i don't think this is any worse now than it used to be, if you think of when McLaren or Williams or Ferrari or Brawn or Red Bull were by miles the best car, so Damon could win or a 39-year-old or a 23-year-old who now doesn't look quite that special in another car, or Danny Ric the same. It's always been a (car+driver) equation. And there are examples of teams going into a slump when a top driver leaves, like Renault, or rising when one joins, like Mansell at Williams
In a way then it's harder for drivers to shine against their teammate. It would have been much easier to dominate your lesser talented teammate when they didn't really have the telemetry to show him where he's losing out and how to rectify it.
I even think that 99% of the setup of the car (at the big teams) is done by the engineers, computer simulations and the sim driver. Friday practices are more about syncing the data then actual trying out setups. With Friday data back in the factory the team pulls an all nighter actually setting up the car and finalising race strategies.
Hamilton claims that he drives with his gut, his core, moreso than with his butt. Maybe he is saying the same thing in a different way(which wouldn't be abnormal for him) or maybe he is different. It would be interesting to find out.
I doubt team would want their tire and brake temps broadcasted, especially live, but maybe,but they change so much and so quickly that it wouldn't tell us much as live viewers, but would be interesting on re-watch.izzy wrote: ↑03 Apr 2020, 22:30those sponsored dumb figures are just annoying aren't they. They could do so much, if they weren't focused on dumbing it down. Tyre and brake temperatures, what a difference they'd make! They could just free stream the GPS and let independent web wizards run amazing sites with all those ideas you say and moreENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑03 Apr 2020, 21:43I wish FIA/FOM put out numbers like 0-100km time, best drivers in and out of the pits, fastest drivers thru crucial corners, etc... instead we get nonsense numbers like tire life percentage and probability of overtake.
Indeed so. Friday is about micro changes to get it to the individual driver's preference and to obtain tyre data on the track as it is that weekend. It's about finding the last tenth or two.Jolle wrote: ↑04 Apr 2020, 14:39I even think that 99% of the setup of the car (at the big teams) is done by the engineers, computer simulations and the sim driver. Friday practices are more about syncing the data then actual trying out setups. With Friday data back in the factory the team pulls an all nighter actually setting up the car and finalising race strategies.
No but they'd love seeing their rivals' temperatures and as long as it's the same for everyone it'd be fair. Yes they might need a rolling average, good point, over 2s or something, then it'd give the pundits something to talk aboutENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑04 Apr 2020, 17:07I doubt team would want their tire and brake temps broadcasted, especially live, but maybe,but they change so much and so quickly that it wouldn't tell us much as live viewers, but would be interesting on re-watch.
i've seen the tyre and brake temps on the steering wheel in the Mercedes, it's super useful data, but it wouldn't be a surprise if the only people who don't know is us! You think they fire some kind of focussed infra red at each others' cars or something? and now Liberty have started showing us tyre state but as usual in a dumbed down formPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑04 Apr 2020, 21:35Everybody knows the other guys tyre temps and what the optimal temperature is. The issue is how to get it there!
Remember when F1 used to show random IR images of the cars as they come through the pits? I wonder why they stopped?
I don't think that will be fair to all the simracing kids that have grown up with that stuff.GPR-A wrote: ↑06 Apr 2020, 06:55I think they should remove Tyre sensors and driver's telemetry tracking. Drivers have to develop feel for the car on their own for both tyres and their own driving pattern. Neither of these two are available for viewers in real time, so wouldn't hurt the viewing experience.
I have never watched Sim Racing and I don't know what % of F1 audience watch sim racing around the world. From that perspective, I don't think F1 as challenge for drivers and as sports entertainment for people who watch F1, shouldn't be driven by what the kids at sim racing would do.nzjrs wrote: ↑06 Apr 2020, 16:24I don't think that will be fair to all the simracing kids that have grown up with that stuff.GPR-A wrote: ↑06 Apr 2020, 06:55I think they should remove Tyre sensors and driver's telemetry tracking. Drivers have to develop feel for the car on their own for both tyres and their own driving pattern. Neither of these two are available for viewers in real time, so wouldn't hurt the viewing experience.