Juzh wrote:ForMuLaOne wrote:Diesel wrote:
What makes you think they are coasting? Considering the additional drag this year, is 330km/h likely? I think not...
Just wanted to highlight the gap in performance they create vs. 2016 specs. Achieving the same lap time with an almost 20% deficit in top speeds is quite an achievement. Given the additional cornering speed (which makes them quicker at the straights as well) and increased PU Power (which helps to run different gear ratios) i would rather think about top speeds in the 320km/h region at best lap time level. I believe they will hit these speeds for sure.
If we see this year´s Formula One cars struggling to hit the 300km/h barrier at almost every track i would be very astonished and disappointed. Imagine Monza or Mexico at 310 km/h opposed to 370 km/h on the long straights. Not going to happen...
Who knows where this trap is positioned. It's 100% not the same speed trap where cars were clocking 330+ last year. Vettel's 280,5 kmh is low even for a start/finish line speed trap (290+ last year). I also don't believe cars are cruising to such an extent. Ludicrious assumption.
Teams rarely push their cars on the first test, let alone the first day. The cars are faster onto the straights and in theory will have more horespower. There will be more drag than last year, but potentially it will be more efficient drag too. Why is it "ludicrous" to think that they might not be anywhere near top speed?
If it is "ludicrous" to think the cars are cruising, then the five seconds that we were promised (and the teams think they will deliver) seem to have vanished into thin air.
The cars will be multiple seconds quicker than they are now. Not just by race time but probably by the end of the week. So in F1 terms, is this not cruising?