind Mercedes to start with and eventually Ferrari- before then turning the engine down (as did Max and Checo).
Any idea what the race lap time differential was?
I know he wouldn’t have been a threat for race win but interested to have an idea of the gap.
According to Scarbs, the AMR23's floor edge is very simple.
Dan has always been highly appreciative of Newey and has learned a lot from him, doesn't mean that he can't come up with his own ideas or every good idea on the grid somehow comes from newey and the rest are only copiers.Wouter wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 12:15.snajam wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 11:40.
Isn't it? That last paragraph is exactly what I mean, an unnecessary and false dig, how is the Amr23 last year's RB? How is it copying? They're just subtle ways of taking credit for others work. I've usually sided with RB when it makes sense but unfortunately it seems the non technical brass (including checo) have gone blind.
You wont hear these statements from Newey, as they are factually untrue. Never did we hear Alpine accusing amr when the most unique visible feature on the car comes from them.
Dream On! Dan Fallows has worked with Newey for 15 years and knows his way of working inside out.
It's only natural that he remembers his good designs and uses some of it.
Haven’t seen comparative tunnel shots to make that determination 100% but yes indeed above floor, they’ve definitely done their own thing with bodyworksnajam wrote: ↑12 Mar 2023, 11:25Dan has always been highly appreciative of Newey and has learned a lot from him, doesn't mean that he can't come up with his own ideas or every good idea on the grid somehow comes from newey and the rest are only copiers.Wouter wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 12:15.snajam wrote: ↑11 Mar 2023, 11:40
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Isn't it? That last paragraph is exactly what I mean, an unnecessary and false dig, how is the Amr23 last year's RB? How is it copying? They're just subtle ways of taking credit for others work. I've usually sided with RB when it makes sense but unfortunately it seems the non technical brass (including checo) have gone blind.
You wont hear these statements from Newey, as they are factually untrue. Never did we hear Alpine accusing amr when the most unique visible feature on the car comes from them.
Dream On! Dan Fallows has worked with Newey for 15 years and knows his way of working inside out.
It's only natural that he remembers his good designs and uses some of it.
Anyway the argument was and it still holds that the car is not an RB18 copy, visually and from what can be seen of the floor. So the statements from the RB camp are untrue, unless you can provide concrete contrary evidence via pictures instead of 'dream on'.
About the tunnels we can't say, but the fence arrangement is different (a bit vanilla on the amr atm imo). They've got rid of the 2 prong outboard turning vane. Diffuser exit is different. Floor edge seems like an evolution of last year (rb18ish) but rather simple compared to the grid.101FlyingDutchman wrote: ↑
Haven’t seen comparative tunnel shots to make that determination 100% but yes indeed above floor, they’ve definitely done their own thing with bodywork