Give 2-3 races and his optimism will disappear. 2 years just focussing on 2022 regulations as a manufacturer and still way off, shows just how incomptetent Alpine aka Renault is.
Give 2-3 races and his optimism will disappear. 2 years just focussing on 2022 regulations as a manufacturer and still way off, shows just how incomptetent Alpine aka Renault is.
Saints & LeClerc had the lowest speed traps of the race, because they where running with more DF. They did that because their powerful engine allows them to do so. There is always a compromise between DF, top speed and cornering speed. You always have to choose the balance that suits you. A powerful engine allows you to run more DF in the car where is needed. I guess the new ground effect cars can cope ok with high speed corners because of they way the DF is generated now, but it seems in this era DF is even more important now for the slow and mid corners also. The ground effect is less obvious with less speed, the cars are bigger and heavier so running more DF overall in the car will help a lot with low and mid cornering speed and most crucial with tire degradation.diffuser wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 06:20Saints & LeClerc had the lowest speed traps of the race.
In quali Alonso had 3ird highest speed at the finish line and 3ird highest at the speed trap. So I would think they are good DF wise. The really sucked in S2. Maybe they're losing DF in corners. Maybe the flow into the tunnels is obscured in corners or the car leaning is causing an issue. We can't tell any of that from here. They're gonna have to figure things out.
Alonso didn't use 8th gear, and Ocon was using 8th Gear only with DRS open.
High trap speed means low drag (which is usually correlated with low downforce because you have to be absolutely brilliant to have high downforce and no drag). Weak S2 is obviously low downforce. The bad tire wear is also likely due to low downforce. I don't want to come across disrespectful, but doesn't this add up (isn't it obvious that bad sector 2 means no downforce, and less drag)?diffuser wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 06:20Saints & LeClerc had the lowest speed traps of the race.
In quali Alonso had 3ird highest speed at the finish line and 3ird highest at the speed trap. So I would think they are good DF wise. The really sucked in S2. Maybe they're losing DF in corners. Maybe the flow into the tunnels is obscured in corners or the car leaning is causing an issue. We can't tell any of that from here. They're gonna have to figure things out.
Enough DF is needed get high speed at the finish line(low Df will delay the time the driver can get on full throttle). So low DF cars I typically look for low on the speed at the finish line then higher up the charts at the speed trap. The speed difference was inline with Max and Perez. So I think they were running RBR DF levels. I will add that the speed at the finish line was rather high at Bahrain, so my theory might not lend itself as well to Bahrain. It might have been rather easy to acheive the right amount of speed to go full throttle.Bisonas wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 17:13Saints & LeClerc had the lowest speed traps of the race, because they where running with more DF. They did that because their powerful engine allows them to do so. There is always a compromise between DF, top speed and cornering speed. You always have to choose the balance that suits you. A powerful engine allows you to run more DF in the car where is needed. I guess the new ground effect cars can cope ok with high speed corners because of they way the DF is generated now, but it seems in this era DF is even more important now for the slow and mid corners also. The ground effect is less obvious with less speed, the cars are bigger and heavier so running more DF overall in the car will help a lot with low and mid cornering speed and most crucial with tire degradation.diffuser wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 06:20Saints & LeClerc had the lowest speed traps of the race.
In quali Alonso had 3ird highest speed at the finish line and 3ird highest at the speed trap. So I would think they are good DF wise. The really sucked in S2. Maybe they're losing DF in corners. Maybe the flow into the tunnels is obscured in corners or the car leaning is causing an issue. We can't tell any of that from here. They're gonna have to figure things out.
My guess is, Ferrari did just that, and maybe Alpine underestimated a bit what a problematic and not smooth sector2 could mean for tire degradation.
Ofc this is only one theory out of many regarding what caused the Tyre degradation.
FINISH LINE KM/H 11 S. PEREZ 291.4 1 M. VERSTAPPEN 290.7 14 F. ALONSO 290.7 31 E. OCON 289.7 47 M. SCHUMACHER 289.4 6 N. LATIFI 289.3 16 C. LECLERC 289.2 55 C. SAINZ 288.7 23 A. ALBON 288.6 20 K. MAGNUSSEN 288.5 10 P. GASLY 288.3 24 G. ZHOU 288.0 22 Y. TSUNODA 287.9 4 L. NORRIS 287.5 77 V. BOTTAS 287.4 44 L. HAMILTON 286.3 63 G. RUSSELL 286.1 18 L. STROLL 284.6 27 N. HULKENBERG 284.3 3 D. RICCIARDO 283.9 SPEED TRAP KM/H 1 11 S. PEREZ 323.2 2 1 M. VERSTAPPEN 322.9 3 14 F. ALONSO 321.5 4 31 E. OCON 320.4 5 6 N. LATIFI 319.4 6 47 M. SCHUMACHER 318.4 7 20 K. MAGNUSSEN 318.2 8 22 Y. TSUNODA 318.1 9 10 P. GASLY 317.3 10 23 A. ALBON 316.7 11 16 C. LECLERC 316.6 12 55 C. SAINZ 315.9 13 4 L. NORRIS 315.7 14 77 V. BOTTAS 315.5 15 44 L. HAMILTON 315.4 16 24 G. ZHOU 315.1 17 63 G. RUSSELL 314.0 18 3 D. RICCIARDO 311.6 19 18 L. STROLL 311.5 20 27 N. HULKENBERG 310.0
Lift and coast is not done to conserve tires, but to save fuel or brakes. To conserve tires they take care on fast corners, specially on long fast corners where tire temperature increases dramatically
Andres125sx wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 20:36Lift and coast is not done to conserve tires, but to save fuel or brakes. To conserve tires they take care on fast corners, specially on long fast corners where tire temperature increases dramatically
I think it must be related to weight transfer. In braking, even if they reach same Gs, weight is distributed between the 4 wheels thanks to the looooong wheelbase (depending on the corner, about 45% of brake power is applied to rear tires wich shows how uniform is the weight distribution even on brakings), so tires does not suffer too much.
