Any Pics, I thought McLaren and Sauber systems were similar in the first race, while Ferrari had a Acer duct
Sauber ramp was tested later in the season
Sauber C31
That website would be an abomination in 1999.Artur Craft wrote: ↑08 May 2017, 17:03
If the car really improves by that much, then it will corner A LOT faster than Ferrari and Mercedes because, as it was on Bahrain and Sochi, Red Bull already had the cornering speed of Ferrari and Mercedes even with their sleek car:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LytDgckaIGo
http://motorsportzone.blogspot.com/2017 ... fying.html
I know this is off topic, but if the new rules have destroyed their concept of high rake etc, then I wonder if that has impacted on Mclaren as well...TNTHead wrote: ↑09 May 2017, 13:09In Auto Motor und Sport a summary is given at the point Red Bull stands now
http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 27537.html
They state that the Barcelona update of the chassis is aimed at increasing the downforce at back of the car so they can get the rear tyres in the desired temperature range. Furthermore they question whether the new regulations have destroyed their concept (high rake, without losing too much top speed). I am curious which parts will be updated (beside confirmed base plate and front wing). They even may change their basic concept so that the b-spec can be seen as a new car.
Continuing the off-topic theme, Mercedes stated that they explored switching to the high rake concept for 2017 but found its potential to be limited compared with the long wheelbase concept they opted for.adrianjordan wrote: ↑09 May 2017, 16:05I know this is off topic, but if the new rules have destroyed their concept of high rake etc, then I wonder if that has impacted on Mclaren as well...TNTHead wrote: ↑09 May 2017, 13:09In Auto Motor und Sport a summary is given at the point Red Bull stands now
http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 27537.html
They state that the Barcelona update of the chassis is aimed at increasing the downforce at back of the car so they can get the rear tyres in the desired temperature range. Furthermore they question whether the new regulations have destroyed their concept (high rake, without losing too much top speed). I am curious which parts will be updated (beside confirmed base plate and front wing). They even may change their basic concept so that the b-spec can be seen as a new car.
It's odd/different but, imo, still not as bad as the current mobile oriented ones. Does people remember how awesome the previous f1.com was? The new one is uglier, not as neat and lack lot's of info such as sector times and etc(thankfully, those are still available on FIA's website)
I find Russia to be problematic in deducing much, as RB's tyre problems would've been much worse there. Some food for thought from Bahrain:Artur Craft wrote: ↑08 May 2017, 17:03
If the car really improves by that much, then it will corner A LOT faster than Ferrari and Mercedes because, as it was on Bahrain and Sochi, Red Bull already had the cornering speed of Ferrari and Mercedes even with their sleek car:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LytDgckaIGo
http://motorsportzone.blogspot.com/2017 ... fying.html
Bottas was pole lap, Grosjean best lap from qualifying (the Q3 lap), and for Ricciardo, it was his first Q3 lap. The Ricciardo lap was around 0.5s slower than his second Q3 lap but I don't have an onboard of that. For the comparison I posted it shouldn't matter.Artur Craft wrote: ↑09 May 2017, 20:45Thanks very much for the data! Which laps are these data from?
T12 is an easy 100% throttle bend, so it's pure power. On the motorsportzone Bahrain comparison, I think Verstappen was up there with Bottas through the fast T6.
Noble talked to RB people and they threw cold water on the hype surrounding this upgrade, as I guess they would do regardless of how big that is. I don't think the upgrade will be enough because the others will also take their's but it migh closes the gap to less than half a second.
maybe you'are forgetting friction: in a turn, even if you are flat out, friction prevents you from achieving the same acceleration than along a straight.Nuvolari wrote: ↑10 May 2017, 12:25
You're right that turn 12 is full throttle, and I would disagree it's all about power...I think the plot above illustrates that it's not. If it was only about power, the acceleration through turn 12 would be closer to the dashed line. The respective delta between the dashed line and the unbroken lines, indicate how much the cornering speeds were limited by the chassis.
[my emphasis]motobaleno wrote: ↑10 May 2017, 12:33maybe you'are forgetting friction: in a turn, even if you are flat out, friction prevents you from achieving the same acceleration than along a straight.Nuvolari wrote: ↑10 May 2017, 12:25
You're right that turn 12 is full throttle, and I would disagree it's all about power...I think the plot above illustrates that it's not. If it was only about power, the acceleration through turn 12 would be closer to the dashed line. The respective delta between the dashed line and the unbroken lines, indicate how much the cornering speeds were limited by the chassis.
Incidentally, for the same reason, the fact that mercedes was faster than ferrari in turn 3 at sochi did not indicated a better aerodynamical/chassis behavior of mercedes in high speed corners but it was simply another evidence of the fact that mercedes PU is still superior