Behind Merc and MCL on a supposedly favorable track.
Not good.
Sainz did a good job, Charles was on it until the last lap.
Zhou ruined his lap, obviously not his fault but having another car close in front ruins visibility.CouncilorIrissa wrote:Behind Merc and MCL on a supposedly favorable track.
Not good.
Sainz did a good job, Charles was on it until the last lap.
Ah, he had Zhou ahead of him? Makes sense then, unfortunate.
Lucky to escape there
Does not look like it, the impact was far too light.
What are your thoughts on the impact low-grip, but dry conditions make on relative car performance in general? Are they beneficial for the SF24 because of all the sliding causing higher wear? Or am I getting this wrong?
When you have a problem with deg on a normal track, you'll have a bigger problem on low grip track compared to a car that's good or great on deg, since every car will slide more than usual. Top 5 cars seem to be in almost the same downforce trim between themselves, so there's no reason to expect things to be any different than Suzuka.CouncilorIrissa wrote: ↑19 Apr 2024, 11:30What are your thoughts on the impact low-grip, but dry conditions make on relative car performance in general? Are they beneficial for the SF24 because of all the sliding causing higher wear? Or am I getting this wrong?
Some of y'all are wildly spoiled if you think legit championship contending cars in any period can leave somebody as just a 'meh' TD. smhCouncilorIrissa wrote: ↑18 Apr 2024, 20:31You can if it's achieved through illegal means. And if it was a legitimate grey area, then it's on Binotto again for not getting his way the FIA.
And two out of three wins came from circuits that reward engine power disproportionately. Post-Singapore the chassis had finally became somewhat competent, but race pace still remained a weakness that was never rectified under Binotto.
I'm not saying that I hate the guy, but his work, both as TP as well as TD was meh at best.
He did a good job with the 2022 PU though, credit where credit is due.