Probably his fault the gravel? I mean lolKimiRai wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 21:36Not sure if it was already mentioned but according to Alonso they also had a brake issue. That probably caused Lance's spin into the wall. Many people have attacked Lance but he may have had no blame there, similar to Leclerc last year. At least for the spin, as beaching it on the gravel later was probably his fault.
Yeah, I had already read that,wouldn't be the first time a reputable site got things wrong and I found pictures on Motorsport. It wouldn't be the first time they dated pictures incorrectly too.KimiRai wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 21:08Disagree.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-al ... /10670802/Just before the race, Aston Martin had changed the specification of the floor on the cars, returning to the one rejected in Austin.[...]
After the free practice sessions [note: Sprint was basically a second free practice session], due to the excessive bouncing and the conditions of the asphalt, in view of the sprint it was decided to take a step back, returning once again to the most used specification throughout the year as it was the one that guaranteed the best indications, namely the Suzuka surface, which generates less rebounds and guarantees more confidence to the drivers. However, the two accidents in qualifying on Sunday morning pushed Aston Martin to change the surface again on both cars, returning precisely to the Austin specification.
“After this morning, we had to go back to a less performing package on the car. So the race was a bit slower in terms of pace on our side and then we had a problem with the brakes,” Alonso said after the race.
The most scare thing is how huge is the downgrade proposing by the Austin's package, that completely made AMR24 absolute impossible to drive.I think was the most terrible upgrades they even brought. Why they didn change the front suspension if this is the main problem? what a motive to not change?diffuser wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 22:44Yeah, I had already read that,wouldn't be the first time a reputable site got things wrong and I found pictures on Motorsport. It wouldn't be the first time they dated pictures incorrectly too.KimiRai wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 21:08Disagree.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-al ... /10670802/Just before the race, Aston Martin had changed the specification of the floor on the cars, returning to the one rejected in Austin.[...]
After the free practice sessions [note: Sprint was basically a second free practice session], due to the excessive bouncing and the conditions of the asphalt, in view of the sprint it was decided to take a step back, returning once again to the most used specification throughout the year as it was the one that guaranteed the best indications, namely the Suzuka surface, which generates less rebounds and guarantees more confidence to the drivers. However, the two accidents in qualifying on Sunday morning pushed Aston Martin to change the surface again on both cars, returning precisely to the Austin specification.
“After this morning, we had to go back to a less performing package on the car. So the race was a bit slower in terms of pace on our side and then we had a problem with the brakes,” Alonso said after the race.
Brazil Looks like they ran Austin floor
Sprint Quali
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... -amr2.webp
Sprint Race
https://cdn-6.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... tin-a.webp
Quali
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... -amr2.webp
Race
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... tin-a.webp
Both the sprint ones and the ones you sent exactly the same two identical photos. In my opinion they used Suzuka in fp1 and it was fine, since the sprint wasn't very interesting they did two test sessions in sprint quali and sprint race, seeing the results they returned again to Suzuka and in fact Alonso in quali he was flying, after the damage they were forced to return to Austin. This is what I think and what I have deduced, I am ready to be proven wrongdiffuser wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 22:44Yeah, I had already read that,wouldn't be the first time a reputable site got things wrong and I found pictures on Motorsport. It wouldn't be the first time they dated pictures incorrectly too.KimiRai wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 21:08Disagree.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-al ... /10670802/Just before the race, Aston Martin had changed the specification of the floor on the cars, returning to the one rejected in Austin.[...]
After the free practice sessions [note: Sprint was basically a second free practice session], due to the excessive bouncing and the conditions of the asphalt, in view of the sprint it was decided to take a step back, returning once again to the most used specification throughout the year as it was the one that guaranteed the best indications, namely the Suzuka surface, which generates less rebounds and guarantees more confidence to the drivers. However, the two accidents in qualifying on Sunday morning pushed Aston Martin to change the surface again on both cars, returning precisely to the Austin specification.
“After this morning, we had to go back to a less performing package on the car. So the race was a bit slower in terms of pace on our side and then we had a problem with the brakes,” Alonso said after the race.
Brazil Looks like they ran Austin floor
Sprint Quali
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... -amr2.webp
Sprint Race
https://cdn-6.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... tin-a.webp
Quali
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... -amr2.webp
Race
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... tin-a.webp
I watched Piastri's onboard. It was pretty bumpy too. It's not the car it's the track.Rikrikrik wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 23:59The most scare thing is how huge is the downgrade proposing by the Austin's package, that completely made AMR24 absolute impossible to drive.I think was the most terrible upgrades they even brought. Why they didn change the front suspension if this is the main problem? what a motive to not change?diffuser wrote: ↑06 Nov 2024, 22:44Yeah, I had already read that,wouldn't be the first time a reputable site got things wrong and I found pictures on Motorsport. It wouldn't be the first time they dated pictures incorrectly too.
Brazil Looks like they ran Austin floor
Sprint Quali
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... -amr2.webp
Sprint Race
https://cdn-6.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... tin-a.webp
Quali
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... -amr2.webp
Race
https://cdn-7.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... tin-a.webp
Not suspicious at all,I mean they could lift the floor by few mm if they would have better working floor.l,I mean more efficient as Mercedes.
This was already brought up at the start of the season. Fallows wasn't happy with the suspension, which I remember was very late in development because Mercedes were struggling to get it to work on the test rig.
Or the wind tunnel?
https://www.formulapassion.it/f1/f1-ana ... ere-apertoAston Martin’s is not a simple correlation problem. On the contrary, in scenarios replicable in the wind tunnel and CFD, the updates return expected load, efficiency and balance values. The difficulties arise from those phenomena that cannot be analysed except on the track, such as transients, the transition between the various phases of the curve or the impact between the floor and the ground. “We found that for the most part [the updates] behave as we expect, although sometimes there are slightly underestimated consequences, or others that we are aware of, but which have a heavier impact on performance”, comments Dan Fallows to Racecar Engineering.
Interesting ...on that link ...KimiRai wrote: ↑07 Nov 2024, 14:43Or the wind tunnel.
https://www.formulapassion.it/f1/f1-ana ... ere-apertoAston Martin’s is not a simple correlation problem. On the contrary, in scenarios replicable in the wind tunnel and CFD, the updates return expected load, efficiency and balance values. The difficulties arise from those phenomena that cannot be analysed except on the track, such as transients, the transition between the various phases of the curve or the impact between the floor and the ground. “We found that for the most part [the updates] behave as we expect, although sometimes there are slightly underestimated consequences, or others that we are aware of, but which have a heavier impact on performance”, comments Dan Fallows to Racecar Engineering.
Mercedes is quicker with the same WT after all so there is no room for excuses, but it could be a factor. From what Ive read, AM's new wind tunnel should have some innovations in it concerning the floor.
That also brings to me another question. In that case, why doesn't Mercedes improve it? McLaren modernized their old one, Ferrari updated theirs during the summer break too, even Red Bull is building a completely new one, Aston too of course. If all of those teams have done it/are doing so it suggests there is a clear benefit.
I had forgotten that the difference between the Hungry floor fences and the Austin Floor fences is the part close to the rear tires, the Austin floor has a convex bubble on the floor fence with an openingTyreSlip wrote: ↑07 Nov 2024, 20:08https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/aston ... /10671383/
TLDR: After qualifying, the team didn't have enough spare floors so had to switch to the Hungary one without penalty. They weren't allowed to change the suspension settings to adjust to the different floor, which led to the exaggerated brake issues and nervous rear end.