You should really cite the source next time. http://plus.autosport.com/premium/featu ... ing-giant/iotar__ wrote:I told fuel corrected calculations are coming , those are always fun.
"If we take Red Bull's best time from the two Barcelona tests – which was Vettel’'s 1m22.197s last month – take off 0.7 seconds for the track improvement that happened this week, and deduct 2.45s to fuel correct it down to empty and you are left with a probable potential of 1m19.047s.
If Rosberg was running 30kg of fuel today (as could be expected), then that leaves a theoretical best of 1m19.08s. However, if the W04 was running on even less fuel, its potential best would start heading towards the mid-1m19s."
Really? What about different front wing, different rear wing, different exhaust (examples, I don't know if they were different) and/or better understanding of those components? What about hundreds more laps of data and better understanding of tyres? How many tenths for that? Although to be fair the assumption may be that those equalise themselves.
Somehow Red Bull end up 0,2 in front, which is basically within calculation error, let's say 0,1 on one side and 0,1 on the other. I think they deserve it, for name, Newey, past reputation and the fact that they did not do much, spectacular time-wise which makes it easier to speculate. It's a safe bet and you can't disprove it. Because also you know, "they may be sandbagging", woooo.
Useless F1 teams didn't even bother to run race sims on the last day, apart from Force India and Sauber (abandoned one). I've read on AMUS FI's was slightly better so I'm tipping them as a dark horse based on that and the fact that I like them.
Another number, from S. Michael: nine teams within 1 second. Probably until the second part of the first stint on full fuel on SS in Australia.
I would if I knew it, I copied it from from a post on their message board. "0,2 RB in front" one was from SKY, I think, I read it here. Plus it wasn't really my point to critique this or the other prediction, just the general thought on how those calculations are IMO flawed and only a bit of harmless fun.raymondu999 wrote:You should really cite the source next time. http://plus.autosport.com/premium/featu ... ing-giant/iotar__ wrote:I told fuel corrected calculations are coming , those are always fun.
"If we take Red Bull's best time from the two Barcelona tests – which was Vettel’'s 1m22.197s last month – take off 0.7 seconds for the track improvement that happened this week, and deduct 2.45s to fuel correct it down to empty and you are left with a probable potential of 1m19.047s.........................[deleted]
SS in Australia.
For reference, the 2.45s mentioned is taken from the Red Bull historically running 70kg - ie 2.45/7 = 0.35s per 10kg
NO!diego.liv wrote:From a comparison W03-W04 Barcelona test, Rosberg improved from 1:22.932 to 1:20.130. Schumi's fastest lap was merely the same.
Maybe they weren't pushing the car at the limit, but when they reached Spaing GP (can't remember how many updates they took at that point of the season), Rosberg Q2 were Mercedes fastest in 1:22.882 on soft tyres (failed to better it in Q3).
Purely comparing testing times, adding to that SkySport Italy quoted Hembery saying 2013 tyres are generally 0.8s faster, Mercedes found 2 seconds till today, not to say we are probably missing aero upgrades coming Melbourne
It's their MO. That's what they do every year.Juzh wrote:How much did RB sandbag with their RB7 in testing? Just curious, because we all know what happened that year.
They both used it on the 2 pre-agreed straights by the teams. I really don't know what the fuss is all about. Webber said in valencia last year DRS is worth 1,2s+ around the lap.mclaren_mircea wrote:About Rosberg using DRS on every sector of the circuit, compared with Alonso using DRS only on the long straight where is permited. How much time cand be? We have to notice that Alonso as Rosberg used the DRS on the long straight , and that zone is the zone on the Montmelo Circuit where the DRS can have the most serious impact on the lap time: on this zone we have parity between Rosberg and Alonso. The question is that how much can count the other areas of the circuit where Rosberg used DRS? I don't think that can count more than -200 or -250, because are a lot of medium and slow corners and only one straight line which is only about a half compared with the long straight for the DRS. Last year a heared a report that the difference between using DRS on every section and not using it at all is about half a second. So with parity on the long straight it's not much difference between Rosberg using DRS on sector 2 and 3 and Alonso using only on sector 1.
And we even don't know if Rosberg used the DRS on that zones. Auto Sport und Motor said that he used it only like Alonso on the long straight, while Sky Sports said that he used it everywhere.
Not entirely correct. You deliberately left out red bull which vent much faster in the race weekend.Artur Craft wrote: For reference, in 2010, these were some of times from winter testings in Barcelona(on the left) versus their respective best qualifying time in the same year(on the right):
F. Massa Ferrari 1:20.539 1.21.585
A. Sutil Force India 1:20.611 1.21.985
M. Schumacher Mercedes 1:20.745 1.21.294
R. Barrichello Williams 1:20.870 Problem in Q but compare with Hulk's time
K. Kobayashi Sauber 1:20.911 1.21.984
N. Rosberg Mercedes 1:20.686 1.21.408
S. Buemi Toro Rosso 1:21.413 1.22.191
N. Hulkenberg Williams 1:20.614 1.22.131
F. Alonso Ferrari 1:20.637 1.20.937
P. de la Rosa Sauber 1:20.973 1.22.026
V. Liuzzi Force India 1:21.056 1.22.854
J. Alguersuari Toro Rosso 1:21.571 1.22.207
L. Hamilton McLaren 1:20.472 1.20.829
Or, if you prefer, here's how much slower each driver's qualifying time was than his' respective winter testing time:
Massa 1.046s
Sutil 1.374s
Schumacher 0.549s
Kobayashi 1.073s
Rosberg 0.722s
Buemi 0.777s
Hulkenberg 0.514s
Alonso 0,300s
PDLR 1.053s
Liuzzi 1.798s
Alguersuari 0.636s
Hamilton 0.357s
Yep, air density along with humidity is the most singnificant reason. Even I in my 2.0l 180bhp peugeot can feel much more responsive throttle and eninge's urge to rev at lower temperatures (5-12°C) on a sunny day.hollus wrote:And the cause why winter testing times almost always are faster than quali times in may: mostly temperature affecting...
Air density
The fastest laps this winter were probably made with an air temperature of about 13C. That translates into about 3% extra air density for the aero to work and likely over 4% extra oxygen density for the engine to burn, after accounting for likely humidity levels, compared to last may.
This just isn't true.dren wrote:It's their MO. That's what they do every year.Juzh wrote:How much did RB sandbag with their RB7 in testing? Just curious, because we all know what happened that year.
Checking the results from the first 4 races last season shows that Red Bull was one of several closely matched fast teams. Four different teams won those first races as they all learned about the Pirelli tires. The teams that were strong in testing claimed podiums in the opening races.Nando wrote:Well looking at those years then comparing the car they had when the season started they definitely sandbagged...
RB6 and RB7 is great examples of that.
Even if they had done identical times as the top runner in season tests it would still be a form of sandbagging when you can pull out a second from nowhere come AUS.