matteosc wrote: ↑11 May 2022, 20:13
FDD wrote: ↑11 May 2022, 19:30
matteosc wrote: ↑11 May 2022, 17:17
The working range of the tires is the same for everyone, but the ability of the car to build up temperature is different for each team.
I would not consider the Miami race as "cold" (like Imola), even if the temperature was lower than Saturday.
You are absolutely right, Miami was not as cold as Imola or cold in general, but 10 degrees is huge difference from Saturday to Sunday, and I think it has impact on tire working window/car set up.
It definitely did, even though it is difficult to say how and how much, since on Saturday it was all about a single lap and Sunday all about tire degradation. In the last two races Red Bull was able to obtain a better tire management in the race, which is remarkable given that they ran a lower downforce setup.
I think funnily enough the 2 races were the opposites of reasons:
in Imola Ferrari couldn't heat the tyres, always needed 2 laps, like in Australia or Jeddah or Bahrain, to bring them to temperature, ran softer suspension but jumped around too much, couldn't brake well into T2 and T5, but was great in variante alta.
in Miami Ferrari was heating tyres too much, great 1 lap pace without warmup lap, unlike any race before, hard suspension to avoid porpoising, good speed in straights, no mechanical grip which shred fronts and rears with overheating.
So I think at the moment Ferrari setup is trickier than RBR due to porpoising, avoiding it restricts the setup options making the optimal window harder to reach. In a track with lower top speed, where porpoising isn't as big of a deal, the window should be there for Ferrari to perform without too much compromise.
EDIT: How do we move these posts to team thread? I don't think this belongs here.