"I will note one point for myself: in the previous two years, I do not remember Dan losing control of the rear of the car until the turn (reversal). But at Silverstone at Red Bull he had this, although before that he had driven a Red Bull simulator for six months and in theory should have gotten used to the balance of the car. This means that Red Bull has extremely high grip on the front wheels and medium grip on the rear."
A valid observation, but I'd take a slightly different view of this in the context of McL rear inconsistent grip characteristic.
Firstly DR at RB, it was a tyre test without usual setup and optimisation of chassis as I understand it, and likely to have some orientation period for him in working from sym to real time track work. No excuse, but clear gaps in this time from regular race time for him.
More interesting for me was DR time in McL (emphatically this is NOT a driver level comparison, so no comments from that direction to derail thread please ) with his description of chassis around never really knowing what characteristic it'll bring on corner entry, to the ultimate negative effect on his pace and trusting it completely.
Compare that to LN and his undoubted ability to cope more naturally with that rear instability DR observed. DR in this instance has far more judgement, in time basis, from driving previous chassis than LN, and to me that view exposed the stall in development path from McL chassis engineering.
The question over which driving characteristic brings the most productive path, coping or accurate comparative criticism, is something for each team of engineers to answer.
In other words, would a chassis fully able to satisfy that experienced look from DR be the right path to follow ? as it could honestly provide the right impetus to engineering in their consideration of geometry to close the gap on lead teams.
My view is that LN can drive around some inherent chassis imbalance with his undoubted skill. Whether that combination of "coping" can truly match the firepower of a very on-song competitor (you know who
) is a different question, one that's answered each week with NO.
To beat, or be fully competitive with the championship leading teams will need these nuance to be ironed out. A chassis that comes with less compromise needed, even for a highly skilled driving combination, will ultimately be the backstop against getting caught on track without a consistent race pace to match the others.
How they get there of course we are observing through developments this season.