He screwed up too much in the final corner to salvage that lap, the mistake that cost him pole was going way too deep onto the dirty part of the track.ringo wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 23:34The redbull crashed because the driver was out of control from the first turn. That was an easy pole even after the lock up in the last corner. And Jolyon Palmer made that assessment. Going back on throttle with less agression would have kept max going down the straight for pole.
I expect the same for Honda / RB
I upvoted you as well because indeed a healthy discussion would be welcome.
I guess it's just 'easier' to be exceptional over a single lap than over a whole race distance. Maybe he got the softs to work a bit better, Max had no traffic (Lewis had a bit, albeit at mostly inconsequential locations). And clearly, he took every available millimeter on the track (until he took a few that were unavailable).NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Dec 2021, 15:04Not sure where to ask this as the Saudi thread is locked. But how come RedBull lose so much speed to Mercedes on the straights in the race (Lewis was gaining huge chunks in the race in S2 and S3, yet in qualy the RedBull was faster in S2, and was looking quicker in S3 also until Max binned it).
Usually you would say that RedBull have a better qualy mode, but obviously thats not allowed now.
Any thoughts ?
I think that is what they always do, going for the highest top speed without sacrificing to much speed in the corners, meaning, finding the perfect balance for the specific track to obtain the best lap time. Maybe you are suggesting that they might want to sacrifice some lap time in order to gain top speed, which might be possible. In that case they would need to be absolutely sure that they would still take the pole.TNTHead wrote: ↑09 Dec 2021, 14:49Much of the talk is about who messed up where, who's to blame for this, and that. Could we please focus more on the non-emotional side of F1? Like what is the expected pace for RB vs. Merc etc.
I am very curious who will have the faster car next race. I expect Honda/RB to go extreme on engine settings and as minimum DF as possible without sacrifising too much in the corners and on tyre deg. On top of that they may have found something in the floor to reduce drag.
It’s the tow… Max didn’t had a tow and Lewis was in within 2 seconds the whole time… The dirty air made Lewis lose time in S1 following so close (therefore Max increasing the gap by a few tenths) and then when the speed / straight sections came around, Hamilton benefited from the tow to close the gap again… The tow also allowed Lewis to potentially recharge more battery since he didn’t need to deploy as much, therefore in certain laps he would use that extra amount of battery charge and close even further.NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Dec 2021, 15:04Not sure where to ask this as the Saudi thread is locked. But how come RedBull lose so much speed to Mercedes on the straights in the race (Lewis was gaining huge chunks in the race in S2 and S3, yet in qualy the RedBull was faster in S2, and was looking quicker in S3 also until Max binned it).
Usually you would say that RedBull have a better qualy mode, but obviously thats not allowed now.
Any thoughts ?
No, it is really the ICE.rogazilla wrote: ↑09 Dec 2021, 16:44...... It seems this deployment strategy in the race is where Merc has a huge advantage with right now. .......... Though the pace Hamilton demostrated in Brasil specific, it didn't look like he needed to slow down to recharge (this is of course may just be the TV broadcast would focus only during action or overtaking to create such illusion). Since this is not really the topic for the above discussion... back to RBR, this is where I think Honda is saying that a new ICE itself wouldn't result in a big gain the way Merc's does.
I suspect it is a combination of both: in qualy VER had his soft tyres probably more in the right temperature windows leading to a better exit corner traction. In the race VER could not copy the situation HAM had because his tyres were gone so no tow benefits.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑09 Dec 2021, 17:22It’s the tow… Max didn’t had a tow and Lewis was in within 2 seconds the whole time… The dirty air made Lewis lose time in S1 following so close (therefore Max increasing the gap by a few tenths) and then when the speed / straight sections came around, Hamilton benefited from the tow to close the gap again… The tow also allowed Lewis to potentially recharge more battery since he didn’t need to deploy as much, therefore in certain laps he would use that extra amount of battery charge and close even further.NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Dec 2021, 15:04Not sure where to ask this as the Saudi thread is locked. But how come RedBull lose so much speed to Mercedes on the straights in the race (Lewis was gaining huge chunks in the race in S2 and S3, yet in qualy the RedBull was faster in S2, and was looking quicker in S3 also until Max binned it).
Usually you would say that RedBull have a better qualy mode, but obviously thats not allowed now.
Any thoughts ?
Good chance it has to do with the amount of drag that is the trade-off of the extreme rake setup. During FP and in Q they can run with an open DRS to reduce that effect a bit.NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Dec 2021, 15:04Not sure where to ask this as the Saudi thread is locked. But how come RedBull lose so much speed to Mercedes on the straights in the race (Lewis was gaining huge chunks in the race in S2 and S3, yet in qualy the RedBull was faster in S2, and was looking quicker in S3 also until Max binned it).
Usually you would say that RedBull have a better qualy mode, but obviously thats not allowed now.
Any thoughts ?