Yeah the same, starting to become worried. Even though the gap is still around the same as it was in Miami (52 points) many races ago, when our pace dropped.
Yeah the same, starting to become worried. Even though the gap is still around the same as it was in Miami (52 points) many races ago, when our pace dropped.
Yep. Max needs an 86 point lead after Brazil.... (3 x 25, 1 x 8 and 3 x 1 points left available from Qatar, Vegas and AD), that reduces to needing a 52 point lead after Qatar, so the earliest Max can now win is Qatar.Vettel165 wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 00:56To improve the mood even if it looks impossible, but if Max finishes ahead of Lando in the next 2 races he is champion again. Lando needs to gain on Max at least 12 points every race to win the WDC.
I would say one way or another, Verstappen gave its absolute best with a third best car in the second part of the season.
Yeah, I agree so much that I did not even feel the need to mention all of these, clear as sky.AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 00:29Well, let's review how many points and how much disruption Red Bull has cost him:
1) Australia
2) Horner-gate and the internal division
3) Engine penalties (Spa, Brazil)
4) A rubbish car
5) A rubbish teammate
A driver's calm and patience is not endless. You can't simply discuss the few issues of Max without discussing the conditions that he is up against. He's done more than his fair share of carrying this team when they are determined to lose all the titles with this toothless car.
I've been watching F1 for a long time. Brazil will not be interesting for Red Bull. Red Bull has a fundamental performance deficit to Ferrari and Mclaren and there just aren't updates coming in this part of the season that will make a difference towards that. The remaining 4 GPs will play out exactly like Austin and Mexico. Top 4 qualifying and then spending the entire race looking behind at faster Ferraris and Mclarens until they undercut, overcut or overtake. You can hide a bad car in qualifying but you cannot hide it over a GP distance. This is made worse by very powerful double DRS zones in all of the remaining races.
I agree all of these. I even anticipated something like this for the end of the season around summer time.AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:30I've been watching F1 for a long time. Brazil will not be interesting for Red Bull. Red Bull has a fundamental performance deficit to Ferrari and Mclaren and there just aren't updates coming in this part of the season that will make a difference towards that. The remaining 4 GPs will play out exactly like Austin and Mexico. Top 4 qualifying and then spending the entire race looking behind at faster Ferraris and Mclarens for the entire GP distance. Poor tire degradation and made worse by very powerful DRS tracks in all of the remaining races. It's the nature of the car and something like this doesn't get overturned with the limited amount of changes that can be made in this part of the season. The COTA update did not deliver the change of characteristics neccesary to beat Ferrari or Mclaren. Remember 2021. The car never got better despite last minute updates. You just can't make quantum leaps in this part of the season. All the money has been spent already.
I don't expect Max to challenge. More can Lando win if Max is in 5th making up 16-20 points (inc the sprint) can make things interesting. It brings the fight very close all of a sudden.AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:30I've been watching F1 for a long time. Brazil will not be interesting for Red Bull. Red Bull has a fundamental performance deficit to Ferrari and Mclaren and there just aren't updates coming in this part of the season that will make a difference towards that. The remaining 4 GPs will play out exactly like Austin and Mexico. Top 4 qualifying and then spending the entire race looking behind at faster Ferraris and Mclarens until they undercut, overcut or overtake. You can hide a bad car in qualifying but you cannot hide it over a GP distance. This is made worse by very powerful double DRS zones in all of the remaining races.
It's the nature of the car and something like this doesn't get overturned with the limited amount of changes that can be made in this part of the season. The COTA update did not deliver the change of characteristics neccesary to beat Ferrari or Mclaren. Remember 2021. The car never got better despite last minute updates. You just can't make quantum leaps in this part of the season. All the money has been spent already.
In a way at the points too I almost wonder if Red Bull are happy to have Perez well behind. I think RBR could do withy a drop to 3rd in the constructors championship and do with the wind tunnel and CFD time.Paa wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:35I agree all of these. I even anticipated something like this for the end of the season around summer time.AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:30I've been watching F1 for a long time. Brazil will not be interesting for Red Bull. Red Bull has a fundamental performance deficit to Ferrari and Mclaren and there just aren't updates coming in this part of the season that will make a difference towards that. The remaining 4 GPs will play out exactly like Austin and Mexico. Top 4 qualifying and then spending the entire race looking behind at faster Ferraris and Mclarens for the entire GP distance. Poor tire degradation and made worse by very powerful DRS tracks in all of the remaining races. It's the nature of the car and something like this doesn't get overturned with the limited amount of changes that can be made in this part of the season. The COTA update did not deliver the change of characteristics neccesary to beat Ferrari or Mclaren. Remember 2021. The car never got better despite last minute updates. You just can't make quantum leaps in this part of the season. All the money has been spent already.
What is even more worrying that Red Bull don't give any vibes suggesting that they know what is going on and will be able to come back strong for next season. And then the questionable engine comes into picture for 2026.
At this point there is no sign of positive turnaround at the horizont.
I'm not sure that CFD time is their main issue at the moment to be honest.
The extra time doesn't hurt them. That's all that can be said. You would rather have it than not if you are behind.Paa wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:49I'm not sure that CFD time is their main issue at the moment to be honest.
They would need a fundamental understanding. More CFD would help to finetune the great base, which they don't have.
Look at Mercedes. They had more more WT/CFD during like the whole rule set and they come up maybe with the mots upgrades, trying all kinds of direction and their performance is totally random. I see Red Bull in a very similar situation right now.
Yeah. With the misteps I think they would almost want it now.AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:54The extra time doesn't hurt them. That's all that can be said. You would rather have it than not if you are behind.Paa wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:49I'm not sure that CFD time is their main issue at the moment to be honest.
They would need a fundamental understanding. More CFD would help to finetune the great base, which they don't have.
Look at Mercedes. They had more more WT/CFD during like the whole rule set and they come up maybe with the mots upgrades, trying all kinds of direction and their performance is totally random. I see Red Bull in a very similar situation right now.
I also think 2025 is going to have issues. 2025 is not a time for fundamental architectural changes. Like we saw from 2020 to 2021, it's only a matter of limited evolution because you need to spend more time on the 2026 cars.Paa wrote: ↑28 Oct 2024, 01:35I agree all of these. I even anticipated something like this for the end of the season around summer time.
What is even more worrying that Red Bull don't give any vibes suggesting that they know what is going on and will be able to come back strong for next season. And then the questionable engine comes into picture for 2026.
At this point there is no sign of positive turnaround at the horizont.