Interesting, i always found McLaren's quotes on not being able to bring the Turkey upgrade after 3 weeks were a bit odd, people seemed to be biting their lips and in the end didn't really say anything concrete beyond 'various reasons', 'manufacturing issues', etc. I wonder if they already knew that off-throttle mappings were being banned soon and chose to redirect their efforts elsewhere.astracrazy wrote: ...i seem to remember macca had a new engine map this weekend (spain). i wonder if this was to improve the ebd or to fit in with the new rules...
You realize this is F1, and as such fuel is used to go faster?WhiteBlue wrote:The open throttle in corners is a waste of fuel
Of course, you can. They just did. I am not a fan of RedBull (Ferrari is my car and Monster is my drink), but this stinks.ecapox wrote:If it was to slow the Redbulls, that is garbage. You cant penalize a team because they thought of something more clever than you...seeing as it isnt against the rules.
There you go Don, a page taken directly from the Nascar book, Bill France's ghost all over it, frontspoiler up and a restrictorplate to go with it if you're too fast.donskar wrote:Of course, you can. They just did. I am not a fan of RedBull (Ferrari is my car and Monster is my drink), but this stinks.ecapox wrote:If it was to slow the Redbulls, that is garbage. You cant penalize a team because they thought of something more clever than you...seeing as it isnt against the rules.
Who is this mythical EVERYONE you refer to? I think many of those who care at all are opposed to mid-season changes, including this one.bill shoe wrote:These new technical interpretations are interesting, they could be good or bad, but in the big picture-
WHY DOES EVERYONE THINK IT'S REASONABLE FOR THE FIA TO MAKE LARGE RULES RE-INTERPRETATIONS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SEASON IN COMPLETE SECRECY?
True, Webber was faster consistently for a few races, and by Red Bull's own words, a change in the way they use the exhaust, a new engine map really, allowed Vettel to benefit more from the exhaust too. Looking at this in a different light, we have right there a rare example where we can quantify the effect of 1 individual performance factor in a car. The situation went, right then and there, from Webber being consistently about 2 tenths faster, to Vettel being about 3 tenths faster. If we assume that the engine mapping did not slow Webber down, and why should it, webber was tricking the car into optimizing the exhaust use and he could continue to do the exact same trick afterwards; then that software update alone, was worth at least those 5 tenths of difference.EricB wrote:...I can't remember the specifics, but wasn't there something last year about Webber being able to get the most out of the RB6 under trailing throttle, then a change was made to the car mid-season that didn't require that technique anymore and Vettel regained the advantage?
100% in quali trim apparently.richard_leeds wrote:So it is not a ban on the EBD. It limits the open throttle to 10% of full throttle. The thread title needs to be "partial limitation on EBD"
Out of interest, what % do they currently run on open throttle?
EBD will continue.