Jeddah is not abrasive, but there can be thermal degradation. The track temperature is very high and high speed corners put a lot of temperature into the tires. Mercedes overheated their tires (blistering) and were losing over a second a lap. Max didn't struggle so much. Piastri was struggling at the end of stint 1. I think Red Bull have made a genuine improvement. These were the softer compounds where you would have expected them to suffer. Marko says they are no longer blindly following the simulator, but instead working from real world experience to make setups for the car.venkyhere wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 08:17
-given the capability of MCL39 and all the aces up it's sleeve, it's rare for Max to get a chance at winning a race on a high-speed low-deg track (the only conditions where RB21 is competitive). He nailed it in Suzuka, he lost it in Jeddah.
- that said, P2 is not a bad thing to have; Redbull&Max would have taken 87 trailing 99 after 5 rounds, if offered the next day after the 3day Bahrain test.
So far, the car's performance this season indicates the following: If the car is decent in quali it actually translates to somewhat decent race pace. My expectation after qualification was if Max could pull a Suzuka, which is to drive 50 laps without errors, he would win. In fact, that is actually what would have happened if not for a bad start.Paa wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 01:00I don't get the logic. I would think, that the worse the car the more you would like to avoid the penalty.
If Max had terrible deg, he would have been overtaken on track by Piastri, and he wouldn't have been able to create a gap to Russell/Charles so he would have just lost position to them as well with the penalty. Vs giving back 1 place to Piastri, losing 1 place and 1.5 sec in the process, then try to keep Merc/Ferrari behind on track.
Sticking to a penalty only makes sense if you have a very quick car and you believe, you can create the penalty gap in free air.
Bingo. That's the important thing in all of this.AR3-GP wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 08:31I think people (viewers, commentators, team, etc) are just caught up with lap 1. The media failed to ask the good questions. Hopefully more will trickle out this week about the upgrades, what they did, and whether Red Bull understand why they were fast.
If the upgrades start working, Jeddah doesn't matter, there's plenty of time to recoup those points with an actual fast car.
Very difficult to say. Clean air is important here and I would bet that a lot of that extra deg in the first stint from Piastri came from running close to Max for many laps. For Max to stay within undercut range at the end of the stint he would need a big deg advantage, which he didn't have.
Yeah, this is something everyone seems to ignore. Only cars much quicker could pass yesterday. It was obvious. The delta to pass was not there for Red Bull. We also saw something similar at Jeddah 2023.Cs98 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 09:28Very difficult to say. Clean air is important here and I would bet that a lot of that extra deg in the first stint from Piastri came from running close to Max for many laps. For Max to stay within undercut range at the end of the stint he would need a big deg advantage, which he didn't have.
In that case they've changed the standard from before, it used to be that the car on the outside was entitled to space if they were "ahead from the apex", which Max was, marginally.Emag wrote: ↑20 Apr 2025, 23:43https://i.imgur.com/cuSiyvP.jpeg
Apparently, for the inside car, having the front axel at least alongside the wing mirror is enough.
You know, Max pulled exactly what Oscar pulled here to Lando last year in Texas right? And Max did exactly what Lando did, he overtook off the track.
Lando got a penalty last year, that was fair.
But now because Max is on the receiving end, it’s unfair?
If Max kept it on track and then Piastri crashed into him (because he was not giving space to Max) then Piastri would get a penalty.Dee wrote: ↑20 Apr 2025, 23:06I think this is 100% spot on.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Apr 2025, 21:36I also think that strategically you have to give Red Bull a break. They could have told Max to give the place back (like other teams do, who know their car is faster (Ham/Norris Bahrain), but they were very worried about their race pace and from that perspective you would advise him to stay in front to keep the buffer to Russell. Knowing what we know now, he could have won the race if he immediately gave the place back, but that is hindsight. No one foresaw Red Bull's race pace today and that's still the most positive thing. A car doesn't get that quick out of nowhere. Red Bull have to understand this and see where the development goes.
What I don't agree with though is the wording in the stewards document. They said that Piastri was alongside and he needed to be left room, but if that was the case didn't Max also deserve to be left room?
This is what I understand the rules to be;
Alongside = 50/50 - racing incident - no penalty
Ahead = win the corner - no penalty
Behind = lose the corner - penalty given
On their wording alone, it should have been a racing incident and no penalty given, no?
Yes, exactly this. Are rules based on the drivers names, now? This is an absolutely identical situation, and in both cases Verstappen is penalized for doing the exact opposite of what he did before.euv2 wrote: ↑20 Apr 2025, 23:54Ok, explain MEX turn 4 then, Max front axle is alongside NOR wing mirror, MAX keeps his car fully inside the white line, 10 sec penalty.Emag wrote: ↑20 Apr 2025, 23:43https://i.imgur.com/cuSiyvP.jpeg
Apparently, for the inside car, having the front axel at least alongside the wing mirror is enough.
You know, Max pulled exactly what Oscar pulled here to Lando last year in Texas right? And Max did exactly what Lando did, he overtook off the track.
Lando got a penalty last year, that was fair.
But now because Max is on the receiving end, it’s unfair?
It is promising, but we also kind of expected Jeddah to be good for RedBull. I would wait until Miami to get my hopes up. Hopefully they'll be able to replicate the good deg+race pace.AR3-GP wrote: ↑21 Apr 2025, 08:31I think people (viewers, commentators, team, etc) are just caught up with lap 1. The media failed to ask the good questions. Hopefully more will trickle out this week about the upgrades, what they did, and whether Red Bull understand why they were fast.
If the upgrades start working, Jeddah doesn't matter, there's plenty of time to recoup those points with an actual fast car.