codetower wrote: ↑12 Jun 2024, 17:50
organic wrote: ↑12 Jun 2024, 07:14
Lewis' form looks troubling for the next couple of years. Seems to me like he's hit that performance cliff like Seb and others did. Every weekend Sainz seems like the better bet to me and 80 million cheaper
Completely agree. My biggest issue with the Hamilton signing is that Ferrari are signing two drivers with different driving styles. Charles likes a very pointy front with lots of oversteer, while Hamilton likes a more stable rear with a bit of oversteer. This makes the car development much more difficult. It's what we see now with Sainz/Leclerc. Sainz has a similar car preference to Hamilton. When the car is understeery, Sainz can match, and occasionally beat Charles until Charles adapts his style for the car. When the car is more pointy, Charles excels and Carlos falls back about 2 tenths.
Look at RB. Max and Checo have vastly different styles. Difference there is that (aside from Max being much better), Redbull build/develop the car completely for Max. Unless theres a driver with the same style (e.g. Lando/Charles), the #2 will never even come close.
Carlos would do well alongside Hamilton or Alonzo.
This is not exactly correct. Hamilton drives a very strong front end. Meaning the car is oversteering. Same as Leclerc.
A stable rear is not really a balance preference. It's actually a deficiency with any car, over or understeer. Stability is not a grip balance problem; it's more to do with dynamics of a whole lot of things.
No driver is gonna say "hey this rear end is too stable, slacken it up for me". More stability increases the envelop for him whereas it may be of no consequence to someone else who maybe is not braking as late or whatver.
I see no issue next year. Nico, Lewis, Bottas, George all for some reason no issue sharing setup data. Only standouts were Jenson, who did not like oversteer. Hamilton geneally will drive anything but prefers the oversteering car.