You guys really need to stop underestimating RedBull. This is a team of incredibly professional engineers. I would not be at all surprised to see them come out guns blazing, with a working car at Australia.Felipe 92 wrote:Some predictions here about Australian GP are hilarious. McLaren slower than Sauber, Red Bull 3rd fastest, Mercedes 5th fastest team in race etc. My predictions: 1. Mercedes, 2. McLaren 3. Williams 4. Ferrari 5. Force India and Red Bull catching fire at lap 15
First of all, Newey had more impact on the cars design than anyone, and he has shown himself to be very gifted but also very fallible. After all lets not forget the MP4-18. The RB10 is a lot like the MP4-18, It's packed so tightly that it's having cooling issues. I'm sure RBR will get it together this year but short of a miracle, I don't see them as title contenders because they are laps behind the competition.beelsebob wrote: You guys really need to stop underestimating RedBull. This is a team of incredibly professional engineers. I would not be at all surprised to see them come out guns blazing, with a working car at Australia.
+1.beelsebob wrote:You guys really need to stop underestimating RedBull. This is a team of incredibly professional engineers. I would not be at all surprised to see them come out guns blazing, with a working car at Australia.Felipe 92 wrote:Some predictions here about Australian GP are hilarious. McLaren slower than Sauber, Red Bull 3rd fastest, Mercedes 5th fastest team in race etc. My predictions: 1. Mercedes, 2. McLaren 3. Williams 4. Ferrari 5. Force India and Red Bull catching fire at lap 15
Felipe 92 wrote:Some predictions here about Australian GP are hilarious. McLaren slower than Sauber, Red Bull 3rd fastest, Mercedes 5th fastest team in race etc. My predictions: 1. Mercedes, 2. McLaren 3. Williams 4. Ferrari 5. Force India and Red Bull catching fire at lap 15
History backs you up in this though, just think about Schumacher from 2000-04, a simple tire rule change ended his dominance, at the end of the 90's the dominant Williams team fell hard when Renault pulled out. No team is immune from falling on their faces, if anything the massive rule changes make it more likely that a top team will fall hard.Jef Patat wrote:We can't know for sure and I admit everything is possible, they have lots of money which can make a very big difference. But the fact that it can doesn't mean it does. All those predictions on RB being at the front can only be based on the assumption that in the past they have been the team to beat so now they will be again. Let's not forget http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tortoise_and_the_Hare
A working car? For sure.beelsebob wrote:You guys really need to stop underestimating RedBull. This is a team of incredibly professional engineers. I would not be at all surprised to see them come out guns blazing, with a working car at Australia.
If you would be reading this forum you would know that the problem is not cooling. Only stupid journalists still keep on blaming the cooling.dans79 wrote:The RB10 is a lot like the MP4-18, It's packed so tightly that it's having cooling issues.
You are right with that. The 1000km test put the Mercs to the front last year by solving the tire issues. It would be stupid to underestimate the 2000km+ advantage of the tests with the new car.dans79 wrote:I'm sure RBR will get it together this year but short of a miracle, I don't see them as title contenders because they are laps behind the competition.
History tells you nothing. The end of active suspension did much more to the aero than the ban of the blown diffusor. They can still run the same rake like with the blown diffusor, so aero still works the same. And the change in the tires supported Michelin...maybe this is partially comparable with the non competitive Renault V6T engine. But with the other engines frozen the Renault engine will be developed until it is competitive at the end of this or next season for political reasons.dans79 wrote:History backs you up in this though, just think about Schumacher from 2000-04, a simple tire rule change ended his dominance, at the end of the 90's the dominant Williams team fell hard when Renault pulled out. No team is immune from falling on their faces, if anything the massive rule changes make it more likely that a top team will fall hard.Jef Patat wrote:We can't know for sure and I admit everything is possible, they have lots of money which can make a very big difference. But the fact that it can doesn't mean it does. All those predictions on RB being at the front can only be based on the assumption that in the past they have been the team to beat so now they will be again. Let's not forget http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tortoise_and_the_Hare
Blackout wrote:DIE TOP-SPEEDS VON BAHRAIN
Team Speed Tag
1. Ferrari 339,6 km/h 8
2. Williams-Mercedes 334,3 km/h 8
3. Mercedes 332,3 km/h 4
4. Caterham-Renault 331,2 km/h 8
5. McLaren-Mercedes 330,2 km/h 2
6. Toro Rosso-Renault 324,3 km/h 8
7. Force India-Mercedes 322,3 km/h 3
8. Red Bull-Renault 317,6 km/h 8
9. Sauber-Ferrari 314,8 km/h 5
10. Lotus-Renault 313,0 km/h 8
Marussia-Ferrari 313,0 km/h 8
http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 65979.html
Even stupid journalists know you don't do stuff like this to your car unless you are having overheating issues.basti313 wrote: If you would be reading this forum you would know that the problem is not cooling. Only stupid journalists still keep on blaming the cooling.
