Mudflap wrote: ↑30 Sep 2019, 11:38
godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Sep 2019, 01:05
Mudflap wrote: ↑29 Sep 2019, 22:56
So did they or did they not bring the fuel lol ?
Yes they did. We'll see next round.
You said the new fuel worked fine in Singapore then you said there is new fuel in Japan?
What exactly are you proposing we are going to see? Green flames shooting out of the exhaust? RB matching Ferrari's straight line performance?
Then there is the mystery Honda secret device that would take a year for others to match? Come on..
I said they brought fuel, whether it was used at any point, I don't know. Could have been on one or two cars, could have been used only in practice and not raced.
More power, whether it is enough to beat Ferrari, I have no clue. It is supposed to give another tenth or two in qualifying. Biggest benefit is that it allows more usage of quali mode in the race.
There isn't any fancy device, just something that happens to exhaust gases at EVO. I don't know exactly what they are doing. It is supposed to drive the turbine harder than conventional methods. This allows them to use a more free flow turbine and maintain the same response as before.
Fuel is to control knocking, whatever they are doing increases it at the highest modes. They can't use a higher mode for too long, maybe 2 quali laps per weekend and a half dozen semi quali laps during the race.
If you want specifics I don't know any. You should be able to piece together why you would get more power from an equally efficient yet higher flowing turbine. Fewer pumping losses or more energy to the MGU-H would be obvious, and represent a modest gain. Now add fuel you've been developing for this concept. That would unlock the rest of the power.
Will it be enough, I don't know, it is a power bump, and estimates point to it being worth .2 seconds per lap. If that is correct then the gap to Mercedes will be .1 instead of .3
Will that make Red Bull the fastest car? It'll get them closer, the chassis is still not quite good enough. Which is a shame because they brought a pretty sizable update for Singapore and it didn't give them the performance they wanted. They tried again in Sochi and it brought almost no performance.
Japan is next, very few low speed corners, mostly mid and high speed, plus lots of full throttle. It will be a huge challenge, however Pirelli is bringing the hardest rubber so this may hurt Ferrari.
Mercedes slow corner advantage won't count for much, as all the critical corners are in the mid speed range. We saw how close qualifying was between Red Bull and Mercedes in Silverstone, which is a very similar track. I expect the same here, except the Red Bull will be just a bit faster. Will it be enough, I don't know.