Vettelswonmeover wrote: ↑10 Mar 2018, 09:26
JPBD1990 wrote: ↑10 Mar 2018, 08:55
Again I just don’t understand how people are making the assessment that redbull is ahead of Ferrari. Even excluding Verstappen’s spin, the Ferrari was consistently lapping faster. Now the new rumour is they had to drive to a delta to save fuel - but were still faster than redbull. Something just isn’t adding up... it’s been a weird preseason.
There are two factors at work in this assessment of RB being ahead of Ferrari. 1) Ferrari driving to a delta to save fuel & 2) Renault running their power units turned down. Ferrari is having issues in fuel consumption. The new oil burning clampdown has hit them the hardest. This may be a big issue and Ferrari will need time to find a fix. Renault too will run the PU turned down for quite a few months till they get their own ERS. However, RB will have a great upgrade package for Australia. Ferrari I'm not so sure. Many media guys (reliable ones) are saying that Ferrari are not yet fully on top of how to run the car with that High Rake. This again would need time to find a fix. RB and Merc are known to run heavy in testing. Ferrari not so. Hence, the consensus is RB is ahead of Ferrari. I hope not but i am pretty convinced about this.
Driving to delta, is what every team has been doing, not just in testing, but in all races for last few years. You might have a lot of power (PU + Chassis capabilities), but you have to be mindful of the fuel and tyre usage. So, in essence, what you see in races, is what you have seen in testing! You either use full power available for a few laps and go a whole lot slower for the remaining, or drive to a delta! Either ways, your performance averages out.
With the throttle % increase since last year, due to additional down force available and with the teams adding more downforce this year (as part of development), the throttle % is going to increase further, which means, you are going to consume a hell lot more fuel than ever. So, driving to Delta is going to be even more critical! With increase in fuel economy as the combustion technology continues to improve, the problem would get reduced over time, not eliminated! So whatever race sim numbers we have seen, even if is driving to delta, is the optimum utilization of resources to the maximum. That is the reality of a car and nothing more to the story.
Regarding Renault having turned down their PU for the reliability sake, it would be interesting to see where they stand with fuel consumption, when they fully resolve their reliability issues and unleash full power. However, the extra grunt should definitely help in qualifying.