Spoutnik wrote: ↑17 Sep 2023, 17:48No it was 0.140 I belive because Russell himself was 0.70 from the pole (0.70 + 0.70 = 0.140)scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Sep 2023, 17:39It was 0.079 in qualy.Spoutnik wrote: ↑17 Sep 2023, 17:24I never stop believing in Carlos, I'm so happy for him.
Like one of the McLaren engineer said it's like racing with an extra engineer in the team.
In front of my TV I thought "Sainz should give DRS to Norris to create a DRS train" and he did it brillantly, it was reminiscent of Hamilton parking the bus at Abu Dhabi 2016 to save his WDC.
Really mature drive !
Regarding Charles, I think it was not his weekend ofc (luck in the pit, teamplay, 0.140 in qualy). I think Ferrari could've tried the Merc strategy (with scrubbed soft in that case) because they had nothing to lose and Perez had create such a gap against the rest of the field that it was a free stop for him like for the Merc.
I just hope the team can find the most neutral car philosophy for both driver. Sainz likes a lazy front-end, Leclerc is said to "don't have any driving style" but in reality he's close to Verstappen in terms of preference. I think the SF-21 was the sweetspot. Carlos described it in "Beyond the grid" saying this car was very neutral (while the McLaren in which he excelled had a very understeery nature, and the Renault on the opposite was very oversteeery/strong front end).
A neutral balance won't cut it. You can't biuld car to exploit the best from your driver by trying to cater for both. Tyres in the current generation just don't allow understeer to be fast consistently on various track layouts. As I also mentioned, tuning out oversteer is easier than trying to add it.
There is reason for big pace deltas when the car suit the driver with the oversteer preference. It is not just true for Ferrari but for all the teams across the grid.
Verstappen smashes Perez
Leclerc smashes Sainz with the car to his liking.
Russell who is used to a weaker rear end from driving a Williams, smashed Hamilton last year.
F1-75 up until TD039 had a strong front end and competitive tyre wear. Once we got punished, the pace went away, the tyres went away and the gap between LEC and SAI came down ever so slightly. Do I need to go on. These aren't just coincidental.
The floors on these cars play a massive role in tuning the balance of these cars. The flexi planks could've likely moved the Cpt forward which is why the F1-75 had such a good fornt end until it got banned.
The prove is in the pudding. These Pirellis don't like scrubbing and sliding.
I understand your analysis but I believe Hamilton example is wrong, and some drivers like Hamilton and Alonso aren't oversteery/particularly strong front end oriented but are the fastest amongst their pairs.
So I just think you are right (you cannot be fast without taking risks, that why full understeer only works in endurance racing or for midfield cars) but a more neutral car or lets say not on "100% sensitivity" (to quote Albon), might be a good way.
It shows gap to leader not interval in qualifying
but here you go anyways
Oversteeer refers to having the balance moved forwards. Hamilton has talked aout not having any feel in the rear end where George has not mentioned having trouble with it once. That can back track to driving a backmarker car. I think it makes enough sense to be okay to say it.