Is there actually any evidence of the Renault engine being down on power? The 2 Red Bulls were actually one of the fastest in the speed traps in qualifying at Spa and they were no slouches either in Canada (compared to the Ferraris and Mclarens). I know Horner always whined about his engine being down on power last year, but then alot of us have learnt not to accept what Horner says as the complete truth.Lycoming wrote:the "inherent advantage" I referred to was the engine. Its no secret that the renault engine is down on power compared to the Mercedes and Ferrari engine. The rest is a matter of setup to take advantage of this. Additionally, the RB&'s strength is in the high speed corners; monza has no abundance of those.
You're right in that things this season have not gone as expected in terms of where we expect teams to be strong, but I'm cautiously optimistic. They have a great chance to beat Red Bull here and if things can just fall into place for them like they have for Red Bull in nearly every race this season, they can lock them out of the podium.
of course there's lots that could go wrong too. Mclaren could fail to shed enough drag and Ferrari may once again fade away on the prime tyre. We'll see on sunday.
Yeah like ray said, it wouldn't be smart to set up the car like that, you'd get mugged in the race because you'd be so slow without the DRS for the whole lap yes, you'd be fast in the corners but the loss on the straights would be staggering without the F-duct.Aced wrote:I'm surprised that no one thinks the 2010-Button setup can actually work here again.
I think McLaren have gone with more downforce setups in these low downforce tracks on purpose. The main reason would be that, you can close the gap being faster through the corners to the car in front of you and then the DRS does the job for you.
I honestly believe that this could also be the case in Monza. More downforce; later on the brakes; better traction through the corners. And having better traction through those corners plays a very big role in Monza.
But for that to work of course you need an overall very good car in order to find the good balance between more downforce and good top speed. And I think McLaren are aware that on Sundays they have had a very strong car. So it could work. It's just an opinion and I could be totally wrong.
I found this one to be very interesting http://formula-one.speedtv.com/article/ ... on-button/
The time you gain in the corners at Monza is dictated more by mechanical grip (i.e. braking stablity, traction and ability to ride the kerbs) rather than aerodynamic grip. Sure running a bit more wing would gain you some time in the corners, but it would be more than offset by the time you lost on the straights.Aced wrote:I'm surprised that no one thinks the 2010-Button setup can actually work here again.
I think McLaren have gone with more downforce setups in these low downforce tracks on purpose. The main reason would be that, you can close the gap being faster through the corners to the car in front of you and then the DRS does the job for you.
I honestly believe that this could also be the case in Monza. More downforce; later on the brakes; better traction through the corners. And having better traction through those corners plays a very big role in Monza.
But for that to work of course you need an overall very good car in order to find the good balance between more downforce and good top speed. And I think McLaren are aware that on Sundays they have had a very strong car. So it could work. It's just an opinion and I could be totally wrong.
I found this one to be very interesting http://formula-one.speedtv.com/article/ ... on-button/