AR3-GP wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 16:54
f1isgood wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 16:27
I don't know why you decided to leave out the last sentence in my original post where I in fact do address the regulation change.
Sorry, I started replying before reading fully.
f1isgood wrote: ↑25 Feb 2024, 16:27
McLaren started with a terrible car. As with another point you made about Aston gaining a lot a while ago, of course you will appear to gain a lot if you just start off very poorly.
Let's do the math once again. +5 tenths for floor regulation change, -3 tenths for RB18 being overweight by 10kg at end of 2022 + Development = 4 tenths gain. This basically leaves winter (2022) + in-season development at 6 tenths for Abu Dhabi, over a lap.
W11 only did 1.27.2. These cars will no way get within 1s of those cars while being 50 kilograms heavier. That is already a 1.5s penalty over a lap. Of course I would like to be proven wrong. But I don't ever see these cars match the previous regulation cars over slow speed and medium speed corners.
I'm confused by why you don't include the weight reduction as part of the development (so the sum should be 9 tenths rather than 6 tenths). The reason I suggest this is because under a budget cap, money is either being spent for aero performance or to reduce weight but it is all development. In a different season, the budget spent reducing weight, could have been spent for aerodynamics instead.
Valid point but RB will not presumably find as much gain in weight reduction moving forward. I would categorise weight development as "free" lap time, as you know what you are looking to do (of course not saying it's easy but it guarantees laptime). Aerodynamically you will need a lot more thought process to ensure that the parts work.
All in all, I don't think any one except McLaren improved significantly within last season, and I think expecting cars to go to low 1.28s is very optimistic, even though I will be very happy if these boats can go that fast.
Re RB's weight develpment: They were reported to be well below the weight limit and had flexibility to include ballast to tune the car to each driver last year. Of course there's the potential issue of the new cooling system being more heavy compared to last year, and increasing weight. However given Max's feedback so far, I tend to believe that the car is not anywhere near as heavy as 2022, if at all it's overweight. I believe most teams will not be finding significant gains in weight reduction moving forward, and that the gains will be primarily aerodynamic.