machin wrote: ↑24 Sep 2018, 21:33
BlakjeKaas wrote: ↑24 Sep 2018, 19:36
It is interesting to see how the times at the top are so close, while the cars differ so much in drag and downforce.
There was a Monaco F1 race a few years back where one of the drivers smashed his front wing off meaning he effectively had almost zero downforce (all that rear downforce is worth nothing if your front wheels won’t turn in)... he was running only 3 seconds per lap off the cars in front...
Is 3 seconds a lot or a little? It doesn’t sound like much, but across the start finish line it is going to be somewhere around 200 metres lost ground per lap...
Well, 3 seconds is rather a "lightyear" in racing, but since it's quite hard to overtake on Monaco, a 3 second deficit doesn't have to mean a lot of trouble if you're already in front.
I suppose you mean the 1997 Monaco race where Mika Salo finished 5th without doing any pitstops and with a broken front wing? His 3 second deficit could partly be explained by him driving in a Tyrell, which was already ~1,5 seconds slower than the top cars anyway. Furthermore, since he was driving the whole race on a single set, I'd suppose the tyre wear didn't help lap times as well..
A more recent example is Daniel Ricciardo, he lost his complete hybrid system this year, but went on to finish the race in 1st position because the other cars couldn't find a spot to overtake him even though the race pace would've been ~3-4 seconds faster.
However, my point was actually that the designs of the top 3 cars differ a lot in drag & lift coefficient, but the results however are very close.
It's also interesting to note that TalnoRacing designed a car that only had a L/D of ~1.5, but due to the low drag coefficient was able to finish relatively high. The question remains whether a low drag design philosophy will be the way to go for the upcoming tracks or if a high downforce approach will work better.
If my eyes don't deceive me, the next race will be in 1,5 months, giving me a lot of time to try out different concepts, and I might even be able to focus on a certain design philosophy.