

In his notebook Ted said the car doesn't seem to work well on tracks which extensively use the left front wheel, i.e lots of right hand corners like Barcelona. Not sure how true this is but the lack of downforce and excessive rear tyre wear are very similar to how it was back in Spain.
I wonder why they ran such a large rear wing compared to Mercedes and RedBull? It seemed to really hurt their pace.
If so, that means they will have similar problems at Japan.M840TR wrote: ↑01 Oct 2018, 10:30In his notebook Ted said the car doesn't seem to work well on tracks which extensively use the left front wheel, i.e lots of right hand corners like Barcelona. Not sure how true this is but the lack of downforce and excessive rear tyre wear are very similar to how it was back in Spain.
One thing to note is the cleaner path air has to reach the rear wing on the 2017 car.
So maybe they did indeed lose some power to Mercedes, which would explain some of why they are struggling, relatively speaking.The competition's GPS data shows it clearly: Ferrari's advantage on the straight has disappeared since two races. Did Mercedes catch up or did Ferrari have to turn down Power? And what role does a new FIA sensor on the Ferrari play?
