Dont forget Mercedes and RBR have nice tricks like soft rear, or maybe active suspension.
If this is not be forbidden next year, will McLaren use it?
I think that one that is lost in this discussion is that McLaren(Ferrari also but that's irrelevant here) has clearly failed to extract the full performance that the car is capable of at some tracks ,whereas Red Bull has followed this aero concept/philosophy(roughly) since '09, and always gets the best out their carmrluke wrote:I have updated the charts again to includei Mexico.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... rmat=image
Again the divergence between RBR and Mclaren's performances continues, the season can be split into 3 parts.
Part 1: Australia to Canada
Part 2: Canada to Singapore
Part 3: Singapore to Mexico
Parts 1 and 3 show a clear divergence between Mclaren and RBR while Part 2 shows a good correlation.
Mexico has actually been one of the best tracks for Mclaren this year in contrast to the USA which was one of their worst.
For Mclaren USA was nearly as bad as Italy while RBR were much more competitive at USA. It is therefore clear that lack of power cannot be the cause for Mclaren's poor performance in USA.
I wonder if we are seeing everybody gain on Mercedes since Malaysia as they detune for reliability?
Separately I am going through all of the qualifying sessions from 2014 onwards to get a full picture for all of the teams, I am particularly interested in how STR compare this year against Mclaren.
Below chart shows how Mclaren have performed vs RBR
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... rmat=image
Do you have anything to support this assessment?PlatinumZealot wrote:The Renault is strong now and has be been getting stronger proportionally with each race since their latest update. I put the Renault no more than 10hp less than Ferrari. Maybe 20hp down on Mercedes. The Honda is 80hp weaker than Mercedes.
Because Mclaren have stated over and over that this season,due to lack of power, aero development has focused exclusively on efficiency at the expense of total downforce. Red Bulls advantage is in max downforce so they're draggy on your "power" circuits.mrluke wrote:Do you have anything to support this assessment?PlatinumZealot wrote:The Renault is strong now and has be been getting stronger proportionally with each race since their latest update. I put the Renault no more than 10hp less than Ferrari. Maybe 20hp down on Mercedes. The Honda is 80hp weaker than Mercedes.
If the Honda is 60bhp down on Renault then why do Mclaren catch up RBR on all of the power circuits but lose time on the chassis circuits?
http://www.espn.co.uk/f1/story/_/id/151 ... -engine-f1Mercedes' data shows Toro Rosso has least powerful engine in F1
"You may not know this, but the engine with the least power on the grid is actually the Ferrari in the Toro Rosso," Mercedes technical boss Paddy Lowe told ESPN. "The Renault and the Honda are not so far behind the Ferrari Mercedes, so there is not a lot of difference now between the power units."
In your whole analysis, you do not account for any progress made by Mercedes.PlatinumZealot wrote:They catch up Mercedes too. That is just down to getting the set up right.
Honda has claimed at halfway through the season to be equal or slightly better than the Ferrari 2015 power unit.
Franz Tost has claimed to be 80hp down on Mercedes. These two pieces of info are enough to make a good estimate.
Then as for Renualt.
Christian Horner has claimed to be 37kW (58hp) down when they just did their Monaco upgrade. (Note they have increasingly gotten more power out of the engineer after each race). In Singapore they gained another 15hp (according to an Insider) and they have gained more thru tuning thereafter. In the last three races RedBull have displayed similar top speeds and at the same time cornering speeds as Mercedes.
Ferrari are are very coy, not making any claims at all. So once they are not complaining you know they are close. Guys like Niki Lauda said that Ferrari was just about there in power terms as well. The Japan onboard video comparison between Kimi and Nico show how much power the Ferrari has even through the esses.
Not forcing anyone to accept them, but I am fairly satisfied with these estimates.
Exposed as you did it looks like nosense, but it really is notmrluke wrote:So far we appear to have established that Mclaren perform better at the engine tracks than the chassis tracks but this is because they have designed the chassis of their car to only be good at the engine tracks.
For this season, yes. For 2017, maybe not.mrluke wrote:Andres, while I completely agree that top speed in f1 is overwhelmingly a factor of drag rather than power. I struggle to comprehend how or even why Mclaren have made a chassis that only performs at power tracks. Even assuming this was true it seems like a complete waste of time and effort