Watch the Silver Arrows then, that's where the real race is now.....auv wrote:Expecting a boredom here with red cars' domination in both qualy and race
In the past, Red Bull's rate of development late season and Renault's PU that came on par with other Manufacturers as they did not have to run as conservative as others meant, Red Bull were strong. But this year, they have fallen behind in development of the car and we are still to witness how Honda performs here with RB chassis. With Mercedes leading the slow corner performance with Ferrari almost close, the past slow corner advantage of Red Bull also doesn't exist. I expect them to be where they have been in the past few races, comfortable third best car.NathanOlder wrote: ↑20 Oct 2019, 15:18Looking forward to this one! RedBull always been strong, Ferrari will be there or there abouts. Max vs Charles vs Seb. Plus the title race goes to Austin.
I agree with you so much on Red Bull that i'm starting to think that the conventional wisdom of "last year of regulations just keep evolving what you got" might not be the best to them, for all their chassis reputation they have been markedly average, maybe they need a shake up and more aggressive thinking.GPR -A wrote: ↑21 Oct 2019, 04:24In the past, Red Bull's rate of development late season and Renault's PU that came on par with other Manufacturers as they did not have to run as conservative as others meant, Red Bull were strong. But this year, they have fallen behind in development of the car and we are still to witness how Honda performs here with RB chassis. With Mercedes leading the slow corner performance with Ferrari almost close, the past slow corner advantage of Red Bull also doesn't exist. I expect them to be where they have been in the past few races, comfortable third best car.NathanOlder wrote: ↑20 Oct 2019, 15:18Looking forward to this one! RedBull always been strong, Ferrari will be there or there abouts. Max vs Charles vs Seb. Plus the title race goes to Austin.
Very true, and looking back at last year for Max,GPR -A wrote: ↑21 Oct 2019, 04:24In the past, Red Bull's rate of development late season and Renault's PU that came on par with other Manufacturers as they did not have to run as conservative as others meant, Red Bull were strong. But this year, they have fallen behind in development of the car and we are still to witness how Honda performs here with RB chassis. With Mercedes leading the slow corner performance with Ferrari almost close, the past slow corner advantage of Red Bull also doesn't exist. I expect them to be where they have been in the past few races, comfortable third best car.NathanOlder wrote: ↑20 Oct 2019, 15:18Looking forward to this one! RedBull always been strong, Ferrari will be there or there abouts. Max vs Charles vs Seb. Plus the title race goes to Austin.
You remember how Mercedes were in a limbo of running their new wheel rims last year at this point due to the fear of a Ferrari protest? They were focused on wrapping up the title than competing hard. That skews the competitive landscape for last year at this stage.
Ahaa, I hadn't remembered that! Thanks
How will the altitude affect the Mercedes cooling do you think, if at all?zibby43 wrote:Mexico is a power unit equalizer. Near Monaco-levels of downforce required here. All thanks to the altitude.
Highest circuit elevation on the calendar.
Ferrari Q 1-2, MV +0,5s from pole, title race was over 10 GPs ago or before the season.NathanOlder wrote: ↑20 Oct 2019, 15:18Looking forward to this one! RedBull always been strong, Ferrari will be there or there abouts. Max vs Charles vs Seb. Plus the title race goes to Austin.