I'm cautiously optimistic. Lot of work has been done, including the Monza test.
Of course there will be no wonders, they can only play with setups until Austin, but I expect them to be better than Monza.
at least setup wise, Baku normally is also an easy track to get right, as is mainly consists of similar corner types.
With the report that they are reverting to the Japan spec floor, it puts them a few development steps behind the others. This effect may cancel out any benefit they got from going to a track where their wings are closer to the others.search wrote: ↑12 Sep 2024, 17:02at least setup wise, Baku normally is also an easy track to get right, as is mainly consists of similar corner types.
Mechanically it may be a different story, and it's also not one which suits Verstappen particularly well, but I doubt Red Bull will be as far off as in Monza.
yeah, but none of their developments this year came with improvements anyway. And in Spielberg Verstappen still took pole by half a second.AR3-GP wrote: ↑12 Sep 2024, 17:25With the report that they are reverting to the Japan spec floor, it puts them a few development steps behind the others. This effect may cancel out any benefit they got from going to a track where their wings are closer to the others.search wrote: ↑12 Sep 2024, 17:02at least setup wise, Baku normally is also an easy track to get right, as is mainly consists of similar corner types.
Mechanically it may be a different story, and it's also not one which suits Verstappen particularly well, but I doubt Red Bull will be as far off as in Monza.
The engineers found a substantial lack of correlation between the simulator data and what was being collected on track, leading to a decision to only analyse the latter to determine car set-up more effectively.
RacingNews365 understands that for the Baku weekend, the floors of both RB20s for Verstappen and Sergio Perez will take on something akin to a 'patchwork'.
The floor will be composed of a mix of three different evolutions, with the radical step considered by the engineers to be the most logical solution to avoid wasting the effort and resources spent on producing each evolution.
Although the team does recognise that the sum of the individual elements does not equate to the overall competitiveness, the radical step was the only plausible choice the team had, considering the short amount of time available.
sounds like the perfect receipe for a nightmareThe floor will be composed of a mix of three different evolutions, with the radical step considered by the engineers to be the most logical solution to avoid wasting the effort and resources spent on producing each evolution.
Although the team does recognise that the sum of the individual elements does not equate to the overall competitiveness, the radical step was the only plausible choice the team had, considering the short amount of time available
While I agree with most of your points, the one I disagree will be about spa. They had to take a new engine ? Which other track would you rather take the engine ? They proved themselves by being fastest in Q. It turned out that the shortened DRS zones (which they could have modelled into sims) and most importantly, the massive tailwind from EauRouge to the the 90 degree turn at the end of straight made overtaking very hard, not just for Redbull, for all teams. That couldn't be predicted, so we should cut some slack there.Sergej wrote: ↑11 Sep 2024, 08:12I am much more angry for the presumption errors the trackside team made, thinking that you can overtake easily in Budapest, that you can afford an engine penalty in the possibly only track left where win is achievable, not to mention the clown shows with the brakes in Melbourne and the engine in Montreal, which costed a ton of points.
What do you mean ? They won't win the WCC this year, it's clear as daylight.
sounds like Mercedes circa 2022