raymondu999 wrote:obraz wrote:raymondu999 wrote:
Again - we don't know *why* the cars perform that way, but what we *do* know is that in the tracks we've seen so far, Red Bull has the advantage at rear-limited, Ferrari at front-limited.
What about Lotus and Mercedes?
Hamilton was 3rd in China but struggled in Spain and both are front-limited tracks.
Btw, Nürburgring, the track after the british GP is it front-limited too?
Lotus seems to me more temp sensitive. It has a good balance front to rear, and it doesn't mind whether a circuit is front or rear limited. Merc is worse at rear limited, IMO.
Nurburgring... Never knew what to make of it really. Very frnt limited in some sections, very rear limited in other sections.
Thank you sincerely for your time. All replies help me better understand.
Would it be fair to say that since Lotus is a chassis which seems to do pretty well at both front and rear limited circuits, they cannot compete at the same level as Ferrari and RB, who have it seems, as the years pattern reveals, focused their attention on a better front or rear griping car? Maybe they did not intend this...
It seems from all that has been written here (which has been very insightful by all participants, thank you), that if you construct a car which is good, not exceptional, but good, at both types of circuits, you will inevitably not be able to compete on equal terms with cars that have been focused to the rear or the front?
Could it be concluded then that you are in fact better off as a manufacturer to focus more on one end of the car over the other? I know it would be optimal to have both at absolute perfection certainly (Williams 1992, Ferrari 2001-2004, RB 2011) but it seems that may not be possible in this year since no team has been mentioned or shown that they excel exceptionally well on both ends of the car--equal to the point they can match RB or Ferrari at tracks where the other dominates? The results for Lotus reveal that maybe there is merit to this consideration. Lotus is just good enough to compete for the top 3-5 most everywhere, but they will not dominate virtually anywhere, and therefore rarely win since RB will dominate at rear limited circuits and Ferrari will dominate at front limited. Maybe Lotus is thinking if they can finish top 4 each week they will win it in the end by being consistent and not badly struggling anywhere?
Sorry to be a bit off topic of the Silverstone track exactly, these were just my further considerations as I read through the string.
Watching F1 since 1986.