NathanOlder wrote: ↑01 Dec 2019, 10:42
Downforce is king yes, but not to the extent you are suggesting. As an example, cars. dont run Maximum downforce at Silverstone or Catalunya. If being slower on the straights (Mercedes compared to Racing Point) is faster in laptime, then Bottas should add some wing and be down 5kmh on the straights but quicker overall. But its not quite true as you already know.
well they have a setup window don't they, that basically is the range each car concept has to be tuned for each circuit they go to. For each circuit they have scans of the track and all that, loaded into the sim, and they try to find the best compromise. Downforce/drag/efficiency. And all year long Ferrari have been trying to develop their front end to have more downforce to switch the front tyres on, and we thought they'd pretty much done it, or i did.
So now the conspiracy theory apparently is that they've lost power with the TD's and so they've had to take downforce off to compensate, and this is why twisty S3 is such a fail.
Well, i just doubt that is a
choice they would make, because it's such a huge loss. If they have to adjust their compromise then I think they'd lose less time on the lap overall if they lost some top speed instead and kept the front working through S3
So I'm beginning to believe they've lost some power, but i don't think S3 is an item of evidence for it. I think it's more likely to be just the very slow, tight corners, that they still lack front downforce for fundamentally, and their super complicated suspension and overheating the rears. Losing 20kW or whatever isn't why they decided to ruin their car for that sector. The Merc and the Red Bull both have a lovely strong front end and that's the difference, not power. If it was power Ferrari wouldn't bother hanging on to +7kph at that price would they?
Oh and i'm wondering if driveability might be a factor as well, one small part of it, as the other Ferrari-powered cars aren't great there either