OK here is what I’m on about!
Taking speed, and (possibly) weight into consideration,
did it appear that the F10 absorbed that nasty bump at turn 6 much easier than any of the rest of the cars they showed taking it?
You sure that is not because the whole car is so flexible.Tazio wrote:OK here is what I’m on about!
Taking speed, and (possibly) weight into consideration,
did it appear that the F10 absorbed that nasty bump at turn 6 much easier than any of the rest of the cars they showed taking it?
How do you know there was overheating when they closed to front car, if I may ask?segedunum wrote:That overheating issue they seemed to have was quite a shock. As soon as they got anywhere near a car in front, and they had less then crystal clear perfect air, they had an overheating issue almost straight away. You saw it when Alonso even just got close to Vettel or Massa to Alonso. No other team had that at all, and if they find themselves down in the midfield at any time, and every team does during the year at some point, then it's going to be a real problem.
They're also still clearly thirsty.
segedunum wrote:They have a nice car Ferrari, they're the fastest and most reliable right now and they're certainly going to win a few races this year, but I wouldn't get too excited yet.
Please, let's get excited about something in F1! As a Ferrari fan, I am excited. Boring race, but good for Ferrari!
That overheating issue they seemed to have was quite a shock. As soon as they got anywhere near a car in front, and they had less then crystal clear perfect air, they had an overheating issue almost straight away. You saw it when Alonso even just got close to Vettel or Massa to Alonso. No other team had that at all, and if they find themselves down in the midfield at any time, and every team does during the year at some point, then it's going to be a real problem.
Not really a shock: their engine has always been one of the hottest. A solution should not be impossible.
They're also still clearly thirsty.
You may be right, but if so, then the car's other components more than made up for the fuel consumption. Even if Vettel had been trouble-free, the Ferraris would have finished 2-3. Not too bad for a pair of gas-guzzlers?
Rob Smedly was jumping up and down on the radio to Massa about it and Alonso was constantly ducking out of Vettel's slipstream when there was no really go reason to do so.vall wrote:How do you know there was overheating when they closed to front car, if I may ask?
also domenicali immediatly after the end of the race told to italian interviewer massa got temperatures problemswesley123 wrote:it was said over the radio of massa if im correct
It can be used again! It's a real mystery how much it was "compromised". If you believe Ferrari it will be ok for a cooler race climate!volarchico wrote:This may be a dumb question, but does this mean both Ferrari's only have 7 engines left for the entire season? Or can they clean out the sand-filled first engine and use it later?
They can certainly use it again and put mileage on any of their allocation of engines, but you naturally don't want to put mileage on an engine unless you really, really have to for good reasons.volarchico wrote:This may be a dumb question, but does this mean both Ferrari's only have 7 engines left for the entire season? Or can they clean out the sand-filled first engine and use it later?