Isn’t this the first time we split our strategy?
Isn’t this the first time we split our strategy?
I think this is the first time
I can’t even remember Fernando and Stoffel splitting tyre choice.
M840TR wrote: ↑11 Jun 2019, 09:16Apologies for the brevity. What I meant is the tapered FW does not generate more downforce at higher speeds than the conventional. Of course any object passing through air has higher resistance with increase in speed, but relatively speaking the tapered FW doesn't generate the upwash that the other one does. Which is why the front end isn't as agile. F1 is all about relative performance; so for instance it wouldn't matter if a new car isn't as quick as the old one as long as it's better than the competition that year. Obviously the same applies to low-speed corners but aero usually isn't as significant in such scenarios.
The comparison to SF90 isn't as straight forward either. Sure the car is much better overall than the Mcl34 but that's not to suggest they don't share similar limiting factors because of mutual FW philosophies. Both have front-end DF issues which is a fact. Where the former excels is better aero (NB: Ferrari has an S-duct unlike Mclaren), mechanical and tyre management. If Mclaren keep developing the concept they'll probably reach similar performance levels but theoretically the ceiling is much lower to the front.
The problem is that there was “one article” that said that Ferrari’s concept had less development potential than Mercedes... I would wait until the end of the season to see who effectively have developed more (a little early to tell)... That’s the only “theory” that the ceiling is lower with the current wing philosophy.M840TR wrote:Apologies for the brevity. What I meant is the tapered FW does not generate more downforce at higher speeds than the conventional. Of course any object passing through air has higher resistance with increase in speed, but relatively speaking the tapered FW doesn't generate the upwash that the other one does. Which is why the front end isn't as agile. F1 is all about relative performance; so for instance it wouldn't matter if a new car isn't as quick as the old one as long as it's better than the competition that year. Obviously the same applies to low-speed corners but aero usually isn't as significant in such scenarios.
The comparison to SF90 isn't as straight forward either. Sure the car is much better overall than the Mcl34 but that's not to suggest they don't share similar limiting factors because of mutual FW philosophies. Both have front-end DF issues which is a fact. Where the former excels is better aero (NB: Ferrari has an S-duct unlike Mclaren), mechanical and tyre management. If Mclaren keep developing the concept they'll probably reach similar performance levels but theoretically the ceiling is much lower to the front.
I’m sure Mclaren always had Renault and Haas as their biggest threats... I don’t think the team has came out at any point saying that they are leading the midfield or comfortably making it to Q3.Ground Effect wrote:I don’t know what McLaren’s plans are, but surely they must see Renault now as the biggest threat. I’m genuinely concerned the gap will get bigger in France. If McLaren don’t have anything significant planned for Paul Ricard, I hope they will have for Silverstone.
You and every person here know that this weekend would have been a whole lot better if it weren't for NOR failure, and SAI early lap incident with the visor plastic. And to jump to conclusion after McLaren were better at every race up to this point. So wait for a fair race and judge then.
Both imply a mistake from the driver wich didn´t happen and is the point, so please do not hide behind semanticsmwillems wrote: ↑11 Jun 2019, 09:04Once more misquuoting. I said he compromised, not ruined, seems you have a little agenda.Andres125sx wrote: ↑11 Jun 2019, 07:56Well, you said he ruined 3 races himself even when you can´t provide a reason for the third (first two are laughable btw), but keep blaming him so...
It's not semantics its blants misrepresentation, and if you were so convinced your opinion was correct you wouldnt need to do it. You betray your own argument with your behaviours, repeatedly deliberately twisting, changing and putting words into my mouth and then following that with childish emojis, It's like talking to Donald Trump on Twitter. I've trolled the troll enough now, you can carry on berating folks for not sharing your opinion now, although we both know this is because I called you out a few days back for being rude to someone after having a bad dayAndres125sx wrote: ↑12 Jun 2019, 07:50Both imply a mistake from the driver wich didn´t happen and is the point, so please do not hide behind semanticsmwillems wrote: ↑11 Jun 2019, 09:04Once more misquuoting. I said he compromised, not ruined, seems you have a little agenda.Andres125sx wrote: ↑11 Jun 2019, 07:56
Well, you said he ruined 3 races himself even when you can´t provide a reason for the third (first two are laughable btw), but keep blaming him so...