You are correct on some aspect but when it comes to the point that you are saying rider is more important than bike it is wrong. When we compared it to car racing, as you said, riders have more impact. Talent is a bit more important.Andres125sx wrote: ↑19 Mar 2018, 10:15The answer IMHO is easy, riding a bike is completely different to driving a car because of several factors:NathanOlder wrote: ↑18 Mar 2018, 16:43What I find odd in recent years is riders using 2016 chassis with a 2017 swingarm and 2018 forks. How do these top manufacturers not progress every year. Imagine Mercedes using 2017 suspension and 2016 aero on the 2018 chassis. Its insane to think that would happen in F1, but it happens all the time in motogp.johnny comelately wrote: ↑18 Mar 2018, 15:33It brings up the old question, (in races) : in the troglodyte years Cars were 80% car and 20% driver with bikes being the opposite, what are the percentages now? Cars = 90% car 10% driver; Bikes 40% bike and 60% rider
So yes the riders have a larger impact than drivers in f1, but when you see the mixture of chassis, swingarms ect it helps on certain tracks for different pecking orders when teams/riders make the wrong choices
1- Riding a bike you change weight distribution while moving around, wich means difference between riding styles can be dramatic from one to another, specially when compared to F1 and drivers
2- Rider weight is a huge percentage of total weight, so the difference between a small and light rider to a big and heavy one is dramatic too.
So basically in MotoGP there´s no perfect chassis, perfect for who? A light and smooth rider like Pedrosa has completely different chassis requirements to any other heavier, more aggressive, or even taller rider who can modify weight distribution easier when compared to Dani..... or keep static and not modify it. It´s all up to the rider, wich is dramatically different to F1 where drivers can´t modify weight distribution, and their weight and height is almost irrelevant for the chassis design
Actually only Casey Stoner (the greatest natural talent) achieved results with a Ducati...Dovi sort of (yet)
Ha ha, yes its much easier to list the successful ones.Nonserviam85 wrote: ↑21 Mar 2018, 15:16Actually only Casey Stoner (the greatest natural talent) achieved results with a Ducati...Dovi sort of (yet)
Agreed Honda riders Qatar ( which is not Honda track) results show us that Honda made it.nacho wrote: ↑21 Mar 2018, 19:23Ducati is now a totally different bike than it used to be. Used to be a career destroyer from 2007-2014 or so, except for Stoner.
GP15 was perhaps the first Ducati that almost all the riders got along, before that GP14.2 (introduced mid season) was already decent.
During the past few seasons Honda has been the most difficult bike, especially rookies have been unable to get much out of it. For this season Honda has gotten their bike a bit easier to ride again as evident of the results behind Marquez.