Will be watching the race from Turn 6,7 and 8. the exit at turn 8 is a section where the better car will shine.raymondu999 wrote:I think you have turns 5 and 12 reversed. Turn 5 is a lot more aero demanding, turn 12 is the flat out one. Not all cars can be flat out through 5 IMO. Also, Turn 6 will also be a Red Bull thing. As will, I expect, 9, 11 and 13.
Also, ouch: http://www.patronisef1.com/index.php/f1 ... laysian-gp
The whole pit straight!? That's slight overkill, isn't it?
I don't get what you're saying. The exit of 4 only has a short squirt to the entry of 5. 5 will be probably a lot too fast a corner to take with DRS onbeelsebob wrote:I just had an interesting thought re RedBull's qualifying pace. I suspect that they may be plastered across the front row by a significant margin, and backing off in the race again...
For the sake of argument, suppose the RB7 has significantly more downforce than the rest of the field (seems fairly likely at the moment). Next, suppose that this means that they can make turn 5 at 260km/h, while McLaren can only manage it at 240km/h. With the use of the DRS, they may well hit that 260km/h aero limit, meanwhile, without its use, they may be sufficiently slower purely due to lack of acceleration. This would cause the better aero package to have a significantly bigger advantage in qualifying than in the race.
While my choice of corner may not be correct, what I'm getting at is basically that if there's a corner where their speed is limited by power in the race, and by aero in qualifying (due to DRS or no DRS making them accelerate faster in qually), RedBull will show a more significant advantage in qually than in the race.raymondu999 wrote:I don't get what you're saying. The exit of 4 only has a short squirt to the entry of 5. 5 will be probably a lot too fast a corner to take with DRS onbeelsebob wrote:I just had an interesting thought re RedBull's qualifying pace. I suspect that they may be plastered across the front row by a significant margin, and backing off in the race again...
For the sake of argument, suppose the RB7 has significantly more downforce than the rest of the field (seems fairly likely at the moment). Next, suppose that this means that they can make turn 5 at 260km/h, while McLaren can only manage it at 240km/h. With the use of the DRS, they may well hit that 260km/h aero limit, meanwhile, without its use, they may be sufficiently slower purely due to lack of acceleration. This would cause the better aero package to have a significantly bigger advantage in qualifying than in the race.
No, I mean the RBs could take a turn at 260km/h with the DRS on because it allows them to get to 260km/h, meanwhile the maccas might not be able to get past 240 with the DRS on because of a lack of downforce. Meanwhile, in the race, both would have the DRS off, and both get to 240km/h because the maccas are borderline acceleration/downforce limited, but the RBs become entirely acceleration limited.alelanza wrote:Not sure i follow, you mean the RBs could take a turn at 260 km/h with DRS on while the Maccas wouldn't be able to get past 240 with DRS off?