It's on the Pirelli "demo" compound tyres which accounts for some of the deficit.
yes
Those tyres are still a whole lot smaller than the current ones.
Weren’t the narrow 2005 cars the fastest in a straight line ever? Maldo exceeded 270kph at Monza iirc.
Agreed about the length, but F1 cars are supposed to be 2.15m wide, not 2m and definitely not 1.8m. The narrow cars always looked squashed to me.
You deliberately picked the ugliest narrow track Renault you could find for that comparison didn't you I'd say the 1997 were probably the last well proportioned cars.JordanMugen wrote: ↑13 Dec 2020, 09:29Agreed about the length, but F1 cars are supposed to be 2.15m wide, not 2m and definitely not 1.8m. The narrow cars always looked squashed to me.
It just looks squashed and all wrong, don't you agree!?
Agree. I think it depends on when you started to watch the sport though...JordanMugen wrote: ↑13 Dec 2020, 09:29Agreed about the length, but F1 cars are supposed to be 2.15m wide, not 2m and definitely not 1.8m. The narrow cars always looked squashed to me.
https://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... t-re40.jpg
Wiiiiideee load coming through.
https://o.aolcdn.com/images/dims3/GLOB/ ... 89_opt.jpg
It just looks squashed and all wrong, don't you agree!?
F1 "evolved" in the wrong direction, with the limos and extra weight.Steven wrote: ↑12 Dec 2020, 22:04Those tyres are still a whole lot smaller than the current ones.
But, exactly that might explain how the car is maybe very quick on the straight as well.
Pity they didn't have a set of Michelins lying around somewhere
In any case, the car looks and sounds quicker than today's cars, imho.