false. Refueling doesn't mean all teams pitstop the same time for the same amount of fuel. What you say is what is happening now, All teams with virtually the same fuel weight and same pit stop strategy.myurr wrote:The key word there is conditions. Those are part of the peripheral factors that artificially warp a race.Maybe a little wishful thinking, but at the same time in 2010 we didn't see the effect of the changing balance of the car due to movable front wings (direct quotes from drivers support this). It is also true that some cars can be very very quick and grab pole and run away with the race when they are set up perfectly and conditions are perfect, but that others cars whilst not being able to match the outright pace in perfect conditions work better over a wider range of conditions. This can be seen in the Renault when Alonso won his titles, and arguably the McLaren of 07 and 08 - both vs the Ferrari that was quicker in absolute pace but was not as flexible over a range of conditions. Again direct quotes from Alonso support this.
The Renault was not slower if it was faster on a day. It was simply faster at a certain track becuase it was the better and faster car. I see the renault as the best car in 2006 and 2005, michelin tyres and all.
It's not a good example of a car being slow at a certiain track, but becuase of the fuel it puts on at the start, it becomes faster than a heavily fueled car which was faster in practice and qualifying.
Yes, but it was still faster. It was never on pole to suddenly be slower on heavy fuel. Secondly Webber and Vettel were pretty inconsistent in there driving or had technical niggles and still were faster light to flag in most races. No form of fuel juggling could make the ferrari or Mclaren faster.And you saw this to a degree in 2010 where the Red Bull was often untouchable in qualifying but just about reachable in the race.
Those cars were only faster on tracks that suited them, they weren't faster becuase of fuel strategy.
ringo wrote:A slower car cannot suddenly be faster than a quicker one because they both carry more fuel. I myself thought it would happen but it hasn't.That's pushing it. I would imagine all teams have a fuel cell pretty much at the floor height. The cars start with full tanks and the tanks are all similarly sized especially height. I don't think a mere COG change can gain a car 5 tenths in lap time, when in pratice the faster car's heavy runs are faster as well.Absolutely it can. Packaging may mean one has the more optimum C of G for the fuel tank.
I can't say anything about that becuase I don't know. But that has nothing to do with refuelling and is not a strategy. It's simply a car being faster in the wet.Another cars aero may be more affected by the change in ride height and rake than the other. These cars are so finely balanced that putting wet weather tyres on a car can suddenly make or break the aero just because the tyre is a slightly different shape and size.
I don't want to pray car x gets to use wet weather tyres so it can get to see the gear box of car y. With other sports weather is not needed for competition.
The only thing you can categorically say is that refuelling leads to a narrower range of operating conditions for the cars to have to work in, and that this will reduce the chance of any balance and or pace differences between the cars occurring.
2010 was boring without weather and Lewis Hamilton trying some risky moves.