Definitely a kick in the stomach for the team. Unlikely they'll out develop the 4 teams ahead either so fighting for the tail end of points might be the realistic goal.
I thought stroll's recovery drive was great though.
The season is very long and there could be many surprises left (bad ones too
The weakness is actually very clear this time around. They are struggling to rotate the car in high fuel and it got better with lower fuel. It's highly likely set-up confusions with the pushrod rear suspension along with a sacrifice on traction for more high speed. The field is quite close and everyone is trying to understand their car real pace will be known in three four races.mvfad wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 01:50From what I can see, Aston is in a very difficult position. Last year they had an idea of what the car's weaknesses were clearly from the beginning, so they could develop those weaknesses (although they didn't). This time they don't seem to be clear about the car's weaknesses (only about the tire wear), in other words, they don't seem to know why the car is slow.
It's not slow, it's fast!?mvfad wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 01:50From what I can see, Aston is in a very difficult position. Last year they had an idea of what the car's weaknesses were clearly from the beginning, so they could develop those weaknesses (although they didn't). This time they don't seem to be clear about the car's weaknesses (only about the tire wear), in other words, they don't seem to know why the car is slow.
They had 3 test day,3 free practice and 1 qualification. Never ever gonna be so much test opportunity to setup the car right. Is definitely to do something with the heavy car,because at last run was "flying" on hards Alonso was fast as McLaren and Ferrari. I also would wait for next weekend at least.jofs89 wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 10:32People are being way too pessimistic after one race. Not to say they're wrong, but the reasons they were slow on high fuel could be a set up issue that can be sorted out. The car clearly has pace in it.
It might just take them a few races to understand it and unluck it. Also, Bahrain is not the most representative track on the calendar. Like other have said, we need to see a clear pattern before we write them off.
Sometimes I really feel like the F1 is Pirelli tyres handle championship and not car/driver or team championship. Becuse the big difference between qualification and race this what I think.jofs89 wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 10:32People are being way too pessimistic after one race. Not to say they're wrong, but the reasons they were slow on high fuel could be a set up issue that can be sorted out. The car clearly has pace in it.
It might just take them a few races to understand it and unluck it. Also, Bahrain is not the most representative track on the calendar. Like other have said, we need to see a clear pattern before we write them off.
I agree I HATE the fact that everyone sits 3s back from each other because they can’t push as it’ll hurt the tyre. It completely murders a championship when field spread narrows. We need tyres that last way better because this level of tyre protection kills off any fun. You need to have a tyre offset and 0.7s/lap advantage to have any hope of passing quicklyOnEcRiTiCaL wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 15:01Sometimes I really feel like the F1 is Pirelli tyres handle championship and not car/driver or team championship. Becuse the big difference between qualification and race this what I think.jofs89 wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 10:32People are being way too pessimistic after one race. Not to say they're wrong, but the reasons they were slow on high fuel could be a set up issue that can be sorted out. The car clearly has pace in it.
It might just take them a few races to understand it and unluck it. Also, Bahrain is not the most representative track on the calendar. Like other have said, we need to see a clear pattern before we write them off.
That's more than just tire related. Aero is involved in that, if the cars behind's aero wouldn't be disrupted as much as it is, they could follow closer. Tracks effect that as well, the longer it takes to pit(pit entry to pit exit), the less likely teams will be to pit for fresh tires. If switching decrease your lap time by one second per lap, you can maintain that advantage for 20 laps and it takes 10 seconds for a pit stop. The a team can easily switch tires and get an edge but if the pitstop takes 30 seconds, well you're losing 10 seconds in total race time if the team switches tires...101FlyingDutchman wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 15:23I agree I HATE the fact that everyone sits 3s back from each other because they can’t push as it’ll hurt the tyre. It completely murders a championship when field spread narrows. We need tyres that last way better because this level of tyre protection kills off any fun. You need to have a tyre offset and 0.7s/lap advantage to have any hope of passing quicklyOnEcRiTiCaL wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 15:01Sometimes I really feel like the F1 is Pirelli tyres handle championship and not car/driver or team championship. Becuse the big difference between qualification and race this what I think.jofs89 wrote: ↑03 Mar 2024, 10:32People are being way too pessimistic after one race. Not to say they're wrong, but the reasons they were slow on high fuel could be a set up issue that can be sorted out. The car clearly has pace in it.
It might just take them a few races to understand it and unluck it. Also, Bahrain is not the most representative track on the calendar. Like other have said, we need to see a clear pattern before we write them off.