Maybe lol, although he was disqualified for overtaking the safety car because he thought he was a lap down. when I think he was actually leading the race. Was all a mix up when he had a drive through penalty for a jump start, then everyone pitted when the safety car came out at the same time he did his drive through. A few lappped cars were waved by as usual and he followed them expecting to be well down as he had just served his penaltydtro wrote: ↑28 Oct 2020, 06:00Redemption timeJust_a_fan wrote: ↑27 Oct 2020, 18:12Kimi is the only current driver who has raced at Imola in an F1 car.
Hamilton raced there in GP2, starting P3 in the feature race before being disqualified. He started the sprint race P15 and finished in P10.
What a mess! These are the best drivers in the world though so I expect them to learn the track pretty quickly.NathanOlder wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 00:51Maybe lol, although he was disqualified for overtaking the safety car because he thought he was a lap down. when I think he was actually leading the race. Was all a mix up when he had a drive through penalty for a jump start, then everyone pitted when the safety car came out at the same time he did his drive through. A few lappped cars were waved by as usual and he followed them expecting to be well down as he had just served his penaltydtro wrote: ↑28 Oct 2020, 06:00Redemption timeJust_a_fan wrote: ↑27 Oct 2020, 18:12Kimi is the only current driver who has raced at Imola in an F1 car.
Hamilton raced there in GP2, starting P3 in the feature race before being disqualified. He started the sprint race P15 and finished in P10.
I doubt it was the aerodynamics that put it there. The tea tray will have hit it and then it will have been thrown one side or the other of the car and caught on the first bit that got in the way
It's amazing how they've managed to squeeze-in +/-1000 reliable HP in such a tight space. I know their slightly longer wheelbase would have helped but still....PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Nov 2020, 21:59Having that turbine closer to the engine has really given them a tight coke bottle area.
Expect Ferrari and Renault to follow suit.
They have to. The new regulations will force teams to improve packaging as that is where all the aero potential is. The rest of the bodywork rules are so restrictive that it's nothing but aero optimization.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Nov 2020, 21:59Having that turbine closer to the engine has really given them a tight coke bottle area.
Expect Ferrari and Renault to follow suit.
I could be wrong, but I'm not so sure that having the turbine closer to the engine is the reason. Mercedes place their intercooler in front of the engine and pipework from the intake to the compressor and from the compressor to the plenum, are all ahead of the engine, essentially pushing it backwards. The Ferrari has/had it's intercooler and associated pipework above the engine. This increases the c.g, but creates a shorter engine package. The turbo is substantially place in the free space of the the gearbox casing/slightly above it.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Nov 2020, 21:59Having that turbine closer to the engine has really given them a tight coke bottle area.
Expect Ferrari and Renault to follow suit.