But on corners, since cars are extremelly narrow compared to the lenght, weight transfer is much higher, so the outer wheels carry a much higher percentage of car weight and take more abuse.
The acceleration out of turn 14 until the finish line, takes a lot into account. DF is only one of them and usually other things (other than pure DF) are more important. Traction, engine power and mapping for me are more important and if you see the speed on FL, the delta between all drivers is 7.5KM/h with most of them being within a delta of 4MPH.diffuser wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 19:59Enough DF is needed get high speed at the finish line(low Df will delay the time the driver can get on full throttle). So low DF cars I typically look for low on the speed at the finish line then higher up the charts at the speed trap. The speed difference was inline with Max and Perez. So I think they were running RBR DF levels. I will add that the speed at the finish line was rather high at Bahrain, so my theory might not lend itself as well to Bahrain. It might have been rather easy to acheive the right amount of speed to go full throttle.Bisonas wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 17:13Saints & LeClerc had the lowest speed traps of the race, because they where running with more DF. They did that because their powerful engine allows them to do so. There is always a compromise between DF, top speed and cornering speed. You always have to choose the balance that suits you. A powerful engine allows you to run more DF in the car where is needed. I guess the new ground effect cars can cope ok with high speed corners because of they way the DF is generated now, but it seems in this era DF is even more important now for the slow and mid corners also. The ground effect is less obvious with less speed, the cars are bigger and heavier so running more DF overall in the car will help a lot with low and mid cornering speed and most crucial with tire degradation.diffuser wrote: ↑21 Mar 2022, 06:20
Saints & LeClerc had the lowest speed traps of the race.
In quali Alonso had 3ird highest speed at the finish line and 3ird highest at the speed trap. So I would think they are good DF wise. The really sucked in S2. Maybe they're losing DF in corners. Maybe the flow into the tunnels is obscured in corners or the car leaning is causing an issue. We can't tell any of that from here. They're gonna have to figure things out.
My guess is, Ferrari did just that, and maybe Alpine underestimated a bit what a problematic and not smooth sector2 could mean for tire degradation.
Ofc this is only one theory out of many regarding what caused the Tyre degradation.
I pointed out the Ferrari drivers as a statement that top speed can be useless information, really just one piece of he performance puzzle. I don't know how easy it is to pull the drag or DF off these cars. It's not as easy as just reducing the rear wing. Probablly need to adjust ride height. So we'll see how well they do at tracks with longer straights like Monza. Right now, they are the favourits for Monaco.
I doudt that Alpine underestimated it. They just couldn't get it to work for whatever reason.
FINISH LINE KM/H 11 S. PEREZ 291.4 1 M. VERSTAPPEN 290.7 14 F. ALONSO 290.7 31 E. OCON 289.7 47 M. SCHUMACHER 289.4 6 N. LATIFI 289.3 16 C. LECLERC 289.2 55 C. SAINZ 288.7 23 A. ALBON 288.6 20 K. MAGNUSSEN 288.5 10 P. GASLY 288.3 24 G. ZHOU 288.0 22 Y. TSUNODA 287.9 4 L. NORRIS 287.5 77 V. BOTTAS 287.4 44 L. HAMILTON 286.3 63 G. RUSSELL 286.1 18 L. STROLL 284.6 27 N. HULKENBERG 284.3 3 D. RICCIARDO 283.9 SPEED TRAP KM/H 1 11 S. PEREZ 323.2 2 1 M. VERSTAPPEN 322.9 3 14 F. ALONSO 321.5 4 31 E. OCON 320.4 5 6 N. LATIFI 319.4 6 47 M. SCHUMACHER 318.4 7 20 K. MAGNUSSEN 318.2 8 22 Y. TSUNODA 318.1 9 10 P. GASLY 317.3 10 23 A. ALBON 316.7 11 16 C. LECLERC 316.6 12 55 C. SAINZ 315.9 13 4 L. NORRIS 315.7 14 77 V. BOTTAS 315.5 15 44 L. HAMILTON 315.4 16 24 G. ZHOU 315.1 17 63 G. RUSSELL 314.0 18 3 D. RICCIARDO 311.6 19 18 L. STROLL 311.5 20 27 N. HULKENBERG 310.0
She asks "How did you see the car on the race?radosav wrote: ↑22 Mar 2022, 00:08https://youtu.be/t097xfUayggRedragon wrote: ↑19 Mar 2022, 18:57I am happy, I am happy as we didn't know where we were.
Surprise to be both fighting for Q3
Now is time to push new parts and developrment on next races
To close the gap to the liders that it is a bit more of 1 sec in qualy
I felt confortable during the 3 Q runs, the last one no so happy
But the weekend has been in general good
And tomorrow the degradation of the Tyres is the clue
We are going to have to be careful with the planning and strategy
As it is an incognita as no body has done the 52 laps that there are tomorrow on race
And also what kind of Tyres you choose would be important as there are going to be different strategies
And let's see who gets the right choice and strategy
More or less he says that
And this?