Zynerji wrote: ↑26 Nov 2020, 15:39
raymondu999 wrote: ↑26 Nov 2020, 14:05
Zynerji wrote: ↑24 Nov 2020, 13:57
I'm sure Charles is a fine fellow. But his best results so far came in a car of questionable legality.
While this is true; I don't think the legality of the car affected the quality of his driving skill. He was given, in an algebraic analogy, "Equipment X" - but what results he pulled out would be seen relative to Equipment X. It's like an equation where both sides are divided by the same denominator. It cancels out, IMO.
Meh...
A "better than legal" car will be easier to drive... Thats why traction control was such an attractive thing.
My 6 year old daughter could lap within 1 second of me on rFactor (2010 F1 cars, Monaco circuit). Turning on traction control, she became 2 seconds faster. I can see how the clock made her look like the best driver, but the hidden illegality of her car was truly the differentiator. Not her skill and experience.
I feel very similar with Charles.
Time will tell a more complete story, and I'm a patient one!
So why did he have 7 poles in his rookie season vs 4xWDC that is Vettel who had 2? Vettel drove legal car, or? They are driving one right now and Vettel is getting beaten badly (worse then pretty much any other driver on grid).
Moore77 wrote: ↑26 Nov 2020, 19:33
Zynerji wrote: ↑26 Nov 2020, 15:39
raymondu999 wrote: ↑26 Nov 2020, 14:05
While this is true; I don't think the legality of the car affected the quality of his driving skill. He was given, in an algebraic analogy, "Equipment X" - but what results he pulled out would be seen relative to Equipment X. It's like an equation where both sides are divided by the same denominator. It cancels out, IMO.
Meh...
A "better than legal" car will be easier to drive... Thats why traction control was such an attractive thing.
My 6 year old daughter could lap within 1 second of me on rFactor (2010 F1 cars, Monaco circuit). Turning on traction control, she became 2 seconds faster. I can see how the clock made her look like the best driver, but the hidden illegality of her car was truly the differentiator. Not her skill and experience.
I feel very similar with Charles.
Time will tell a more complete story, and I'm a patient one!
I see you are getting it all mixed up. First off, explain precisely how SF90 was "better than legal car" and why it was easier to drive.
Your daughter's example here is irrelevant. I would be happy to know, what exactly in SF90 that helped Leclerc perform better than Seb.
In his rookie season of 2018, he outperformed a more experienced driver who was his team mate and got some really good results in a Sauber. He then outperformed his more pro team mate in 2019 and he continues to do that in 2020 with a couple of podiums and some near podium results in what is occasionally, a 6th best car.
To be precise, in his rookie season Charles dominated Ericsson, a 4 year F1 veteran, by scoring 84% of Sauber points and by having 0.5s advantage on average in pace. He also beat him 16 v 3 in qualifying (having lost first 2 at beginning of season).
Just for comparison sake, Werhlein barely beat Ericsson by 1 point to 0 in his rookie season, but lost more races to Ericsson then he won against him. That puts things in perspective IMO.