I think the hurry up and get early spec F2012 competitive cost the team towards end of the year. I think they concentrated so much on just getting to car to compete early on they didn't think too much about future development. I think some time after the summer break they realized to take a good cut out of the gap to RB & MaCa they realized they would need to redesign much of the car. Which just wasn't feasible so instead they decided to try and refine certain pieces. And it worked insomuch that it allowed them to maintain the gap to the leaders but not decrease it.TheGkbrk wrote:Clean air around sidepods was a huge problem since England and the team didn't do anything to solve that. We just saw some flo-vis on sidepods in FPs and some bargeboard updates but nothing major. Thats sad for such a huge team without any limits in terms of recources and money.
If someone had told me after Australia that Ferrari would finish the season with its lead driver three points away from the World Championship, I would have wondered how someone of such slight intelligence figured out the Internet enough to make such an irrational claim. Given the myriad problems faced by the team - tire wear, pitch sensitivity, low-speed traction, top speed, etc. - and the fact that its design tools are obviously compromised, the Scuderia's record of achievement this year has been nothing short of astonishing.TheGkbrk wrote:Silence in this forum after losing the championship...
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Top speed issues were only sorted around Canada time, but yeah, since then top speed was very good. So much so that Alonso could defend from others behind even if they had DRS, most notably at Hockenheim and Abu Dhabi.mbvinnie wrote:It wasn't that bad. The real issue was qualy pace.stefan_ wrote:OK, so the season has ended.
You can't win the championship with a car like the F2012, I am amazed by how Alonso drove it and managed to drag it into a championship fight. Massa couldn't simply understand it at the beggining of the season and that is unacceptable. No major updates, no wind tunnel - track correlation, guessing and going blind with the exhaust solution and guessing with the FW / RW solutions. This was not a good car and they patched it up during the season.
It was the best starting car.
It was a very reliable car.
It had very good consistent race pace - it was a much better race car relatively then qualy car.
It always had decent top speed allowing passing opportunities.
So never really the best car, but definitely some plus points. Even Massa showed it was alright at the end of the season!
No, its for transport protection.stefan_ wrote:Probably it is a top secret device which is also illegal.
It's a rain blanket for the camera...
Fry: The Ferrari of 2013 will maintain the pull rod suspensiondiffuser wrote:... What is more interesting to me is whether Ferrari will be going pullrod or pushrod front suspension next year. I thought that would be a dead give away at how successful Ferrari thought the pullrod 2012 experiment went. Now I'm reading the bulk head height for 2014 will be lowered from 625mm to 500mm...
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I'm not sure but I think that height is much easier to achieve with a pullrod system. So I'm thinking it is pretty certain that their gonna stay pullrod.