The above comment is all kinds of wrong.basti313 wrote: History tells you nothing. The end of active suspension did much more to the aero than the ban of the blown diffusor. They can still run the same rake like with the blown diffusor, so aero still works the same.
I would rather see F1 go the way of the dodo than socialist crap like this. F1 is a competition of drivers and development, so if you do a crap job, or chose a crap supplier you should have to deal with the consequences.basti313 wrote: But with the other engines frozen the Renault engine will be developed until it is competitive at the end of this or next season for political reasons.
You are completely missing the purpose of this solution. It is for cooling the MGU-H heatsink which is getting to hot/is burning due to software and battery faults the software can not deal with. This has nothing to do with cooling under normal conditions.dans79 wrote:Even stupid journalists know you don't do stuff like this to your car unless you are having overheating issues.basti313 wrote: If you would be reading this forum you would know that the problem is not cooling. Only stupid journalists still keep on blaming the cooling.
[Jerez]
http://thejudge13.files.wordpress.com/2 ... ysis-6.png
[Bahrain]
http://www1.skysports.com/f1/news/12475 ... at-bahrain
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-OEM2gv29aZA/U ... ustom).jpg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-az-3_gvJzXY/U ... ustom).jpg
You are not getting what I said...dans79 wrote:The above comment is all kinds of wrong.basti313 wrote: History tells you nothing. The end of active suspension did much more to the aero than the ban of the blown diffusor. They can still run the same rake like with the blown diffusor, so aero still works the same.
Teams haven't been blowing the diffuser since 2011. the last 2 years teams have been blowing the gap between the diffuser and the rear wheels. this helps them seal the diffuser from tyre squirt and thus allows them to run more rake.
Scarabs talks about it here:
http://scarbsf1.com/blog1/2012/10/15/an ... -exhausts/
Would you also have this opinion if not the Renault engine would be crap but the Merc, Honda or Ferrari engine?dans79 wrote:I would rather see F1 go the way of the dodo than socialist crap like this. F1 is a competition of drivers and development, so if you do a crap job, or chose a crap supplier you should have to deal with the consequences.basti313 wrote: But with the other engines frozen the Renault engine will be developed until it is competitive at the end of this or next season for political reasons.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think the old wing had much less drag, it just had fewer elements - it may have even been producing more peak downforce (feel free to correct me if I'm wrong - I don't claim to be an expert in these things, just my understanding).ironrose wrote:Blackout wrote:DIE TOP-SPEEDS VON BAHRAIN
Team Speed Tag
1. Ferrari 339,6 km/h 8
2. Williams-Mercedes 334,3 km/h 8
3. Mercedes 332,3 km/h 4
4. Caterham-Renault 331,2 km/h 8
5. McLaren-Mercedes 330,2 km/h 2
6. Toro Rosso-Renault 324,3 km/h 8
7. Force India-Mercedes 322,3 km/h 3
8. Red Bull-Renault 317,6 km/h 8
9. Sauber-Ferrari 314,8 km/h 5
10. Lotus-Renault 313,0 km/h 8
Marussia-Ferrari 313,0 km/h 8
http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 65979.html
That top speed for ferrari .. was that recorded on the old wing configuration or new one???
if it was recorded on the old wing ... thats not much to read into the numbers ...