Judging by the way they are going to try to prevent blowing rear wing and the way they explained it, it seem to me as they are saying we are not going to do anything about that this year.
Judging by the way they are going to try to prevent blowing rear wing and the way they explained it, it seem to me as they are saying we are not going to do anything about that this year.
There isn't any new regulation. All they said was that teams have been complaining about the rules not being followed. FIA realises that the intent of the rules are difficult to put down in words for the rulebook. But they will enforce the intent of the rules rather than the exact wording and hence work on a case-by-case approach. There isn't any kind of rule change - you were never allowed to have engine modes just for blowing the wing.
Daniel was only 0.45 of a second off Vettel's pole lap in Bahrain.Mr. Fahrenheit wrote: ↑24 Apr 2018, 09:58Ricciardo was a second slower than Vettel's pole lap in Bahrain. Calm it with the sensationalism
at the bottom of the home page on this site is a live weather report for baku
That's a serious understatement for tyre and simulation engineers in Ferrari and other F1 teams.Restomaniac wrote: ↑24 Apr 2018, 06:24Ferrari will have had no clue how their car treats the new compounds in 'anger' when they decided on this weekends tyre compounds.
Almost half a second in one of three races. More in the other two and unless engine difference was worth 0,5 or 0,7 s in those that's not a great sign. Fine, it's still only three GPs and engine upgrades are coming.carisi2k wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 06:51Daniel was only 0.45 of a second off Vettel's pole lap in Bahrain.Mr. Fahrenheit wrote: ↑24 Apr 2018, 09:58Ricciardo was a second slower than Vettel's pole lap in Bahrain. Calm it with the sensationalism
1. The engine difference has been worth about 0.5 of a second and so in race trim they are on their coat tails.iotar__ wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 10:53Almost half a second in one of three races. More in the other two and unless engine difference was worth 0,5 or 0,7 s in those that's not a great sign. Fine, it's still only three GPs and engine upgrades are coming.carisi2k wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 06:51Daniel was only 0.45 of a second off Vettel's pole lap in Bahrain.Mr. Fahrenheit wrote: ↑24 Apr 2018, 09:58
Ricciardo was a second slower than Vettel's pole lap in Bahrain. Calm it with the sensationalism
Next race Red Bull couldn't risk softs in Q2 (overlooked in win chest beating) which compromised their race. They had a good pace but it's hard to compare it when you're nowhere near the lead and rely on a gift of a SC erasing 15 s gap (ric, less for ver), free pitstop and quicker, fresh tyres against sitting duck one-stoppers. Also: Bott and Vett lost time on artificial Raik blocking .
Right on their coatail reminds me of a Sky commentator. While Bottas was jumping Vettel, he claimed he was defending against MV who was ~6 s behind yet almost overtaking him. Gap was getting bigger on mediums (later stops).
RBR was 1,3 down on Mercedes here last year. Aero efficiency is the key on this circuit and good top speed, engine. I see Ferrari again at the top of top speed charts with their brand new car philosphy. Having high-rake is really good for tight S2 here, and then a low-drag Mercedes style in S1,S3 would of course help with the top speed.
Of course you would do something like that with a big fat paddle on the steering wheel so that no one notices.saviour stivala wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 13:14FIA imposing nothing new regarding this hot air speculation by the well known usual people.
FIA is not concerned by exhaust blowing the rear wing, as all teams exhaust tail-pipe position is within the FIA rules.
What the FIA is worried about is the speculations being pushed out about special maps which are triggered by the number 5 FERRARI new paddle on the steering wheel spinning the turbo by the "H" when the driver is off throttle. these speculators are implying that when the driver goes off-throttle the engine throttles are being open by the engine map. something that is not permitted by the rules. and something which in my opinion no team will attempt with the pedal/throttles rules as are.
I would just have the drivers lean out of the monoque and blow the diffusor themselves when off throttleMtthsMlw wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 14:59Of course you would do something like that with a big fat paddle on the steering wheel so that no one notices.saviour stivala wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 13:14FIA imposing nothing new regarding this hot air speculation by the well known usual people.
FIA is not concerned by exhaust blowing the rear wing, as all teams exhaust tail-pipe position is within the FIA rules.
What the FIA is worried about is the speculations being pushed out about special maps which are triggered by the number 5 FERRARI new paddle on the steering wheel spinning the turbo by the "H" when the driver is off throttle. these speculators are implying that when the driver goes off-throttle the engine throttles are being open by the engine map. something that is not permitted by the rules. and something which in my opinion no team will attempt with the pedal/throttles rules as are.
WORST. GOVERNING. MISTAKE. EVER.FMP wrote: ↑24 Apr 2018, 22:35There isn't any new regulation. All they said was that teams have been complaining about the rules not being followed. FIA realises that the intent of the rules are difficult to put down in words for the rulebook. But they will enforce the intent of the rules rather than the exact wording and hence work on a case-by-case approach. There isn't any kind of rule change - you were never allowed to have engine modes just for blowing the wing.
Not really. They were new compounds.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 10:52That's a serious understatement for tyre and simulation engineers in Ferrari and other F1 teams.Restomaniac wrote: ↑24 Apr 2018, 06:24Ferrari will have had no clue how their car treats the new compounds in 'anger' when they decided on this weekends tyre compounds.