mwillems wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 00:58
organic wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 07:09
Considering I think Leclerc could've finished ahead of Norris if they had chosen not to attempt a 1-stop, a P2 result and points gained to Merc, Ferrari, and a place in wdc for Norris is exceptional. Bad luck with oscar.
The sprint weekend meant a suboptimal setup. And Ferrari/Merc were not necessarily legal, so the gaps shouldn't be looked at too closely
I think it does indicate that the car prefers smoother tracks however
I was just reading through and noticed this. Why do you think the car prefers smooth tracks? I know Austin was tough and you could argue we had the 2nd, 3rd or 4th fastest car depending on your perspective or bias, but Singapore we had the second fastest car on merit, Merc were only catching us due to race circumstances and fresh tyres. I thought the difference was that Singapore in the revised layout "only" had 5 slow speed corners compared to Austin's 7, which also put some slow speed corners together into a tricky sequence that exaggerated the weakness of the car.
Ferrari are particularly good at handling bumps. Have been the best at it all year. Whenever a track is bumpy they outperform their own expectations as others lose performance relative to them.
Mercedes designed the W14 around running quite high ride heights to avoid porpoising altogether. Like Ferrari they lose Less performance when the lower cars have to back off ride height
So the direct competition have cars that handle bumps well relative to the rest of the grid. So McLaren don't necessarily hand bumps "poorly" in general but when a track is bumpy it helps Ferrari/Merc more than them
Additionally I think it was a limiting factor for McLaren at Austin for a couple of reasons. One: in fp1 Norris' engineer was asking him to take different lines through specific sections - most likely to avoid certain bumps that they can see in the data unsettling the car. Stella also mentioned post-race that the bumps in the slow speed cost them a lot
"Braking into Turn 11 and then traction out of Turn 11 was the most problematic phase from a car performance point of view," he explained.
"It was no surprise, it is to do with bumps and with braking and traction in two very low-speed corners, where we said already that we know the car doesn't perform very well.
Oscar also ahead of USA
"Qatar was a very smooth track but also had a lot of fast corners and really no slow corners – which is good news for us. Here, I think the bumps won’t be our friend in particular. I mean it’s never anyone’s friend, but I think we might suffer a bit with that.
I think it's not surprising that the two cars (RB/McLaren) who are miles ahead in terms of medium/high speed performance and perform comparatively better at smooth tracks compared to other teams then struggle more at a bumpier track