Yeah I can see what you mean, but if it is deployment then it just looks like we deploy more earlier in the straight as we overall gain and lose nothing between Spoon and Casio. We spoke about it privately before so I'll elaborate in case anyone is interested..LionsHeart wrote: ↑06 Apr 2024, 17:03Mwillems, regarding the telemetry that you posted: look at the acceleration graph after the Spoon turn and how Max and Lando drag the straight line before turn 130R. There is a drop in speed visible there. Apparently this is the zone where the electrical power begins to decline. In front of this zone, you can see that Lando is winning back quite a bit, but then he begins to lose again in relation to Max. Perhaps this is what we were talking about. Perhaps the McLaren actually expends more energy during acceleration, but then hits the peak power cut-off point earlier.
-here is a graphic for clarity
https://i.ibb.co/2YC2CKh/9-A9567-EE-758 ... 3-FFE7.jpg
There are instances where the Mclaren bleeds speed before a corner whilst others continue to accelerate and this is often within a DRS zone that it is more noticeable, but not exclusive to DRS zones. I want to look at this more and see if this is a real phenomenon, but it looks entirely possible that the issues in the DRS zone could possibly belong to deployment.
However, what I have noted is that this isn't consistent from track to track, but then that makes sense because deployment and regeneration will differ from track to track. Looking at Suzuka I did not notice any early drop in speed like at Jeddah, for instance. Looking at the telemetry after spoon, it just looks like the cars balance out and that there's no advantage.
I did see this phenomenon again at Australia. Corners 9/10. Which when in the race without DRS, we were the fastest through.
Edit: and still probably fastest even dropping speed at the end of the "straight" in Q, to be honest. Monumentally fast.