![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)
Tho i expect them they are honing-in new simulations tools under help of sportscars side also.
Beacuse i got hints driver in loop simulator needs some tuning. Those pesky ground effects dammn it.
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)
Some more info here from that interview, especially as regards limitations on development imposed by chassis configuration and loss of DF with steered front wheels/yaw/cross-wind:organic wrote: ↑28 Dec 2023, 20:02Cardile interview about '23/'24
https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... interview/
Link to translation
https://www.reddit.com/r/formula1/comme ... nt/kf9wvzm
Maybe he's meaning that antidive allows playing more with suspension stiffness and ride height.
Could be, but not explained that way. But again—and this is most likely the reason it’s mentioned—RB have little anti-dive effect and recently both Cardile and another F1 design tech (can’t recall at this time) mentioned how suspensions are designed primarily with aero in mind and kinematics adapted to be just good enough. In fact, I believe SF-23 probably has a higher lateral instant center than RB due to its more horizontal lower wishbone.AmateurDriver wrote: ↑29 Dec 2023, 14:53Maybe he's meaning that antidive allows playing more with suspension stiffness and ride height.
Ferrari 2024: found 30 more load points than the SF-23 Japan Spec. That half-second (although the actual gain depends on many other technical factors) which, according to Andrea Stella, is what Mclaren should also find to remain competitive at the start of next season. However, at Maranello, but more or less in all the teams, there is caution after what happened last season. Will it be enough to catch up with Red Bull? Only the track will be able to tell, considering that no team can know how much the technical team headed by Pierre Wache has held back in terms of the RB19's development, remembering also the limitations imposed by the Fia after the 2022 budget gate, only reset in November.
I see the pre-season hype is startingorganic wrote: ↑03 Jan 2024, 13:00Italian media coming with the information
https://formu1a.uno/en/ferrari-2024-upd ... -progress/
Key info is that they've found 30 pts of downforce (4-5 tenths) in the tunnel. What else they can achieve will come from mechanics, moving aerodynamic envelope, tyre wear etc. but the 4-5 tenths number is from the aero step alone that their tunnel tells them
Ferrari 2024: found 30 more load points than the SF-23 Japan Spec. That half-second (although the actual gain depends on many other technical factors) which, according to Andrea Stella, is what Mclaren should also find to remain competitive at the start of next season. However, at Maranello, but more or less in all the teams, there is caution after what happened last season. Will it be enough to catch up with Red Bull? Only the track will be able to tell, considering that no team can know how much the technical team headed by Pierre Wache has held back in terms of the RB19's development, remembering also the limitations imposed by the Fia after the 2022 budget gate, only reset in November.
It seems a lot of people stopped watching this season early, which I can't blame them for in all honesty. Ferrari from Belgium onwards had relatively okay tyre deg. They ran into another issue where as the compound got harder they dropped off massively, even more than they did in 2022. Circuits where they were worse off after Belgim were where they just geniunely lacked pace, mainly because the SF-23 lacked downforce. There were some stints where we Ferrari matched Red Bull over a single stint, particularly post Japan, on the softer race tyre.jumpingfish wrote: ↑03 Jan 2024, 16:23But to beat the RB20, the 676 must save its tires and be 1s faster than the SF23 during the race, otherwise there will be no titles fight.![]()
Again, I'm not suggesting RB are at the ceiling, but them being so much quicker means they are at the very least closer to it.AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Jan 2024, 18:03I actually do think Ferrari and Mercedes will find 1 second over the winter. Their prior cars were fundamentally flawed. They wouldn't be making these big changes just to find a few tenths. The data would have to be overwhelming to justify spending that money on a different concept.
I also think that no team is near any ceiling. The budget cap and the aero restrictions are a massive setback to development pace.