scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑10 Mar 2024, 14:14
I would say traction zones not low speed, since we can generally keep up on th brakes & through mid corner in slow speed but pretty much lose all of it on exit. Ferrari & Aston Martin are the closest in the traction zoens but still not very often able to beat a Red Bull.
And I personally feel you'll have this confirmed in Australia.
BAHRAIN TURN 1
https://ibb.co/71Pw1YW
BAHRAIN TURN 8
https://imgbb.com/
JEDDAH TURN 1-2
https://ibb.co/hDyrTHB
The hallmark of better traction is being on the throttle early. In Bahrain T1-2-3 Max wasn't any earlier on throttle than Leclerc, but he basically dumped the bulk of his 4MJ on the acceleration to T4. You can open the image in another tab and zoom in to see the differences and similarities.
In 2022 Leclerc was slightly earlier on the throttle in T1 exit and notably earlier in T8 and T9 exits - yellow rectangles. You can see his PU is deploying more out of those 2 corners - green diamonds, he's gaining slightly quicker there than Max.
Move to 2024 and Max gained 2 tenths vs Leclerc's Q2 lap in T1-T4 section. They are on the throttle at the same time. Even though Max reaches 95-100% throttle quicker than Leclerc in T1, T8 and T9, Leclerc is still gaining in T8 and T9. Max only had better apex speed in T1, which may have been a bit of an outlier for Ferrari and/or setup compromise. So I don't see better traction, I see them being about equal on traction and Leclerc was tiny bit faster in medium- and high-speed corners.
Bahrain is bumpy (and so is Melbourne) so I think RB lost more from their floor performance with suspension/ride height combo than Ferrari. We could see Ferrari was still slightly better overall in Jeddah corners, but you'd expect them to be a lot better there with bigger wing and I think RB was able to run as low as possible on the perfect Jeddah asphalt and made up a lot of their smaller wing downforce handicap.