AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Sep 2023, 03:04
avantman wrote: ↑02 Sep 2023, 23:36
Xyz22 wrote: ↑02 Sep 2023, 21:40
Albano came up with a similar number to mine. According to him, Sainz advantage in the straights accounted for almost 0.2s, in small part explained by a better exit out of some corners.
the numbers on the graph above show Leclerc is anything but a 'short corner driver'. Verstappen is and Sainz is much closer to him than Leclerc, contrary to what Formula 1 propagandist Peter Windsor says.
Max is cornering for just 15% of the lap, 74.3% of the lap at full throttle. Carlos cornering for 16.9% , at full throttle for 72% and Charles numbers are 19.3% and 70.9%. Isn't that why Charles looks so much better in the corners gaining lap time on Sainz and then losing on the straights, that are simply always longer for him, he spends less time at full throttle.
Great data and the graph, thanks!
Interesting observation. It's part of why Verstappen is able to nurse the tires so well.
yeah, these should be correct conclusions if the numbers are correct( I can only hope they are). because short corners are all about how much time you spend in the corner, not about the distance(as Windsor understands it, incorrectly). I made a mistake in the last sentence though, straights are shorter for Charles, not longer.