avantman wrote: ↑27 Oct 2024, 14:32
Henk_v wrote: ↑27 Oct 2024, 10:07
Rikhart wrote: ↑27 Oct 2024, 00:09
Is it just me, or this car is now night and day over the kerbs? It looks like a different car now.
Not just you. The RB20 attacks T2 as agressive as Ferrari.
look at the telemetry overlays, Ferrari are in different league there, regaining rear grip quicker and gaining gaining gaining all the way through the following straight, even if Max was at full throttle a touch earlier. Mclaren had similar advantage there. You can't see these things just by watching onboards alone.
low speed traction at exit of slow corners is a huge disadvantage for RB20 (was the same even for RB18, RB19) compared to the Ferrari and McLaren. I think this has as much to do with the gear ratios and engine characteristics, as it has to do with mechanical grip via suspension behavior. Exactly opposite with high speed corners. No matter how badly the car is setup, it has superior ability than Ferrari/McLaren in high speed large radius corners - the way the RB20 deals with the lateral weight shifts is exemplary at high speeds.
Such things are what we should consider 'baked-in' features of the car, based on the fundamental design philosophy.