About Force India:kooleracer wrote:I think Force India will be strong here. I think Force India could out qualify some of the top teams (red bull or Ferrari). I Think the top 4 will be Mercedes and Lotus. Both have quick cars in long straights. McLaren could also leapfrog Red Bull or Ferrari on this track. But pole will be decided between Lotus and Mercedes. Red Bull,Ferrari,McLaren ad Force India will be a close pack in qualifying. I really hope for the championship that the Lotus and Mercedes drivers can stay ahead of Vettel the coming 2 race's.
sennafan24 wrote:I think at this stage it is all down to the tyres with Mercedes. Lewis has adapted and is racing to a very high standard, and the car is high quality. If the tyres continue to support the Merc, there maybe no stopping Lewis who was tested in every aspect of the game in Hungry and came away showing he is a great all round driver, not just the fastest
Again, counter argument.Jonnycraig wrote:sennafan24 wrote:I think at this stage it is all down to the tyres with Mercedes. Lewis has adapted and is racing to a very high standard, and the car is high quality. If the tyres continue to support the Merc, there maybe no stopping Lewis who was tested in every aspect of the game in Hungry and came away showing he is a great all round driver, not just the fastest![]()
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Last year Button drove during his qualy lap with DRS open through blanchimont. You can take that corner with a stalled rear wing.bonjon1979 wrote:Is there a way to stop the DRD from working in yaw? I'm sure that it would be devilishly complicated but I wouldn't think it's beyond the realms of possibility.
I bring it up because there was earlier discussion about the value of such a device at Spa with fast corners that could see it activated accidentally through Blanchimont etc. If you could design it to work only when the car is traveling in a straight line then you could have it stall at a much lower speed.
Good point.turbof1 wrote:Last year Button drove during his qualy lap with DRS open through blanchimont. You can take that corner with a stalled rear wing.bonjon1979 wrote:Is there a way to stop the DRD from working in yaw? I'm sure that it would be devilishly complicated but I wouldn't think it's beyond the realms of possibility.
I bring it up because there was earlier discussion about the value of such a device at Spa with fast corners that could see it activated accidentally through Blanchimont etc. If you could design it to work only when the car is traveling in a straight line then you could have it stall at a much lower speed.
Right, blanchemont isn't a problem. The question is, can you have it open in pouhon, If you can, then question is can you have it open in pouhon. If you can, then the question is, can you have it open in the left hander after rivage, If you can, then the question is, can you have it open in Fanges. If the answer to all of these questions is "yes" then you may actually gain a decent benefit from DRD. I highly doubt the answer even to the first one is yes though, given that the teams weren't opening DRS last year, and the f-duct before that in there.bonjon1979 wrote:Good point.turbof1 wrote:Last year Button drove during his qualy lap with DRS open through blanchimont. You can take that corner with a stalled rear wing.bonjon1979 wrote:Is there a way to stop the DRD from working in yaw? I'm sure that it would be devilishly complicated but I wouldn't think it's beyond the realms of possibility.
I bring it up because there was earlier discussion about the value of such a device at Spa with fast corners that could see it activated accidentally through Blanchimont etc. If you could design it to work only when the car is traveling in a straight line then you could have it stall at a much lower speed.