Back in 2012/2013, the Lotus was able to operate in a very wide window. When the tyre structure got changed midseason in 2013, every was thinking it would certainly hurt Lotus due the advantage of tyre managing falling away. It did not, just showing how adaptable the car is.abw wrote:After Malaysia, especially hearing what Allison said about the tires before the race, my hope is that he's managed to build a car with similarly good mechanical grip and "tire sympathy" to what the 2012 Lotus had.... and that this translates into strong showing at any race where sneaky tire strategies can play a role. That's what I hope at least. But if wishes were horses, we'd all be eating steak.
maybe just maybe mercedes never really solved their tire chewing problems of 2013...their massive pace advantage last year may have masked that.....Australia is a one of street circuit that everyone discounts as a good benchmark track to use to establish the pecking order and everyone doing a one stopper really left no room for any challenging team to try different strategies....i think mercedes will win china with ferrari being a lot closer than in australia my guess is that vettel will split the mercedes.turbof1 wrote:Back in 2012/2013, the Lotus was able to operate in a very wide window. When the tyre structure got changed midseason in 2013, every was thinking it would certainly hurt Lotus due the advantage of tyre managing falling away. It did not, just showing how adaptable the car is.abw wrote:After Malaysia, especially hearing what Allison said about the tires before the race, my hope is that he's managed to build a car with similarly good mechanical grip and "tire sympathy" to what the 2012 Lotus had.... and that this translates into strong showing at any race where sneaky tire strategies can play a role. That's what I hope at least. But if wishes were horses, we'd all be eating steak.
He certainly built that aspect in the Ferrari. Mercedes still has the best pace, but Ferrari will perform better when conditions are extreme or are rapidly changing. Rain, extreme cold or extreme hot temperatures, quickly dropping or quickly rising temperatures,... . Ferrari will need to have something out of the ordinary to compete with Mercedes, but a race can quickly get out of the ordinary.
Maybe they did but Lotus connection is not straightforward. I'm guessing there was a bit more behind that, accumulation of designs and experience. Now: no FRIC, different engine, tyres and everything else, Allison is a technical manager but with aero expertise not suspension. It is interesting though why they were superior in that regard in China.abw wrote:After Malaysia, especially hearing what Allison said about the tires before the race, my hope is that he's managed to build a car with similarly good mechanical grip and "tire sympathy" to what the 2012 Lotus had.... and that this translates into strong showing at any race where sneaky tire strategies can play a role. That's what I hope at least. But if wishes were horses, we'd all be eating steak.
Are you sure if so please post the resultsiotar__ wrote:Maybe they did but Lotus connection is not straightforward. I'm guessing there was a bit more behind that, accumulation of designs and experience. Now: no FRIC, different engine, tyres and everything else, Allison is a technical manager but with aero expertise not suspension. It is interesting though why they were superior in that regard in China.abw wrote:After Malaysia, especially hearing what Allison said about the tires before the race, my hope is that he's managed to build a car with similarly good mechanical grip and "tire sympathy" to what the 2012 Lotus had.... and that this translates into strong showing at any race where sneaky tire strategies can play a role. That's what I hope at least. But if wishes were horses, we'd all be eating steak.
Of course he had nothing to do with the engine or change of rules of in-season engine development. Also AFAIR (correct me etc.) inventive cooling praised recently originated before his arrival, maybe it changed. It may explain Merc difference, slightly more conservative on engine side in the race? Whatever happened to front pull rod controversies, he certainly did not bring that with him .
LMAO is anything on any car better than anything on a mercedes harsha? sheeshHarsha wrote:Are you sure if so please post the resultsiotar__ wrote:Maybe they did but Lotus connection is not straightforward. I'm guessing there was a bit more behind that, accumulation of designs and experience. Now: no FRIC, different engine, tyres and everything else, Allison is a technical manager but with aero expertise not suspension. It is interesting though why they were superior in that regard in China.abw wrote:After Malaysia, especially hearing what Allison said about the tires before the race, my hope is that he's managed to build a car with similarly good mechanical grip and "tire sympathy" to what the 2012 Lotus had.... and that this translates into strong showing at any race where sneaky tire strategies can play a role. That's what I hope at least. But if wishes were horses, we'd all be eating steak.
Of course he had nothing to do with the engine or change of rules of in-season engine development. Also AFAIR (correct me etc.) inventive cooling praised recently originated before his arrival, maybe it changed. It may explain Merc difference, slightly more conservative on engine side in the race? Whatever happened to front pull rod controversies, he certainly did not bring that with him .
I dont think that Ferrari con compete with Mercedes under the rain and when the track is cold but changing conditions and hot can help them, speciallly now that they seem capable of taking the correct strategies(finally!!).turbof1 wrote:Back in 2012/2013, the Lotus was able to operate in a very wide window. When the tyre structure got changed midseason in 2013, every was thinking it would certainly hurt Lotus due the advantage of tyre managing falling away. It did not, just showing how adaptable the car is.abw wrote:After Malaysia, especially hearing what Allison said about the tires before the race, my hope is that he's managed to build a car with similarly good mechanical grip and "tire sympathy" to what the 2012 Lotus had.... and that this translates into strong showing at any race where sneaky tire strategies can play a role. That's what I hope at least. But if wishes were horses, we'd all be eating steak.
He certainly built that aspect in the Ferrari. Mercedes still has the best pace, but Ferrari will perform better when conditions are extreme or are rapidly changing. Rain, extreme cold or extreme hot temperatures, quickly dropping or quickly rising temperatures,... . Ferrari will need to have something out of the ordinary to compete with Mercedes, but a race can quickly get out of the ordinary.
Here is the article: http://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/arriv ... at-ferrariSectorOne wrote:Motorsport.com has an article on Arrivabene saying team orders is a thing of the past.
Bodes well for both drivers and us the fans of the sport.
wonder if they will bring forward their engine updates planned for barcelona? they would have to i'm assuming since upgrade parts can only go on new engines...or maybe they just wait till the next engine change scheduled.F1NAC wrote:Amus is reporting that Kimi and Seb could use 2nd ICE, cause the team found some cracks in engine block
I don't believe the cause are cracks because the second ICE for Bahrain was confirmed shortly after China GP. I think it's just scheduled switch because they want to have fresh engine for this track.F1NAC wrote:Amus is reporting that Kimi and Seb could use 2nd ICE, cause the team found some cracks in engine block
I don't think it was part of the original schedule. They wanted to get their second revision of the 2015 engine ready for Barcelona. That would imply that they wanted to only use up one engine before getting there so that they didn't have two original spec engines. Now the new engine has been pushed back to Canada, either because they needed to take a second engine now, or causing them to take a second engine now.MarkedOne8 wrote:I don't believe the cause are cracks because the second ICE for Bahrain was confirmed shortly after China GP. I think it's just scheduled switch because they want to have fresh engine for this track.F1NAC wrote:Amus is reporting that Kimi and Seb could use 2nd ICE, cause the team found some cracks in engine block