Yea sorry I forgot about thoseJPower wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 22:16Five out of 10(McLaren/Williams/Haas/Ferrari/VCARB).
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To be honest with you I had no idea that VCARB had though
Yea sorry I forgot about thoseJPower wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 22:16Five out of 10(McLaren/Williams/Haas/Ferrari/VCARB).
Disagree. Lewis is mostly known as a optimist. And ngl, that positivity has been annoying at times while at MER for years. But in recent times (at MER) he did show uncharacteristic pessimism at times, but more often than not it was more to downplay the situation to then reveal he/team were better than were advertised e.g. Las Vegas '24 where he was the fastest man on track setting purple-purple-purple all race long on old tyres coming pretty darn close to winning the race, but downplayed his chances the night before. More often than not, if he was acting uncharacteristically pessimistic the one day, it usually ends up he is an absolute beast the following day. At least historically.DJ Downforce wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 22:14Lewis who is known to be a pessimist can't stop smiling and says he gets on well with the car.
I will never have excitement until Australia![]()
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That's not acting, Mercedes didn't know why the car performed well there, every good performance they had they didn't understand whyzeroday wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 23:21Disagree. Lewis is mostly known as a optimist. And ngl, that positivity has been annoying at times while at MER for years. But in recent times (at MER) he did show uncharacteristic pessimism at times, but more often than not it was more to downplay the situation to then reveal he/team were better than were advertised e.g. Las Vegas '24 where he was the fastest man on track setting purple-purple-purple all race long on old tyres coming pretty darn close to winning the race, but downplayed his chances the night before. More often than not, if he was acting uncharacteristically pessimistic the one day, it usually ends up he is an absolute beast the following day. At least historically.DJ Downforce wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 22:14Lewis who is known to be a pessimist can't stop smiling and says he gets on well with the car.
I will never have excitement until Australia![]()
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If you want real pessimist you only need to look at Lando Norris. He is and always has been all about doom & gloom.
Leclerc always comes off mostly looking saddened, gutted, and in emotional pain -- wears it on his sleeve -- when things don't go well for him. Despite the words that come, his body language always betrays him.
I am hoping this year will be positive for FER as a team.
He doesn't seem disappointedcontinuum16 wrote: ↑18 Feb 2025, 19:27The true test will be whether or not Gary Anderson is disappointed; if so then there is a good chance of success![]()
I guess so - but I think all the smiles suggest it's a nicely balanced car.zeroday wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 23:21Disagree. Lewis is mostly known as a optimist. And ngl, that positivity has been annoying at times while at MER for years. But in recent times (at MER) he did show uncharacteristic pessimism at times, but more often than not it was more to downplay the situation to then reveal he/team were better than were advertised e.g. Las Vegas '24 where he was the fastest man on track setting purple-purple-purple all race long on old tyres coming pretty darn close to winning the race, but downplayed his chances the night before. More often than not, if he was acting uncharacteristically pessimistic the one day, it usually ends up he is an absolute beast the following day. At least historically.DJ Downforce wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 22:14Lewis who is known to be a pessimist can't stop smiling and says he gets on well with the car.
I will never have excitement until Australia![]()
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If you want real pessimist you only need to look at Lando Norris. He is and always has been all about doom & gloom.
Leclerc always comes off mostly looking saddened, gutted, and in emotional pain -- wears it on his sleeve -- when things don't go well for him. Despite the words that come, his body language always betrays him.
I am hoping this year will be positive for FER as a team.
All of my optimism vanished right here.KimiRai wrote:He doesn't seem disappointedcontinuum16 wrote: ↑18 Feb 2025, 19:27The true test will be whether or not Gary Anderson is disappointed; if so then there is a good chance of success![]()
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https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/99-p ... n-verdict/
one of the most interesting posts in a while. thank you for this summary.LurkingMostly wrote: ↑20 Feb 2025, 03:10According to the author of this video, which seems to be trustworthy when it comes to having contacts in and around Ferrari:
- Shakedown has gone really well overall, if you consider lap times, lack of problems and how satisfied the two drivers looked. These facts can't be denied, according to the video's author. Still, until there is a direct comparison with other teams, it is better not to get hyped.
- There was a little problem that caused a 30 minutes stop (video's author didn't specify what it was), but once resolved both drivers completed the program without other problems.
- As far as drivability goes, the car looked good (to the eyes of the author of this video, who is a racing instructor).
- They tried a lot of different setups. On a certain lap, you can see the car understeer. On a different lap, you can see it oversteer. Those outcomes were caused by them trying out setups at different extremes.
- When the car was creating a lot of sparks, that was the consequence of using a setup that was both low and soft. That was used to try and test if it would result in porpoising, which didn't happen.
- Lap times were great. Both drivers consistently ran below 0:57:000 (track record is 0:55.999, set 20 years ago by the F2004).
- Leclerc's program was a little bit more extreme than Hamilton's. Hamilton's program was more conventional.
- Leclerc stint 1 and 2: done with a balanced car. Lap times were already good by lap 7.
- Leclerc stint 3: extreme setup that caused understeer.
- Leclerc stint 4: extreme setup in the opposite direction. This caused oversteer.
- Leclerc stint 5: done with a balanced car again. Comprised of a series of out lap/push lap/cooldown lap.
This is where Leclerc set his best time: 0:56:060.
- Hamilton was fast from the get-go and looked at ease with the car. The author of the video knows Hamilton's times, but doesn't want to reveal them to avoid comparisons with Leclerc (doesn't want to cause drama I guess, might have been requested by his contacts telling him the times). Even so, he implies Hamilton was running consistently around 0:56:400 (that's my guess based on his words, might be wrong).
- Hamilton apparently tested with more fuel compared to Leclerc.
