https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... r1I2pJx71Gdialtone wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 19:30I agree. Norris was pushing until the last 4-5 laps.yooogurt wrote:There is no way that Norris did not push not only in last stint, even at the end stint when the first victory in F1 was looming, more than sure that he push on all hundred to get the maximum possible gap in case of a surprising vsc at the end.
https://f1pace.com/p/2024-miami-gp-was- ... to-damage/
We’re not even the only one that agree on this topic, that’s an article that also shares the same:
I’m sure some people will say that the gap wasn’t representative in S2 because Lando could’ve been saving the tires just to avoid any major surprises, but I find that unlikely. Norris kept doing strong lap after strong lap, and it wasn’t until the last few laps that it was clear that Max wasn’t going to get to him. You can even see how from laps 46 to 51 Max picked up the pace and tried to close the gap, but was unable to.
Marchionne was not good at all, politically we were weaker than ever, and Toto was just destroying us in FIA offices. Now in addition to a great team we need political will for sure, without it we can get an analog of TD39 and no Newey will not save us.AmateurDriver wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 19:58A few words only, since I have been warned not to dig too much into the implications of Agnelli/Elkann controlling Ferrari (and I'm aligning to moderator's request even though I don't agree with him). Marchionne (let alone Elkann) would NEVER strive (and pay) to snatch Brown Byrne Schumi from the competition.
more likely his new race engineer will forget to mention faster car behind doing a push lap in qualy and Charles gets grid penalty .. but his new race engineer is familiar and not a total new person, and he was Charles performance engineer, we would often see him in the tv as well. hope he is up for the task.Sphere3758 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 20:18Imagine the scenes if Charles wins his first race with the new race engineer.
I remember reading about how Max and GP hit it off instantly as they started with a win.
I have watch a fair amount (~80%) of the races since the start of 2022 from Charles onboard (quali and FPs too, thx multiviewer) and I thought Xavi had improved hugely in the last 2 years. Him and Charles had worked out traffic really well (mostly). I don't watch other onboard so maybe I was just impressed in the improvement and not the absolute performance.
I'm not a Moderator, those guys post very rarely and have aquamarine (blue green) username colour. The topic is Ferrari team 2024, there are many off topic posts reported and deleted regularly. Us older members do what we can to help Moderators and we care to keep team and car topics as clean as possible, so that fans and members can enjoy meaningful content and feel encouraged to engage even more.AmateurDriver wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 19:58A few words only, since I have been warned not to dig too much into the implications of Agnelli/Elkann controlling Ferrari (and I'm aligning to moderator's request even though I don't agree with him). Marchionne (let alone Elkann) would NEVER strive (and pay) to snatch Brown Byrne Schumi from the competition.
China was the worst race and Australia was the best race for Ferrari. Everywhere else, they have been behind RedBull but by less than 0.4s per lap on average.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 21:12If we're expecting a performance gain of anywhere from 0.25 to 0.4 tenths. Where would that leave Ferrari? Does anyone have strategy and outlier-adjusted race pace data from previous GPs to compare against? I keep seeing 2 tenths this, 4 tenths that. Does that translate to beating Red Bull (Verstappen) at any of the previous races, or does it simply bring Ferrari very, very close to them? What has the average pace difference between Verstappen and the best Ferrari been at any given race? I know the difference at Miami was negligible, but Miami was also a massive outlier. How much would it take to surpass Verstappen at say, Japan or Jeddah?
I know Red Bull are also bringing some decent upgrades at Imola, but could we reasonably expect Ferrari to actually become regular contender for race wins if the improvement predictions from Ferrari turn out to be true? Could they at least be expected to be favourite at certain tracks? Is it just a classic case of hot air and Ferrari hype trains?
I know this question isn't that technical in nature, but I'd love to see the data, which (I think?) qualifies it for this thread?
With current RB spec. Jeddah, 3-4 tenths. Japan, 4-5 tenths. China, 7-8 tenths.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 21:12If we're expecting a performance gain of anywhere from 0.25 to 0.4 tenths. Where would that leave Ferrari? Does anyone have strategy and outlier-adjusted race pace data from previous GPs to compare against? I keep seeing 2 tenths this, 4 tenths that. Does that translate to beating Red Bull (Verstappen) at any of the previous races, or does it simply bring Ferrari very, very close to them? What has the average pace difference between Verstappen and the best Ferrari been at any given race? I know the difference at Miami was negligible, but Miami was also a massive outlier. How much would it take to surpass Verstappen at say, Japan or Jeddah?
I know Red Bull are also bringing some decent upgrades at Imola, but could we reasonably expect Ferrari to actually become regular contender for race wins if the improvement predictions from Ferrari turn out to be true? Could they at least be expected to be favourite at certain tracks? Is it just a classic case of hot air and Ferrari hype trains?
I know this question isn't that technical in nature, but I'd love to see the data, which (I think?) qualifies it for this thread?
Allegedly RedBull also bringing some upgrades, it would depend on how much of an upgrade RB is brining.Emag wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 21:19China was the worst race and Australia was the best race for Ferrari. Everywhere else, they have been behind RedBull but by less than 0.4s per lap on average.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 21:12If we're expecting a performance gain of anywhere from 0.25 to 0.4 tenths. Where would that leave Ferrari? Does anyone have strategy and outlier-adjusted race pace data from previous GPs to compare against? I keep seeing 2 tenths this, 4 tenths that. Does that translate to beating Red Bull (Verstappen) at any of the previous races, or does it simply bring Ferrari very, very close to them? What has the average pace difference between Verstappen and the best Ferrari been at any given race? I know the difference at Miami was negligible, but Miami was also a massive outlier. How much would it take to surpass Verstappen at say, Japan or Jeddah?
I know Red Bull are also bringing some decent upgrades at Imola, but could we reasonably expect Ferrari to actually become regular contender for race wins if the improvement predictions from Ferrari turn out to be true? Could they at least be expected to be favourite at certain tracks? Is it just a classic case of hot air and Ferrari hype trains?
I know this question isn't that technical in nature, but I'd love to see the data, which (I think?) qualifies it for this thread?
If the update delivers these numbers, it could mean that Ferrari moves ahead of RedBull.
Average gap to bulls 3-4 tenth in race pace. In the past five races uprage should bring Ferrari close to Verstappen, and in Australia + Miami Ferrari should be beating RB for sure with 2.0 package.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 21:12Does that translate to beating Red Bull (Verstappen) at any of the previous races, or does it simply bring Ferrari very, very close to them? What has the average pace difference between Verstappen and the best Ferrari been at any given race?