Indeed. Lando will take his time on the long approach, prioritise arriving with a full battery and cooler tyres. He's not stressing the tyres when behind a car by trying to be as close as possible. He picks his overtaking opportunity and then it begins, throwing everything in to try to get it done quickly. If it doesn't work after a couple if tries he backs off to a 2 to 3 second gap and then goes again.LionsHeart wrote: ↑27 Aug 2024, 02:06Regarding the very first sentence. The problem here is not the car, but only Oscar. He wants a lot from the tires to stay close to his rival. And thus he kills his tires, instead of taking a breather, as Lando did. Oscar also attacked aggressively to catch up first with Russell, and then with Leclerc. There were not enough tires to make another attack. The pace of the cars simply equalized. I think Oscar needs to accelerate a little smoother, and not attack with all his money at once.Emag wrote: ↑26 Aug 2024, 15:00Oscar is just a little bit inconsistent and he struggles when following in the dirty air. The car is bad with handling dirty air in general but Lando deals with it quite a bit better.
Anyway, looking forward to Monza now. A very important test for the car and the team. If they remain in the hunt for the win at a track like that, then there’s no reason why they can’t be competitive in all of the remaining races.
Would also be interesting to see if Ferrari joins the fight at the front again with their rumored upgrade package.
Oscar will possibly not be able to keep his tyres as cool on the long approach and when close, seems to be always looking for opportunities, always harassing. It looks nice, but it seems not very efficient. The tyres don't get a breather and eventually lose their life.
To be fair, it's something Lando has only started doing since the car improved last year, but there is some racecraft and tyre management still to go.
It works better at some tracks than others and I think a small part it is experience of the track.