I imagine it's a pretty good way of comparing track and wind tunnel behaviour. At the very least it's damn cost effective. When you think about it, those tell tales actually offer something the pitot tubes doesn't offer directly: flow direction. I'll leave it unsaid how they go about actually measuring anything from them besides watching a shitload of video.beelsebob wrote:Hah, I never thought I'd see an F1 team using tell tales as measuring devices these days.
The stuff you write makes me laugh all the time. ALL THE TIME.ESPImperium wrote:They are closer than they have ever been to Caterham over tha past 12-14 months. However they are still arround a second a lap slower per lap at best.TzeiTzei wrote:Yes, you are dreaming. I think it would be an amazing achievement to catch Caterham during the season, but right now it's looking quite good. I'm interested to see how well their updates will work. If the car only went to the wind tunnell as late as february, then i think there might a lot more to come once they start putting on the updates.Polarbear wrote:Is it just me, or do Marussia look like they are finally making progress on Caterham?
The gap between them is closing race by race, and looking at the progression so far, I wouldn't be surprised if they were leading the "new" teams by quite some margin by the end of the season.
I might be dreaming a bit, but I think Marussia scraping a point is not totally out of the question this year...
They will be within seven to eight tenths of Caterham for the seasons end, however this will still be a lap or so down of the target of being on the same lap as Caterham.
They need KERS, no ifs and buts, Caterham are using the Red Bull system for 2011, whitch is worth at most 4 tenths of a second a lap, however its free lap time for no extra weight.
Marussia have made progress, however this year to them will be very much like 2011 for Team Lotus/Caterham, i am not counting out HRT as they are a new start team to me this year, however they are putting in place decent staff in the correct areas, not proven staff ill aggree but staff that could pull a surprise with a workable and useable car that may have more to come. And from their improvements so far, they are more of a threat to Marussia than Marussia to Caterham.
However if Marussia and HRT can get onto and stay on the same lap as Caterham they are improving.
However the proof af a good car is how much laptime you can gain from the first full update package in season. If each of the teams can bolt on 1.5% in lap time, they will start to worry the established mid pack. And 1.5% is roughly 1.381 seconds to my raw quali pace data. Whitch will see the Toro Rossos really as they arnt qualifying well.
Im looking at 2013 for Marussia to catch up ane be where they should be on the F1 grid, with a established TD in Pat Symmonds if he isnt pinched by Ferrari.
I read about that too from amus. I wonder if they identified the problem in Mugello? It sure destroyed Glock's race in Bahrain.marcush. wrote:marussia seems to suffer from weak in the rearend of the car.funny enough they seem to be unsure if it is the trackrod or forward wishbone attachment points that cause the problem...
ESP has a pretty good track record here on f1technical; though some times he may not be 100% correct, his posts are interesting. It is up to you now to do your research and come back with some material to argue the points he posts.LotusF1 wrote:The stuff you write makes me laugh all the time. ALL THE TIME.ESPImperium wrote:
They are closer than they have ever been to Caterham over tha past 12-14 months. However they are still arround a second a lap slower per lap at best.
They will be within seven to eight tenths of Caterham for the seasons end, however this will still be a lap or so down of the target of being on the same lap as Caterham.
They need KERS, no ifs and buts, Caterham are using the Red Bull system for 2011, whitch is worth at most 4 tenths of a second a lap, however its free lap time for no extra weight.
Marussia have made progress, however this year to them will be very much like 2011 for Team Lotus/Caterham, i am not counting out HRT as they are a new start team to me this year, however they are putting in place decent staff in the correct areas, not proven staff ill aggree but staff that could pull a surprise with a workable and useable car that may have more to come. And from their improvements so far, they are more of a threat to Marussia than Marussia to Caterham.
However if Marussia and HRT can get onto and stay on the same lap as Caterham they are improving.
However the proof af a good car is how much laptime you can gain from the first full update package in season. If each of the teams can bolt on 1.5% in lap time, they will start to worry the established mid pack. And 1.5% is roughly 1.381 seconds to my raw quali pace data. Whitch will see the Toro Rossos really as they arnt qualifying well.
Im looking at 2013 for Marussia to catch up ane be where they should be on the F1 grid, with a established TD in Pat Symmonds if he isnt pinched by Ferrari.
It takes courage to write what you write. All I can say is don't ever go to a F1 interview saying what you say. 90% of the time you are wrong.
a marrussia CANNOT be maxed out by definition except of bang for buck maybe..as Wirth really sold the harware to virgin for bargain prices,..sure we do not know how much they invest these days .Paul wrote:KERS isn't really free performance, you still have to make it work and integrate into your car. It is a good way to gain some time when other developments routes are relatively maxed out (big investments yield little results), but I doubt this car is anywhere near that, unless the team are utterly incompetent in finding aero/mechanical grip.
They have 2 - just the same as all the other teams I've seen. Their height is slightly masked by the angle of the nose in the picture though.n smikle wrote:Needs more strakes.