Emag wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 19:24
Cs98 wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 16:26
The issue is that the comp here is Leclerc who also did a middle stint on C1, and was on average one second faster than this stint from Piastri. Looking at engine modes and top speeds they look comparable. This is why I fear for McLaren.
The 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