#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
Actually it gets weirder from there, Abiteboul claims in race trim the order is Ferrari, Renault, Honda, Mercedes !According to Red Bull's bill, the performance deficit has shrunk to Mercedes in the racing trim in the single-digit horsepower range. Only Ferrari have more bums. Ex-partner Renault is last.
RB16 a big evolution
Red Bull knows that they still have a lot of work to do in order to catch up with Mercedes in all their relationships. No team understands the tires so well. No team makes so few mistakes. No team is as constant as the world champions. Red Bull's achievements are still too variable. 2019 was followed by a decent season start a high before the summer break, a low after the summer break and a final high.
Basic problem of Melbourne
The engineers were never able to eradicate the RB15's basic problem. The aerodynamics platform is not as stable as Mercedes. The engineers practice self-criticism: "We are still too susceptible to wind and temperature." These are two construction sites that one wants to clear out with the RB16.
The wing regulations for 2019 caught Red Bull on the wrong foot. The cars in front of the RB15 had always built on a strong front wing, which directed the air so targeted backwards and vortex toss that the underbody was sealed. Red Bull entered new territory with the simplified wings.
The engineers promise a big evolution. Next year, Red Bull must be capable of winning from the start. "Then it should be a great season. There could be a tight fight between Mercedes, Ferrari and us. "
But the Milton Keynes team does not just dream of the World Drivers' Championship. Red Bull also wants to race for first place in the Constructors' World Championship. It takes a second strong driver next Verstappen. Alexander Albon needs to take a step in 2020. By 2019, Red Bull had been a one-man team for too long. Pierre Gasly, who was replaced at the middle of the season, could not cope with the sharp handling of the RB15 at all. That only managed Verstappen.
It's absurd to thing Mercedes lost it's edge just like that. Their engine is still the benchmark, the other Mercedes teams weren't complaining about power.Bill wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 06:22If you read the full article from amus it says Honda pu is within single digits hp away from Mercedes from what I can deduce Honda has already caught Mercedes or pass them after what we saw from Brazil. Amus is a little biased towards merc. In fact Honda did produce a graph that effectively says they had matched Mercedes for so really they is no point speculating we got the answer from the horses mouth.
Cyril thinks his engine is second best he put Mercedes dead last.Toto on the other hand put Mercedes 2nd Renault last so really to extent everyone see what they want to see.
I think that is part of their design-philosophy. Build you car as smooth as possible. I always believed that if all those winglets and other drag-increasing features are necessary something else has gone wrong. You want to guide the airflow just were you want it, with as little effort as possible.godlameroso wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 07:05It's absurd to thing Mercedes lost it's edge just like that. Their engine is still the benchmark, the other Mercedes teams weren't complaining about power.
About the RB16, I think that the rear end of the car lacked a lot of little winglets and features that were on other cars. I sincerely think that now that they more or less get the new regulations they can add a lot of parts that weren't on the car this year. If we look at the RB15 vs the Mercedes, Mercedes did more detail work around the rear of the car than RB did. Particularly the rear wing end plates.
Not really, if you look at simulations/predictions whacking on the downforce does more for lap-time than reducing drag (for most circuits).Singapore2008 wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 12:39I think that is part of their design-philosophy. Build you car as smooth as possible. I always believed that if all those winglets and other drag-increasing features are necessary something else has gone wrong. You want to guide the airflow just were you want it, with as little effort as possible.
That's true but the issue of being overtaken on the straights means that there is a compromise to be found. It appears that the line between enough downforce for decent lap times and too much drag giving poor top speed, is a fine one.jjn9128 wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 12:42Not really, if you look at simulations/predictions whacking on the downforce does more for lap-time than reducing drag (for most circuits).Singapore2008 wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 12:39I think that is part of their design-philosophy. Build you car as smooth as possible. I always believed that if all those winglets and other drag-increasing features are necessary something else has gone wrong. You want to guide the airflow just were you want it, with as little effort as possible.
No, that's not what I was trying to say. I will try again...jjn9128 wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 12:42Not really, if you look at simulations/predictions whacking on the downforce does more for lap-time than reducing drag (for most circuits).Singapore2008 wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 12:39I think that is part of their design-philosophy. Build you car as smooth as possible. I always believed that if all those winglets and other drag-increasing features are necessary something else has gone wrong. You want to guide the airflow just were you want it, with as little effort as possible.