Lando did 6 stints in Bahrain. Obviously if you slap on a new set of tyres every 9 laps you are going to have some decent lap times. Even so, his first stint was in the 1:40s, second in the 39s, third in the 38s, fourth in the 37s etc. Oscar starts out immediately in the 38s, then does a 20 lap stint in the mid to low 37s, then drops to a high 35 on the final stint. He's miles quicker than Lando despite using less tyres and doing 3 less pit stops. So no, the point you are trying to make is not valid.Emag wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 22:55https://i.ibb.co/DppDyWr/image.png
Lando 2023 Bahrain, Midrace stint, Average -> 38.2
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https://i.ibb.co/Sy7y11J/image.png
Oscar 2024 Pre-Season, Midrace stint "simulation", Average -> 37.8
So the 2024 car is just 0.4s per lap faster than the initial spec MCL60?
The car which is supposed to be at least 0.5s faster per lap over the Abu Dhabi spec 2023 car (based on team's comments about gains they needed to find), which in turn was estimated to be anywhere near from 0.8 to 1s faster than the Bahrain spec MCL60?
Oscar wasn't pushing at all ...
EDIT : The laptimes were pulled pulled from the same amount of laps after the beginning of the race for Lando and the beginning of the race sim for Oscar
Those were 2nd and 3rd stints. He was doing low 38s and high 37s respectifully. You're averaging it wrong.Cs98 wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 23:07Lando did 6 stints in Bahrain. Obviously if you slap on a new set of tyres every 9 laps you are going to have some decent lap times. Even so, his first stint was in the 1:40s, second in the 39s, third in the 38s, fourth in the 37s etc. Oscar starts out immediately in the 38s, then does a 20 lap stint in the mid to low 37s, then drops to a high 35 on the final stint. He's miles quicker than Lando despite using less tyres and doing 3 less pit stops. So no, the point you are trying to make is not valid.Emag wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 22:55https://i.ibb.co/DppDyWr/image.png
Lando 2023 Bahrain, Midrace stint, Average -> 38.2
=========================================================================================
https://i.ibb.co/Sy7y11J/image.png
Oscar 2024 Pre-Season, Midrace stint "simulation", Average -> 37.8
So the 2024 car is just 0.4s per lap faster than the initial spec MCL60?
The car which is supposed to be at least 0.5s faster per lap over the Abu Dhabi spec 2023 car (based on team's comments about gains they needed to find), which in turn was estimated to be anywhere near from 0.8 to 1s faster than the Bahrain spec MCL60?
Oscar wasn't pushing at all ...
EDIT : The laptimes were pulled pulled from the same amount of laps after the beginning of the race for Lando and the beginning of the race sim for Oscar
I'm averaging perfectly fine. His 2nd and 3rd stint he was averaging a low 39 and a mid 38 respectively. I've no idea how you are arriving at these strange numbers. It helps pressing the "hide outliers" button to get a better picture.Emag wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 23:11Those were 2nd and 3rd stints. He was doing low 38s and high 37s respectifully. You're averaging it wrong.Cs98 wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 23:07Lando did 6 stints in Bahrain. Obviously if you slap on a new set of tyres every 9 laps you are going to have some decent lap times. Even so, his first stint was in the 1:40s, second in the 39s, third in the 38s, fourth in the 37s etc. Oscar starts out immediately in the 38s, then does a 20 lap stint in the mid to low 37s, then drops to a high 35 on the final stint. He's miles quicker than Lando despite using less tyres and doing 3 less pit stops. So no, the point you are trying to make is not valid.Emag wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 22:55https://i.ibb.co/DppDyWr/image.png
Lando 2023 Bahrain, Midrace stint, Average -> 38.2
=========================================================================================
https://i.ibb.co/Sy7y11J/image.png
Oscar 2024 Pre-Season, Midrace stint "simulation", Average -> 37.8
So the 2024 car is just 0.4s per lap faster than the initial spec MCL60?
The car which is supposed to be at least 0.5s faster per lap over the Abu Dhabi spec 2023 car (based on team's comments about gains they needed to find), which in turn was estimated to be anywhere near from 0.8 to 1s faster than the Bahrain spec MCL60?
Oscar wasn't pushing at all ...
