You'll see that I didn't, I reported both full race and first stint times. The reason the first lap is discarded is that they are different in length for the first and last car and must thus be discarded since it falls outside the population of equal race laps.Petroltorque wrote:You can't throw out the unfavourable times because it biases the figures. By bias I mean a persistent error in the execution or interpretation of the results.
Seriously? They can't be confident of making the 107% with a normal setup then. Running such a low downforce wing at Spa would mean the car's unbalanced around Rivage, Pouhon, Fagnes and Stavelot. It's not as though the F112 has enough inherent grip to offset the loss of downforce in Sector 2.C_Stonehouse wrote:Just read the teams preview; they will be using the Canada Spec wing.
Petroltorque wrote:Seriously? They can't be confident of making the 107% with a normal setup then. Running such a low downforce wing at Spa would mean the car's unbalanced around Rivage, Pouhon, Fagnes and Stavelot. It's not as though the F112 has enough inherent grip to offset the loss of downforce in Sector 2.C_Stonehouse wrote:Just read the teams preview; they will be using the Canada Spec wing.
The difference is that last years RBR (or any recent RBR for that matter!) had so much grip that they could happily dump a load by running low downforce wings etc and still have plently left to still function fine through S2 which, although it is more downforce dependant than the rest of the track, is still fast. I wouldn't be too surprised if it turned out that the low-downforce spec RBR still had more downforce than the current HRT/Marussia!wesley123 wrote:Remember last year Red Bull ran a Canada or even Monza wing here, being fastest on the straights. It certainly isnt a wrong choice to make. Low df you gain mainly in S1 and some on S3 but with High df you have your tires lasting longer and you are quicker through S2
As someone has pointed out earlier, what works for RBR won't work for HRT even if the principle is the same. RBR could afford to trade some drag at the expense of downforce. The were still sealing the Diffuser with an off throttle EBD. HRT's car is unstable at the rear running less wing won't help that.wesley123 wrote:Great that they had that much more grip, the idea is still the same.
For the 2011 Red Bull as for the HRT now is the same idea applicable, only with the HRT there is less grip, it is still the same scenario.
This also counts for the HRT in exact the same way
Petroltorque wrote:HRT's Canada spec wing was more of an ultra low downforce wing that one would see at Monza. With a low drag config car I would have thought that more rear stability would be the way to go. I suppose if HRT are worried about qualifying within the 107% that's the way to go but's it quite a handicap to race with.