organic wrote: ↑27 Feb 2024, 16:13
Bisonas wrote: ↑27 Feb 2024, 15:56
organic wrote: ↑27 Feb 2024, 15:29
Because Aston Martin didn't do a race simulation with Alonso
Even if he didn't do a race sim,
he did the same thing as Verstappen and he wasn't far behind in race pace.
Verstappen didn't do a race sim either.
They both did long stints with probably medium to heavy load. Not full heavy load.
You mean both drivers did 3 long run stints with a certain amount of fuel and a certain engine mode
But we don't know those fuel levels and engine modes
We don't know engine modes and "exact" fuel levels on race sims either, but we tent to compare them.
We only know more or less what their minimum fuel load could have been.
So if we are ok comparing Race sims just because they don't add/remove fuel between stints then IMO we can compare similar long runs also. Either way we are just making assumptions here, biased assumption or not, they are just assumptions.
On another note, if you compare Alonso race sim last year and long runs this year you can notice that Alonso always start the stints very conservative, trying to maintain a very conservative Delta time and try to lower his times a bit at the end of the stint. (if deg allows him to do so).
he started his race sim on C3 last year on low 39s and ended the stint at low 38s
This trend, with Alonso easily maintaining his delta on his long runs and try to lower his times at the end of the stint is continuing to exist this year also, showing that AMR/ALONSO combination has very low tire deg, and that Alonso probably could have set his delta more aggressively managing a faster stint.
Personally i like this trend and what i am seeing in the long runs from AMR.