Xyz22 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2024, 22:04
I'm absolutely not competent enough on this matter to even try answering the question.
I'm not even saying that Dialtone was correct (i have absolutely no idea), just tried to explain in different terms because i thought some didn't understand exactly what he was trying to say.
I got what dialtone was thinking and so do others.
My point is that insufficient aero isn't the reason, otherwise the car slides and deg gets worse. There was no tyre saving to extend, Leclerc ran the race to the limit of car's capabilities, while Sainz somehow looked compromised but I didn't see yet what was the reason.
AR3-GP wrote: ↑21 Apr 2024, 22:05
I also can't answer this, but why Mclaren's car works isn't going to tell us about how Ferrari's car works. There's no correlation. They are different cars.
Luckily, tyres work the same
dialtone wrote: ↑21 Apr 2024, 22:16
The net result is you are cranking one of your setup levers to the extreme (DF) which is going to limit how much you have to play with the others to find a compromise. And this makes setup harder to balance since you need at least that 60 to go around the lap.
Answered to Xyz above, when you lack aero load you slide and deg when you push. When you push and are at the limit but slower than expected, you lack tyre grip because you're under the temp window
We've seen the opposite happen to Ferrari a lot last year and these situations happening to RB last year, but they always had the most downforce so they were able to offset occasional lack of tyre grip. Remember Silverstone, when McLaren was brilliant in colder weather and was able to extend M as long as Max, then switched to Hards and still made them work even when Max switched to Softs only to finish a few seconds off Max.