True, but then, I couldn't imagine McLaren finding the several seconds they needed to find to be anywhere near the front at melbourne.I can't see McLaren finding a second between then and now, possible a tenth or two, but not a second. Ferrari might rediscover the form they had in testing, if it exists, so that might come in to play.
beelsebob wrote:True, but then, I couldn't imagine McLaren finding the several seconds they needed to find to be anywhere near the front at melbourne.I can't see McLaren finding a second between then and now, possible a tenth or two, but not a second. Ferrari might rediscover the form they had in testing, if it exists, so that might come in to play.
Assuming that upgrades from now will be minor is probably rather over the top. You're talking about a team who's rear end was a first evolution idea hacked onto the back of a car that was not just designed to use, but designed completely around it's rear end concept. The idea is so hacked on that they quickly machined it out of titanium because they didn't have enough time to produce a carbon fibre version.they can managed because they copied a proven RBR and Ferrari exhaust/diffuser system between testing and first race. from now on (till europe at least) all the other upgrade will be minor and to be able to close in on RBR(who will be developing their cars too) that will be a tough call.
He was also that much quicker than his team mate who had the same level of downforce. So it's more likely that it was a combination of car, driver, tyres, setup and conditions all coming together to give that one guy an advantage, rather than anything inherent to the Red Bull and it's aerodynamics. Otherwise Webber would have matched him through that section.Tumbarello wrote:Vettel was consistently around 3-4 tenths faster over the rest of the field in sector 3 so he was definitely going more quickly than any other car through the 11-12, whereas his times where often matched for sector 1.
That is not an assumption, but a fact that team usually won't introduce major update to their cars during the first few fly away races of the season. Unless of course if the team runs into a desperate situation where they have no choice but take the risk. HRT might be in that category if you ask me.beelsebob wrote:Assuming that upgrades from now will be minor is probably rather over the top. You're talking about a team who's rear end was a first evolution idea hacked onto the back of a car that was not just designed to use, but designed completely around it's rear end concept. The idea is so hacked on that they quickly machined it out of titanium because they didn't have enough time to produce a carbon fibre version.they can managed because they copied a proven RBR and Ferrari exhaust/diffuser system between testing and first race. from now on (till europe at least) all the other upgrade will be minor and to be able to close in on RBR(who will be developing their cars too) that will be a tough call.
Basically – there's still big jumps in performance to come out of that McLaren.