MarkedOne8 wrote:Ok, Grosjean had new slim rear bodywork. Kimi had DRD.
Kimi was 8-0 in Qualifying battles with Grosjean this year. Silverstone is the first GP this year where Grosjean outqualified Kimi. That tells me (at least me) that slim rear bodywork is real improvement, a couple of tenths. Also, I don't believe DRD is negative on time delta. It should help at leas a tenth per lap. So, Kimi with new rear bodywork should be real threat.
This is one of the weirdest, not related in any way to car, based on nothing, non-technical posts I've ever seen on this forum. What two tenths? What one tenth? What negative delta? What 8:0? What real threat? Three tenths combined?
To make it simple: ANY kind of result in qualifying (I assume qualifying not race is your point of reference,
why?) in Germany EITHER WAY will prove NOTHING regarding gains from either of updates packages. For obvious reasons:
- no data to back it up
- mixing human element over one lap in qualifying with gains that were recorded by the team (development, tests, straight line test, Silverstone practice) and approved by lead driver. [Then of course there was silence from the team after qualifying regarding updates, which kind of stops discussion about it]
- logic of separating update packages based on data and possible gains with regard to drivers (leading, second). Even if we're dealing with estimations and results that don't match them, such conclusions as posted above make no sense at all
- all others obvious variables (track, weather and so on)
And not obvious: like familiarity and amount of set up, tweaking and adjusting it takes to make 'device' work based on preferences from driver and obvious differences in that regard. Including past data and experience from tests, qualifying and full race. If you're willing to quantify all that and make a comparison having no information from the team than good luck.