vyselegend wrote:I wouldn't be as categoric, but I agree the 908 is probably not as bad in the wet as it could seem. At Petit 2009, and to some extent even during LM 2008, the 908 was actually OK in the wet (when conditions required full wet tyres without ambiguity)...
I must confess I missed some of the early stages of
PLM2009. That only would justify the different perceptions me and
Pandamasque have. The part I remember better was after rain came pouring and the Peugeots started catching and going by the Audis, when these were struggling and spinning around.
The justification you presented for the problems at PLM makes a lot of sense and reinforces my perception.
vyselegend wrote:Just, by experience, remember that Audi are masters when it comes to play the mind games, and thinking they showed their true pace today(even for that given package/track compromise) would be silly.
vyselegend wrote:Peugeot drivers are allowed to use the "boost" button approximatively every three laps (and during qualy obviously) acording to Minassian...
vyselegend wrote:...Audi's V10 is in it's second year only, and in a totally new environement (because the R15 plus engine bay radically differs to the old R15 one, according to Ralph Juttner). So I'm pretty sure they can't play with engine power as confidently as Peugeot does.
I'm really sceptic
(always...) concerning the apparent simplism of some of the things we have taken for fact, in the high/low downforce debate and the "boost" explanations.
First, I really would expect the top speed difference to be higher. In Paul Ricard the Audi topped 331km/h and Peugeot 325km/h -
6km/h difference. At Spa, the Audis reached about 310km/h and the Peugeots 304km/h -
the same 6km/h difference. Of course, a 6km/h difference is a bigger difference at slower top speeds, but is Peugeot's Le Mans configuration (as used by Oreca
au Castellet) worth
that little -
a mere 0,9% difference And if you consider that the alleged higher downforce of the Peugeot would allow it to go faster through
Le Radillon than its adversary, the data available just gets more confusing.
Second, let's analyse this race's best sector data:
- 1st sector:
Peugeot faster by
0,116"
- 2nd sector:
Peugeot faster by
1,238"
- 3rd sector:
Audi faster by
0,225"
A big difference in the technical middle sector -
proving that the Audi really runs with low downforce? Anyway, even if the Audis were running with low boost, they still managed to be faster and thirstier than the Peugeots...
Audi claims to have worked on
not losing power with the new restrictor - they were down on Peugeot last year - and Peugeot admitted at Sebring that the performance lost through the Winter seemed to be offset by a significant consumption gain.
Another thing: given the open-cockpit configuration and still-blunt nose, I believe that the R15+ is still
draggier than the 908 and...
...
actually, higher base drag
(not setup dependent) and a more powerful engine than the Peugeot, coupled with a very low downforce pack would explain a lot - why Audi's top speed is higher, but not by much; why the R15+ seems so thirsty; why it lost so much time for the 908 between Rivage and Stavelot and why Audi seems the first team - all classes combined - to change for inters at the slighest sight of rain.
And it's true, we are waiting for a long time for that clip