Zynerji wrote:No offense, but hiding true pace doesn't make sense. So what if you hang a 1:13.7?
What help is that to the other teams watching?
If I recall, Brawn was 1 sec faster than anyone in 2009 testing. Can anyone tell me how that hurt them?
I don’t think it’s a matter of “hiding” their pace... Simply put, during the first week there is no need to push the engines since they are not going for outright performance... In order to understand the new car, what is working and what isn’t, how it reacts to different settings (ride height, suspension dampening, differential settings, etc.) they don’t need to do so with powerful engine settings... Furthermore, in order to understand how those changes have an effect on the car, it is more important to have a consistent lap time, you don’t get that consistency going at the limit... In addition to all the above, they are also testing the durability of new parts, with the teams trying to shave as much weight as possible from their cars / parts some of them could be close to their stress limits and the only way to find that out is with as much mileage as possible... Why risk losing precious run time in order to push the cars into performance runs?
Next week we should be able to see more runs that are closer to actual performance, the teams will bring their new parts on the first couple of days and will probably try to see what they can get from the best setup on the last day.
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