Most if not all drivers on the grid would win in the rb19Shal_Leg16 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 16:31
On a side note does RB even need a tier one driver? Even Perez looks unbeatable in that car ffs.
Most if not all drivers on the grid would win in the rb19Shal_Leg16 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 16:31
On a side note does RB even need a tier one driver? Even Perez looks unbeatable in that car ffs.
RB had the largest rear wing in Bahrain, and they were still faster in the straights.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 03:35See that's the thing. My arm chair opinion tells me that the wing Ferrari had in Jeddah is the one they should have had in Bahrain. The wing they ran in Bahrain is the one they should have had in Jeddah.
Look at the RB! Why on earth was Ferrari loading up on downforce on a no-deg circuit, while RB was trimming their car out.
None of it makes sense. How are their simulations telling them to do the opposite of RB.
The Ferrari was a missile in Bahrain. They would have cleared 340 km/h easy with the rear wing from Bahrain.
Preciesely average. They have the fourth fastest car. They are just not competent in any measure compared to RB.jambuka wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 03:26Maybe, if they were ahead of Mercs things would not have been so demoralizing. It seems right now the car is in no man’s land. They don’t have strongest traction in slow speed corners, nor they are a missile in straight line. It just seems it’s average in everything.
Why compare Perez's lap 38 personal best with Leclerc on lap 47? Perez has 9 laps more fuel and doesn't have a slip stream like Leclerc does.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 11:40https://i.ibb.co/QHnLFP0/jeddah-r-2023.jpgAR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 03:35See that's the thing. My arm chair opinion tells me that the wing Ferrari had in Jeddah is the one they should have had in Bahrain. The wing they ran in Bahrain is the one they should have had in Jeddah.
Look at the RB! Why on earth was Ferrari loading up on downforce on a no-deg circuit, while RB was trimming their car out.
None of it makes sense. How are their simulations telling them to do the opposite of RB.
The Ferrari was a missile in Bahrain. They would have cleared 340 km/h easy with the rear wing from Bahrain.
Respective fastest laps in the race. It's not the wing, it was the tyres Possibly higher ride height than optimal on Ferrari, they never sparked like they did in Bahrain
They weren't. Ferrari was the quickest on the straights in Bahrain. iirc, Ferrari did 325/326. RB maxed at 321/322.mzso wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 17:14RB had the largest rear wing in Bahrain, and they were still faster in the straights.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 03:35See that's the thing. My arm chair opinion tells me that the wing Ferrari had in Jeddah is the one they should have had in Bahrain. The wing they ran in Bahrain is the one they should have had in Jeddah.
Look at the RB! Why on earth was Ferrari loading up on downforce on a no-deg circuit, while RB was trimming their car out.
None of it makes sense. How are their simulations telling them to do the opposite of RB.
The Ferrari was a missile in Bahrain. They would have cleared 340 km/h easy with the rear wing from Bahrain.
I mistyped. I meant Jeddah.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 17:27They weren't. Ferrari was the quickest on the straights in Bahrain. iirc, Ferrari did 325/326. RB maxed at 321/322.mzso wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 17:14RB had the largest rear wing in Bahrain, and they were still faster in the straights.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 03:35See that's the thing. My arm chair opinion tells me that the wing Ferrari had in Jeddah is the one they should have had in Bahrain. The wing they ran in Bahrain is the one they should have had in Jeddah.
Look at the RB! Why on earth was Ferrari loading up on downforce on a no-deg circuit, while RB was trimming their car out.
None of it makes sense. How are their simulations telling them to do the opposite of RB.
The Ferrari was a missile in Bahrain. They would have cleared 340 km/h easy with the rear wing from Bahrain.
LEC was well behind Sainz at the time, more than 3s, no slipstream. Feel free to compare other laps and post here
I don't think that follows. I'd say it's balance and/or suspension issues. Really they cannot use the tyres in the correct waySoulPancake13 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 19:51Ferrari works fine on the soft, but go to the hard and all the lap time is gone, so that speaks for downforce limitations.
what redbull? they are slower than aston martin and the mercedes ( that confirmed the concept is binned)SoulPancake13 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 19:51formu1a.uno calculates that Ferrari was 7 tenths slower per lap than last season... Of course the change to T22 is part of this, but it seems like this car is slower than the first half of last season still unfortunately. Not sure where to go from here. Is it a lack of downforce or a tyre issue? No idea, in qualy the SF 23 is quicker in every corner and straight than the F175 so it must be a race pace issue nonetheless. Ferrari works fine on the soft, but go to the hard and all the lap time is gone, so that speaks for downforce limitations. At the end of the day, my uneducated opinions is that Ferrari wants to run their car lower, but hasn't solved the bouncing completely - this bouncing is causing the reliability problems due to unpredicted vibrations to the engine. This is the reason the "correlation" is off - when the car is run at the height it wants it may genuinely be as fast as the sim.
Again, this is just my rambling. Sad to say that the season looks to be over, even if it's early. Red Bull is just way too strong.
Sure, but as the Scuderia Ferrari you have to look at the number 1. It's extremely disappointing that in Jeddah they were 4th fastest for that reason.Venturiation wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 19:58what redbull? they are slower than aston martin and the mercedes ( that confirmed the concept is binned)SoulPancake13 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 19:51formu1a.uno calculates that Ferrari was 7 tenths slower per lap than last season... Of course the change to T22 is part of this, but it seems like this car is slower than the first half of last season still unfortunately. Not sure where to go from here. Is it a lack of downforce or a tyre issue? No idea, in qualy the SF 23 is quicker in every corner and straight than the F175 so it must be a race pace issue nonetheless. Ferrari works fine on the soft, but go to the hard and all the lap time is gone, so that speaks for downforce limitations. At the end of the day, my uneducated opinions is that Ferrari wants to run their car lower, but hasn't solved the bouncing completely - this bouncing is causing the reliability problems due to unpredicted vibrations to the engine. This is the reason the "correlation" is off - when the car is run at the height it wants it may genuinely be as fast as the sim.
Again, this is just my rambling. Sad to say that the season looks to be over, even if it's early. Red Bull is just way too strong.
Argument is that the grip provided by the soft tyre masks the lack of DF. Go to a harder tyre and the lack of grip is evident. Not sure I believe it, but that's the proposed theory I have read.organic wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 19:57I don't think that follows. I'd say it's balance and/or suspension issues. Really they cannot use the tyres in the correct waySoulPancake13 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2023, 19:51Ferrari works fine on the soft, but go to the hard and all the lap time is gone, so that speaks for downforce limitations.