They took a chance with the FEE and it did'nt work, looking at the qualification times right from the start.
We should see more testing off the "BEE" soon I think.
I'dont understad your reasoning, why would you be better off with one second at Spa then zero point eight seconds at Monaco? Well maybe if every other circuit on the calendar has the characteristics of Spa! Dont' forget characteristics of car and circuit that come into the equation.raymondu999 wrote:I think that it's quite unfair to compare times like that due to different lap lengths. percentages should be a better compare. For example you'd rather be 1 second off at Spa (1:46-1:47) than 8 tenths off at Monaco (1:13 lap)
What you ar saying is obvious. That's not what I was asking. You were talking about a comparison(I did'nt mention it) of the R31 on different circuit. E.g. maybe the car is just fast at Spa beacuse the characterisctics suite it or the opposite for Monaco. I don't know if you understand me or if I have missunderstood you... mindboggling... I'll figure out a way to explain it...raymondu999 wrote:Right; take this for example. If you were 1 second off at Spa, vs 1 second off at Monaco, you'd rather be 1 second off at Spa.
That 1 second came from a longer lap, versus the shorter lap of monaco. 1s over Spa means you're losing about 0.14s per km (very rough calculation) while 1s behind in Monaco means you're 0.3s slower per km.
You're slower per normalized distance. I'm not sure if that's been said very clearly lol. maybe someone else who understands what I'm on about can explain better.
There is room for exploitation. I am expecting a weirder looking front floor, multi element front winglets, new splitter and other typical upgrade parts.Renault is set to stick with its innovative forward-facing exhaust system for the rest of the season.
The team ran an experimental rear-facing exhaust in both straightline tests and on Nick Heidfeld's car during free practice for the German Grand Prix in July.
But team principal Eric Boullier is confident that there is still more performance to come from its regular design, meaning that the team is likely to continue to use it rather than switching to a more orthodox concept.
"We believe that we still have potential on the forward exhaust even though we have made some wrong developments sometimes," Boullier told AUTOSPORT. "There are some good performance packages coming.
"So we will continue with it and it's likely that we will use it to the end of the season."
The rear-facing exhaust was developed because of the ban on off-throttle blowing of diffusers, which was introduced for Silverstone but then abandoned.
The team opted to try the rear-facing system on track to evaluate its potential, but has continued to work on its forward-facing design throughout this process.
"We spent a lot of time during the engine mapping discussions developing the rearward exhaust," said Boullier. "But at the same time we finished our windtunnel upgrade and kept developing our front exhaust."
Renault has struggled in recent races, but the team is confident that forthcoming upgrade packages will allow it to climb back up the grid.
Like everyone, we will have a low downforce package (little front and rear wings). We will also bring upgraded bodywork, which hopefully will help us build on the gains we made at Spa.
We have an upgrade package to deliver for Monza and then one more at Singapore. After that it will reduce to a trickle as we focus all of our efforts on next year.