- Apparently, both drivers have a driving style that goes in the same direction. They want the same things from the car (might imply that this wasn't the case with Leclerc/Sainz, but maybe not).
Lots of information that I don't think you can find anywhere else, if you can leave a like to his video!
I think the new technical director certainly had some inputClarkBT11 wrote: ↑20 Feb 2025, 06:03Very interesting and positive on all counts. From my rose tinted perspective it feels like Ferrari have clarity in their physiology. To me it looks like Vasseur is pointing the ship in the right direction with valor. It reminds me of Mercedes when Niki Lauda RIP was still with us. Would it be too early for any ex Mercedes employees to have any contribution to this year's car?
If they really are running it low and soft without the porpoising that's pretty big newszeroday wrote: ↑20 Feb 2025, 05:44
According to the author of this video, which seems to be trustworthy when it comes to having contacts in and around Ferrari:
- Shakedown has gone really well overall, if you consider lap times, lack of problems and how satisfied the two drivers looked. These facts can't be denied, according to the video's author. Still, until there is a direct comparison with other teams, it is better not to get hyped.
- There was a little problem that caused a 30 minutes stop (video's author didn't specify what it was), but once resolved both drivers completed the program without other problems.
- As far as drivability goes, the car looked good (to the eyes of the author of this video, who is a racing instructor).
- They tried a lot of different setups. On a certain lap, you can see the car understeer. On a different lap, you can see it oversteer. Those outcomes were caused by them trying out setups at different extremes.
- When the car was creating a lot of sparks, that was the consequence of using a setup that was both low and soft. That was used to try and test if it would result in porpoising, which didn't happen.
- Lap times were great. Both drivers consistently ran below 0:57:000 (track record is 0:55.999, set 20 years ago by the F2004).
- Leclerc's program was a little bit more extreme than Hamilton's. Hamilton's program was more conventional.
- Leclerc stint 1 and 2: done with a balanced car. Lap times were already good by lap 7.
- Leclerc stint 3: extreme setup that caused understeer.
- Leclerc stint 4: extreme setup in the opposite direction. This caused oversteer.
- Leclerc stint 5: done with a balanced car again. Comprised of a series of out lap/push lap/cooldown lap.
This is where Leclerc set his best time: 0:56:060.
- Hamilton was fast from the get-go and looked at ease with the car. The author of the video knows Hamilton's times, but doesn't want to reveal them to avoid comparisons with Leclerc (doesn't want to cause drama I guess, might have been requested by his contacts telling him the times). Even so, he implies Hamilton was running consistently around 0:56:400 (that's my guess based on his words, might be wrong).
- Hamilton apparently tested with more fuel compared to Leclerc.
- Apparently, both drivers have a driving style that goes in the same direction. They want the same things from the car (might imply that this wasn't the case with Leclerc/Sainz, but maybe not).
Lots of information that I don't think you can find anywhere else, if you can leave a like to his video!
It's not confidence, he's simply stating very obvious expectations for the year. They ended up 2nd fastest by the end of last season, and showed a strong ability to maximize what they had and gain strong point overhauls and even be fastest car on a few occasions, putting them within extremely close distance of the WCC. Of course a title is the logical expectation for this year. That's the whole point of this.Luscion wrote: ↑19 Feb 2025, 22:12Nobody has even said that, Charles said he'd be disappointed if they didnt and people are surprised he's that confident
People will say that Albert Park is a unique track that doesn't reflect the rest of the season etc etc
Thanks for summry, awesome to hear... all we can do is prayLurkingMostly wrote: ↑20 Feb 2025, 03:10According to the author of this video, which seems to be trustworthy when it comes to having contacts in and around Ferrari:
- Shakedown has gone really well overall, if you consider lap times, lack of problems and how satisfied the two drivers looked. These facts can't be denied, according to the video's author. Still, until there is a direct comparison with other teams, it is better not to get hyped.
- There was a little problem that caused a 30 minutes stop (video's author didn't specify what it was), but once resolved both drivers completed the program without other problems.
- As far as drivability goes, the car looked good (to the eyes of the author of this video, who is a racing instructor).
- They tried a lot of different setups. On a certain lap, you can see the car understeer. On a different lap, you can see it oversteer. Those outcomes were caused by them trying out setups at different extremes.
- When the car was creating a lot of sparks, that was the consequence of using a setup that was both low and soft. That was used to try and test if it would result in porpoising, which didn't happen.
- Lap times were great. Both drivers consistently ran below 0:57:000 (track record is 0:55.999, set 20 years ago by the F2004).
- Leclerc's program was a little bit more extreme than Hamilton's. Hamilton's program was more conventional.
- Leclerc stint 1 and 2: done with a balanced car. Lap times were already good by lap 7.
- Leclerc stint 3: extreme setup that caused understeer.
- Leclerc stint 4: extreme setup in the opposite direction. This caused oversteer.
- Leclerc stint 5: done with a balanced car again. Comprised of a series of out lap/push lap/cooldown lap.
This is where Leclerc set his best time: 0:56:060.
- Hamilton was fast from the get-go and looked at ease with the car. The author of the video knows Hamilton's times, but doesn't want to reveal them to avoid comparisons with Leclerc (doesn't want to cause drama I guess, might have been requested by his contacts telling him the times). Even so, he implies Hamilton was running consistently around 0:56:400 (that's my guess based on his words, might be wrong).
- Hamilton apparently tested with more fuel compared to Leclerc.
- Apparently, both drivers have a driving style that goes in the same direction. They want the same things from the car (might imply that this wasn't the case with Leclerc/Sainz, but maybe not).
Lots of information that I don't think you can find anywhere else, if you can leave a like to his video!