without RB
the title battle between Fernando and Lewis would have been one of the greatest of all time in terms of WDC battle.
Was it exactly the same? Ferrari were running a slightly softer rear, is a suggestion I'd seen in Qualifying, I'd imagine there is a few different ways of setting the car up that could lead to the floor hitting the bumps excessively.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 10:39How is it obvious? Ferrari's relative pace was slower for exactly the same thing.Cs98 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 10:28Why would it be? The obvious point here is that Merc's pace relative to RB and McL may have been a consequence of running the car illegally low to the ground, gaining performance from that instead of the upgrade.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 08:10
Would Ferrari's floor have also been illegal at the previous venues it raced at?
Unless of course there is a cognitive bias in isolating Mercedes.
A strawman argument if ever there was one.
“run a legal car” said sarcastically the guy whose team were found 2M over the budget cap and received no penalty!
Talking about straws hahaha. Why do you think it didnt help them? Because they were slower in the race than Ver, Nor and Ham? They were on pole and Sainz in the end finished 5 seconds behind norris and Leclerc on a 2 stop would fight for P3 and/or possibly even with hamilton (long shot though). They simply have a slower car and if anything running lower than possible helped them not be so much off the pace than what they were Qatar, where they finished 33s behind mclarens who had to come trough them and even russell who was last at some point. Your argument is flawed to the bone. Yes, running car as low as possible is essential in this regulation set and it unquestionably gives more performance. They played with fire and got burned, both merc and ferrari.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:30A strawman argument if ever there was one.
The absolute clear point is that it didn't help Ferrari's pace relative to their rivals at all. If anything they fell behind.
But yea ok, I see...helps Mercedes doesn't help Ferrari. Makes sense.
Cs98 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 10:52Ground effect cars run lower to the ground generate more downforce, that much is obvious after two years with these regs. Ferrari's raw pace was as fast as anybody, and their race pace was faster than usual finishing only 15 seconds behind Max. We can not draw any positive conclusions about the real relative pace of competitors running illegal cars. The fact that Merc introduced an upgrade and ran the car illegally obfuscates what is what performance wise, hence why I said it puts the new floor into question. Soon enough we will know what is what.
I do believe there is a cognitive bias, though perhaps not the one you do.
Skid blocks worn beyond allowed limits, therefore not legal come race end = DSQ.
Ahhaa so your strawman argument doesn't account for the same Ferrari finishing ahead of the macca at Singapore?Juzh wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:42Talking about straws hahaha. Why do you think it didnt help them? Because they were slower in the race than Ver, Nor and Ham? They were on pole and Sainz in the end finished 5 seconds behind norris and Leclerc on a 2 stop would fight for P3 and/or possibly even with hamilton (long shot though). They simply have a slower car and if anything running lower than possible helped them not be so much off the pace than what they were Qatar, where they finished 33s behind mclarens who had to come trough them and even russell who was last at some point. Your argument is flawed to the bone. Yes, running car as low as possible is essential in this regulation set and it unquestionably gives more performance. They played with fire and got burned, both merc and ferrari.
So you're pretty much implying that Mercedes knew about it and intentionally went ahead with a setup that could get them DSQed...Juzh wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:50Skid blocks worn beyond allowed limits, therefore not legal come race end = DSQ.
As has been mention in race thread Ocon got DSQ when his accidently engine overfueled for a fraction of a second when he struck kerb hard.
Ricciardo was DSQ in singapore when his mgu-k briefly overrevved.
not difficult to understand. No one's stopping mercedes running the car 1 or 2 cm higher but then instead of fighting for wins they'd be 30s off the pace. Single practice session is no excuse.
Of course I dont expect you to understand any of this, but here we are.
Agree.
mclaren had an upgrade in singapore and has since left ferrari for dust. Interestingly ferrari only managed to close up by running their car in such a state they couldn't guarantee legality over a race distance.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:56Ahhaa so your strawman argument doesn't account for the same Ferrari finishing ahead of the macca at Singapore?Juzh wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:42Talking about straws hahaha. Why do you think it didnt help them? Because they were slower in the race than Ver, Nor and Ham? They were on pole and Sainz in the end finished 5 seconds behind norris and Leclerc on a 2 stop would fight for P3 and/or possibly even with hamilton (long shot though). They simply have a slower car and if anything running lower than possible helped them not be so much off the pace than what they were Qatar, where they finished 33s behind mclarens who had to come trough them and even russell who was last at some point. Your argument is flawed to the bone. Yes, running car as low as possible is essential in this regulation set and it unquestionably gives more performance. They played with fire and got burned, both merc and ferrari.
Or Monza? Or Zandvoort?
Instead we must believe that Mercedes update is the reason for illegality.
And Ferrari's previously legal floor is not intrinsically legal(utterly ridiculous).
Because (enter tiny sample size) to validate?
Not because it's a bumpy track with a low amount of practice time. No. Couldn't possible be that.
By spinning the argument this way you're admitting mercedes f**ked up. However technical rules are black and white and long understood, whereas financial regs were new and changed even during course of the season, but i'm not getting into that again.AMG.Tzan wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:59So you're pretty much implying that Mercedes knew about it and intentionally went ahead with a setup that could get them DSQed...Juzh wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:50Skid blocks worn beyond allowed limits, therefore not legal come race end = DSQ.
As has been mention in race thread Ocon got DSQ when his accidently engine overfueled for a fraction of a second when he struck kerb hard.
Ricciardo was DSQ in singapore when his mgu-k briefly overrevved.
not difficult to understand. No one's stopping mercedes running the car 1 or 2 cm higher but then instead of fighting for wins they'd be 30s off the pace. Single practice session is no excuse.
Of course I dont expect you to understand any of this, but here we are.
The same way for example Red Bull knew exactly what they were doing by overspending 2M but hoped they could get away with it (which they did) by saying it was "catering costs"! They could easily have spent 2M less and end up 30s off the pace.
I too don't expect you to understand my points but there you go.
It has everything to do with the team and how they choose to set-up the car. Bumps, kerbs, all known factors which you can account for. The car was illegal and correctly got DQd, same goes for Charles.AMG.Tzan wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 13:39“run a legal car” said sarcastically the guy whose team were found 2M over the budget cap and received no penalty!
The car was perfectly legal! Skid block wear has nothing to do with the team! It usually gets worn out by stuff like kerbs and off track excursions! If it was worn out due to setup it would have caused issues already in the Sprint! When you’ve got 2 qualifying sessions and 2 races on a track so bumpy as COTA it’s only normal that some teams may have worn out skid blocks!
Skid blocks were supposed to be removed with the 2022 regulations as they bring nothing but weight to the cars! They were a fast measure introduced back in the middle of 1994 to prevent cars from stalling! There’s no such thing anymore…
Btw usually it’s only 1 car that’s taken for inspection! Red Bull has been the only team able to run its car so close to the ground yet they got inspected at a race that they weren’t dominant! Probably “randomly”