Seems to me that the cars that required more of a revolution to catch up to last seasons leaders (McLaren, Renault, et al)have difficulties in getting their concepts sorted and set-up, therefore the obvious less time on the track so far. The cars that are evolutions of already good concepts (RBR and Ferrari) have fewer niggles and are able to conduct good long runs. Makes you wonder if it was a good decision from McLaren to launch the new car later?Samo wrote: From another forum:
Ferrari 463,
Red Bull 395,
Mercedes 338,
STR 327,
Sauber 320,
Renault 277,
FIndia 264,
Williams 253,
McLaren 233,
Virgin 216,
Lotus 198.
yes, call it standard deviation is you wishraymondu999 wrote:RMS? Root Mean Square?
Depends on whether the concept works or not.Jakkals wrote:Makes you wonder if it was a good decision from McLaren to launch the new car later?
Again it depends, McLaren have enough data to get started with their new car, but they're the only team to have back to backed with the old car and so arguably have even better data.Jakkals wrote:Bet RBR and Ferrari are the teams with the best tyre data at the moment, and they will have the advantage at the start of the season because of that.
Isn't that irrelevant? I mean, you may have as much data as you wish with the old car, but ultimately what matters is the type behavior with the new car. So, I would think that the teams that completed most laps with the new car will be in the best position understand the tyre behavour.myurr wrote:Again it depends, McLaren have enough data to get started with their new car, but they're the only team to have back to backed with the old car and so arguably have even better data.Jakkals wrote:Bet RBR and Ferrari are the teams with the best tyre data at the moment, and they will have the advantage at the start of the season because of that.
If the old car is e.g. 0.5s faster on the new tyres than the old tyres and your new car is slower on the new tyres than your old car then you know you've got problems. Likewise, if your old car is 0.5s slower and your new car is 0.5s faster than that then you know that the new car / tyre combo is working and, crucially, that the new car is 0.5s quicker than the old car.vall wrote: Isn't that irrelevant? I mean, you may have as much data as you wish with the old car, but ultimately what matters is the type behavior with the new car. So, I would think that the teams that completed most laps with the new car will be in the best position understand the tyre behavour.
That's not entirely true. Everybody tested with the Pirellis end of last season at Yas for exactly this reason, to have base data to compare their new cars with. I still think that the teams that have the most mileage on the new cars at the moment, have the better data sets to model with, and to get workable tire strategies in place by Bahrain.myurr wrote:Again it depends, McLaren have enough data to get started with their new car, but they're the only team to have back to backed with the old car and so arguably have even better data.