GP2 pole lap: 1m38.865
Fastest Kamui lap Friday: 1m38.257
Fastest Marcus lap Friday: 1m39.136
Yeah, it's slow. I though not, but it is.
So even when you compare first FP day of the slowest F1 car with the pole lap of GP2, F1 is still faster...rjsa wrote:GP2 pole lap: 1m38.865
Fastest Kamui lap Friday: 1m38.257
Fastest Marcus lap Friday: 1m39.136
Yeah, it's slow. I though not, but it is.
Sure? Read it again...Andres125sx wrote:So even when you compare first FP day of the slowest F1 car with the pole lap of GP2, F1 is still faster...rjsa wrote:GP2 pole lap: 1m38.865
Fastest Kamui lap Friday: 1m38.257
Fastest Marcus lap Friday: 1m39.136
Yeah, it's slow. I though not, but it is.
Thanks for the data
How about you read it again. You compared apples to oranges twice to draw conclusion you wanted.rjsa wrote:
Sure? Read it again...
Ok, that's true to be fair.ChrisM40 wrote:This years GP2 pole is within last years F1 pole 107% and will likely be well within this years. Thats kind of sad. To me a lesser series shouldn't be able to qualify for the higher series grid on speed.
Dietrich is that you?Töm87 wrote: Whats the budget of an GP 2 team? It's a bit odd that GP2 are that fast with a fraction of the Formula One budgets.
agreesiskue2005 wrote:just 0.8 sec slow with less df, 50kg extra, smaller engines and harder tyres
i dont think they slow
On this track in partciular that isn't true, last year they had mediums as options here.siskue2005 wrote:harder tyres
I have tried without success to tell you todays cars are not as quick...Willl you believe Newey?Red Bull master designer Adrian Newey has mocked Formula One's new engine rules, claiming they have produced slower cars without achieving the intended green goals.
Speaking ahead of Sunday's Bahrain Grand Prix, Newey — who designed the cars that won Red Bull the past four drivers' championships — said the new 1.6 liter V6 turbo hybrid engines have increased costs and slowed down the cars for little benefit.
He said the environmental aims of the hybrid engine could have been more efficiently met by reducing the cars' weight without compromising speed, and that there were more ways to be relevant to commercial car production than fuel efficiency alone.
"The cost has gone up hugely to create this," Newey said. "If you put that cost into weight saving, you might be better off in many cases, so to automatically say that this is some huge benefit for mankind is taking a bit of a big leap.