It's interesting that Albon feels Ferrari and Red Bull are not affected by wind.
Nice change compared to last year with the SF 23 lol
Andi76 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 21:29In 2023, the Red Bull was significantly faster in the slow sections, while the Ferrari was sometimes slightly faster in the very fast sections:
https://postimg.cc/Jt9YPt5s
This year, the picture is different. Ferrari has rediscovered its strength from 2022 in the slower sections and is generally better here than Red Bull, who seem to be slightly better in faster areas. In general, however, it looks much better than in 2023.
https://postimg.cc/K14Nb2N6
Regarding the high- and slow-speed performance of the SF23: Ferrari changed their approach to setup in Australia.AR3-GP wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 21:52I think it's difficult to conclude anything without understanding if the conditions for each run are the same. Should we should assume the fuel load is the same?
Andi76 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 21:29In 2023, the Red Bull was significantly faster in the slow sections, while the Ferrari was sometimes slightly faster in the very fast sections:
https://postimg.cc/Jt9YPt5s
This year, the picture is different. Ferrari has rediscovered its strength from 2022 in the slower sections and is generally better here than Red Bull, who seem to be slightly better in faster areas. In general, however, it looks much better than in 2023.
https://postimg.cc/K14Nb2N6
Also by the end of last season the RB was more proficient in high speed corners and the SF23 more proficient in low speed. If we could rule out variables, and the trend is like this, then it is a continuation from the end of last season.
If we were to hypothetically treat the data as like for like conditions, then I agree. It's simply a continuation from last season and Australia to be specific based on what you showed.CouncilorIrissa wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 22:07Regarding the high- and slow-speed performance of the SF23: Ferrari changed their approach to setup in Australia.AR3-GP wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 21:52I think it's difficult to conclude anything without understanding if the conditions for each run are the same. Should we should assume the fuel load is the same?
Andi76 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 21:29In 2023, the Red Bull was significantly faster in the slow sections, while the Ferrari was sometimes slightly faster in the very fast sections:
https://postimg.cc/Jt9YPt5s
This year, the picture is different. Ferrari has rediscovered its strength from 2022 in the slower sections and is generally better here than Red Bull, who seem to be slightly better in faster areas. In general, however, it looks much better than in 2023.
https://postimg.cc/K14Nb2N6
Also by the end of last season the RB was more proficient in high speed corners and the SF23 more proficient in low speed. If we could rule out variables, and the trend is like this, then it is a continuation from the end of last season.
Before Australia, the SF23 was reasonably competitive in quali trim in high-speed corners, but was losing time in slow-speed stuff:
https://i.postimg.cc/sxp6FDbB/Screensho ... -02-14.png
https://i.postimg.cc/NG7kwV5r/Screensho ... -04-27.png
That changed in Australia:
https://i.postimg.cc/25R1yktj/Screensho ... -05-50.png
So it's a continuation of the post-Australia trend.
Good front end means that while you dont necessarily have much more minimum speed through the corner, you can potentially get on the throttle quicker(rear end willing), which adds up if you can consistently do that throughout the whole lap.Xyz22 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 20:18https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GG9eeG4WQAA ... ame=medium
SF 24 vs SF 23 2nd day of testing. C3 tyres for both.
Sainz very cautious with the brakes. Leclerc was quite aggressive in his lap on the other hand, quite interesting.
If they do low fuel runs I think 1:28.9 should be reachable in hands of Leclerc if they do a Q3 qualifying simulation. I doubt they will do that. It's high time they start prioritizing race setup over qualy.Vinlarr89 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 22:22So guessing that Ferrari will be trying to dial the car right in tomorrow. What I’m really interested in is how much more pure performance is actually left in the car, feels like potentially quite a bit. I can see Ferrari prioritising race setups this year over some of the quali setups based on some of the long run performance we’ve seen so far.
Intrigued which direction they develop this car in. Last years need to create the EVO took so much time and resource, this year they should be able to bring more consistent upgrades like RB normally bring, gently evolving
Ferrari never 'prioritized' qualifying setups. The car was simply inherently better over one lap than in the race. It was a fundamental characteristic of the car. I'm sure Ferrari were trying to prioritize race setups as much or more as everybody else, it's just the car was not gonna cooperate.Vinlarr89 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 22:22So guessing that Ferrari will be trying to dial the car right in tomorrow. What I’m really interested in is how much more pure performance is actually left in the car, feels like potentially quite a bit. I can see Ferrari prioritising race setups this year over some of the quali setups based on some of the long run performance we’ve seen so far.
Intrigued which direction they develop this car in. Last years need to create the EVO took so much time and resource, this year they should be able to bring more consistent upgrades like RB normally bring, gently evolving
The last few seasons suggest they do run quite similar fuel levels, while Mercedes and McLaren usually run with higher fuel loads.
The laptimes were set at different times of day. I don't really understand what context allows one to assume the fuel loads were the same. On the surface, the only thing in common is the tire. How do we know they were in the same run plan, preferred ground clearances, and the many other variables. It just looks like two random laps to me.
Not sure what you are seeing in that piece of data. Every corner, fast and slow, Verstappen is increasing the time delta. No reason to think these runs are comparable.