Most likely, the Friday McLaren motors are very old, and can not develop high power.Nonserviam85 wrote: ↑01 Nov 2019, 14:01Or they have more downforce which induces more drag that requires more power to maintain the speed...
Agree with this, good points raised.f1rules wrote: ↑01 Nov 2019, 14:18will be interesting to see, we are normally at that time of the year, where mclaren introduce next years fw design, but if they change concept, maybe they will not test it this year. And what about their nosecone design, stay or go? Lastly, williams and now Haas introduced mcl, fer, TR style frontwings, will others?? maybe redbull? and will mclaren keep or go the rb way. Looking at the new 2021 aero rules, would it not make more sense to keep their current design which resembles the 2021. And also it seem ferrari and mcl both had success making the frontend stronger, which was the worry earlier in the year.
Not exactly. Power limited is exaclty the opposite. It corners where you have to limit the amount of throttle you use or else you will break traction thereby taking the corner slower. So these are corners that you have to feather the throttle to prevent excess wheels slip.
i get your intuition but 'power limited' means the limit on the laptime there is power/drag, instead of grip as in in the slow/medium/fast corners. The chart is a progression from slow to easy flat. They're corners that are really like straights for these cars (there's a cool F1 word for them i can't remember)PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 00:52Not exactly. Power limited is exaclty the opposite. It corners where you have to limit the amount of throttle you use or else you will break traction thereby taking the corner slower. So these are corners that you have to feather the throttle to prevent excess wheels slip.
Mainly corner exits from slower corners.
Ferrari has supreme traction out of the corners and continue to make gains on the straights. The Haas and Sauber dont seem to be displaying this sort of ability so its a bit more than just the engine I fear.
The original poster is actually correct and you are wrong, power limited corners are corners where you drive around with the throttle pinned such as 130R at Suzuka.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 00:52Not exactly. Power limited is exaclty the opposite. It corners where you have to limit the amount of throttle you use or else you will break traction thereby taking the corner slower. So these are corners that you have to feather the throttle to prevent excess wheels slip.
Mainly corner exits from slower corners.
Ferrari has supreme traction out of the corners and continue to make gains on the straights. The Haas and Sauber dont seem to be displaying this sort of ability so its a bit more than just the engine I fear.
The word "straights" is too simple to use in the graph?trinidefender wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 02:10The original poster is actually correct and you are wrong, power limited corners are corners where you drive around with the throttle pinned such as 130R at Suzuka.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 00:52Not exactly. Power limited is exaclty the opposite. It corners where you have to limit the amount of throttle you use or else you will break traction thereby taking the corner slower. So these are corners that you have to feather the throttle to prevent excess wheels slip.
Mainly corner exits from slower corners.
Ferrari has supreme traction out of the corners and continue to make gains on the straights. The Haas and Sauber dont seem to be displaying this sort of ability so its a bit more than just the engine I fear.
What you are describing is literally every other corner that is covered by the slow, medium and high speed graphic.
Saying straights isn't correct either, as power limited encompasses both straights and corners that can be taken flat. Different cars scrub off, or accelerate at different amounts of speed in a power limited corner.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 02:16The word "straights" is too simple to use in the graph?trinidefender wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 02:10The original poster is actually correct and you are wrong, power limited corners are corners where you drive around with the throttle pinned such as 130R at Suzuka.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 00:52
Not exactly. Power limited is exaclty the opposite. It corners where you have to limit the amount of throttle you use or else you will break traction thereby taking the corner slower. So these are corners that you have to feather the throttle to prevent excess wheels slip.
Mainly corner exits from slower corners.
Ferrari has supreme traction out of the corners and continue to make gains on the straights. The Haas and Sauber dont seem to be displaying this sort of ability so its a bit more than just the engine I fear.
What you are describing is literally every other corner that is covered by the slow, medium and high speed graphic.
Ok. I will give u guys that one.
Traction limited is what i was describing..
OMG PZ! Where have you been? On gardening leave wit PL ?PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 02:16The word "straights" is too simple to use in the graph?trinidefender wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 02:10The original poster is actually correct and you are wrong, power limited corners are corners where you drive around with the throttle pinned such as 130R at Suzuka.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Nov 2019, 00:52
Not exactly. Power limited is exaclty the opposite. It corners where you have to limit the amount of throttle you use or else you will break traction thereby taking the corner slower. So these are corners that you have to feather the throttle to prevent excess wheels slip.
Mainly corner exits from slower corners.
Ferrari has supreme traction out of the corners and continue to make gains on the straights. The Haas and Sauber dont seem to be displaying this sort of ability so its a bit more than just the engine I fear.
What you are describing is literally every other corner that is covered by the slow, medium and high speed graphic.
Ok. I will give u guys that one.
Traction limited is what i was describing..
The biggest step forward in my opinion was ditching that stupid plate that was there for seasons._cerber1 wrote: ↑25 Oct 2019, 07:24Amazing progress
Australia 2019
https://radikal.ru
Mexico 2019
https://radikal.ru
I don't know if you've heard but they've openly stated what their problem was last season. It was the distance between the front wheels and floor edge + front of the sidepod.godlameroso wrote: ↑06 Nov 2019, 06:50The biggest step forward in my opinion was ditching that stupid plate that was there for seasons._cerber1 wrote: ↑25 Oct 2019, 07:24Amazing progress
Australia 2019
https://radikal.ru
Mexico 2019
https://radikal.ru
https://i.postimg.cc/28DgBQ5W/Dz-Xa1-L6-Xg-AAy3u-W.jpg
https://imgr2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/M ... 164372.jpg
They've really come a long way, and it looks like they're on the right trajectory as they keep finding chunks of time.
You mean added an extra chicken wing element? The new BB has 3 vs the old one with 2 + plate.
He means that the concept simply has evolved from previous season... Obviously it will be different to work with the rest of the bargeboard.