EDIT : The laptimes were pulled pulled from the same amount of laps after the beginning of the race for Lando and the beginning of the race sim for Oscar
The 2023 car is "enjoying" the benefit of having fresher tires, but they had an hydraulic problem. They couldn't really push so this is not as fast as they could go.
The race simulation Oscar run in the last day is not representative of the pace of the car, because if it is, McLaren is slower than Sauber
If that turns out to be the case in Bahrain, then by all means, I'll accept that I am wrong.
Either way, I just dont think the gap to Ferrari is 0.7s
It's way too big for a team which has publicly stated the aim is victories and the higher constructor positions for this year.
With that sort of gap they can kiss goodbye to both of those goals.
And now we argue gap differences in the “tenths” based on “testing data”… Wow.Cs98 wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 21:47The gap in the first and third stints is something like 7-8 tenths, so let's not kid ourselves it's only the middle stint that shows a big gap. If you are expecting to be within 2-3 tenths of Ferrari (not to mention Red Bull) I think you are in for a rude awakening come Saturday. I think the real gap will be at least half a second here in the race, maybe more (to Ferrari).Emag wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 19:24The problem is that the data is really difficult to read because the stints were quite different in the number of laps as well as the approach.
Oscar first stint had 14 laps on C3, Leclerc had 18 laps on C3
Oscar second stint had 21 laps on C1, Leclerc had 17 laps on C1
And for the final stint, Oscar had 11 laps on C3, Leclerc had 6 laps on C3
So we have 46 laps for Oscar and 41 laps for Leclerc
Now, if we do take the averages of those middle stints, the average of Oscar is indeed around 1s off Leclerc, but the thing is, Oscar's stint was not natural in how it was progressing, because while Leclerc was getting slower towards the end as you expect it to, Oscar was actually getting faster, which implies they were not running a true race simulation.
And something that is very noticeable in Oscar's stints, is that he actually starts out relatively slow before going faster and stabilizing in a certain x laptime.
It just seems to me that they were doing a pre-planned programme in tyre management in order to help Oscar get a better feel on the tire under different circumstances.
Add to this the fact that Leclerc's first stint was actually longer, which means he had less fuel on the car when he got to the C1s, plus the unknown initial fuel loads (Leclerc ended the full simulation with less laps), I don't think those middle stints are comparable 1:1 at all.
The last C3 stint though, perhaps paints a better picture. And if you discount the laps where it seems the deg was significant, the gap was closer to 0.5s.
Considering that Oscar had this tendency of not pushing during practice sessions (pretty often we have seen race simulations run on FP2 when he seemed pretty far off, and that didn't turn out to be the case come race day). and also the fact that you would probably expect Lando to still have the upper hand on him when it comes to race pace, especially on such a high-deg track, that doesn't seem too unreasonable to be honest.
McLaren said themselves they are behind Ferrari and RedBull. I think the gap, in Lando's hands under real racing conditions, is probably closer to 0.2-0.3s
Lando Norris believes his McLaren team is still "a very long way behind Red Bull and a long way behind Ferrari" after Formula 1's Bahrain winter test.
To be fair, Lando seems to be a glass half empty kinda guy most of the time. I think he likes being surprised when things go well.mendis wrote: ↑26 Feb 2024, 04:52https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/norr ... /10579450/
Lando Norris believes his McLaren team is still "a very long way behind Red Bull and a long way behind Ferrari" after Formula 1's Bahrain winter test.
We've definately taken a jump. But trying to find comparative meaning between this year and last year is not possible for us, But the point i was making is the Mcl60 numbers aren't like the Mcl38 either, that is totally untrue to suggest any similarity in performance between this and last year, either in race or testing.MCLvamos wrote: ↑26 Feb 2024, 03:08The worst case scenario without it being genuinely concerning is 0.5s+ delta to Red Bull, and 0.2-0.3s max delta to Ferrari. Whilst it would still signal a disappointing winter where a team changing concept has leapfrogged us, it is a decent position to develop from and we can fight for P2 in the constructors from there, which should be the goal this year. If it's any more than that of a gap to Ferrari in Bahrain, it will be a slam dunk at most circuits in terms of the pecking order and we will struggle to out develop them in any meaningful way. I doubt any steps we take with upgrades will give us the same *relative* jump as Austria last year given we should already be pretty close to the front as a baseline. Not sure about you guys, but I'm really nervous for next week.