Have to agree. Rosberg gets overlooked a lot, but he certainly has looked promising the last few years.n smikle wrote:Vettel and Webber are huge question because the good balance of the redbull. There just hasn't been a time where you see them complaining about the car or mention correcting the behaviour of the car.
From my observations Alonso, Hamilton and Rosberg DEFINITELY can master cars of varying behaviour. I always look forward to their comments on the car behaviour and most of the time they always figure out how to set up the car to drive around the problems.
They can drive calm as Button: save tyres, save fuel, drive "wild:" overtake, drive understeer, drive oversteer, they even have that on demand speed burst in qualifying when ready. They are truly multiple style drivers.
Well he really liked the 2007 mclaren.. and Hamilton liked his setups in the first half of the season very much.Alonso IIRC likes an understeery car
While most people say that you should never be completely off throttle or brake; I've noticed lately that a lot of times; when a driver is entering a corner; or at least approaching the apex; he will lift brake and throttle completely; I guess to allow the fronts to just ue their grip for turn-in rather than using some of the frontal grip for braking. I've been wondering - could you not, in such a case, crank the brake bias rearwards while you're in the braking? i.e. lets say get the optimum braking for the straight bit; then when you're turning, if you're turning+braking, while you're still on the brakes, crank the lever rearwards? So changing the bias AS you brake?godlameroso wrote:I think he meant to say that depending on the setup a car will understeer under braking whereas it won't if you merely lift off.
Imagine doing that right at the edge of the tyre grip doing several g's along the way.raymondu999 wrote:So changing the bias AS you brake?
dren wrote:Have to agree. Rosberg gets overlooked a lot, but he certainly has looked promising the last few years.n smikle wrote:Vettel and Webber are huge question because the good balance of the redbull. There just hasn't been a time where you see them complaining about the car or mention correcting the behaviour of the car.
From my observations Alonso, Hamilton and Rosberg DEFINITELY can master cars of varying behaviour. I always look forward to their comments on the car behaviour and most of the time they always figure out how to set up the car to drive around the problems.
They can drive calm as Button: save tyres, save fuel, drive "wild:" overtake, drive understeer, drive oversteer, they even have that on demand speed burst in qualifying when ready. They are truly multiple style drivers.
Well he really liked the 2007 mclaren.. and Hamilton liked his setups in the first half of the season very much.Alonso IIRC likes an understeery car
That's very interesting to see how they visualise the lap. Even though Lewis was closer to his actual time, both of them were shifting at the same time, and using almost exactly the same amount of lock when going through the same turns. I wish we could see the whole grid do the same thing.raymondu999 wrote:Hey guys. Just something I found on YouTube, where we can see from the frontal view the respective steering inputs of Hamilton vs Button. What I found interesting is that Hamilton pulls the gearshift with a lot more force than Button, producing a louder "clack" sound
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StqJ40ro56g[/youtube]
More force means more acceleration. Faster shifts.raymondu999 wrote:Hey guys. Just something I found on YouTube, where we can see from the frontal view the respective steering inputs of Hamilton vs Button. What I found interesting is that Hamilton pulls the gearshift with a lot more force than Button, producing a louder "clack" sound
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StqJ40ro56g[/youtube]