It's getting worse, sadly. What is wrong with this team?
So the "No Brackets" tyre designs (C1 & C5 on the image above) are only relevant for testing because at a race there will only be white, yellow and red (with the bracket/stripe designs) ?
If you mean this
Racefans.com wrote:RaceFans understands from a source at the team that the first completed FW42 will be airfreighted to the track early on Wednesday morning.
No all 5 race tyres but in one race only 3 will be available and they will be red white and yellowTankMarvin wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 14:20So the "No Brackets" tyre designs (C1 & C5 on the image above) are only relevant for testing because at a race there will only be white, yellow and red (with the bracket/stripe designs) ?
Yes… Albert Fabrega said that the 2019 is already in the garage.Morteza wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 14:25If you mean this
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DzrkeUBXQAAjWCD.jpg
It's last year's car by the looks of it
for the races will be picked 3 of the C1-C5 , which are then colored white yellow red , hard to the softest.TankMarvin wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 14:20So the "No Brackets" tyre designs (C1 & C5 on the image above) are only relevant for testing because at a race there will only be white, yellow and red (with the bracket/stripe designs) ?
it's called 500M budget and over 1000 of workforce in factory.yelistener wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 14:36Holy moly Ferrari is fast.
1:18.161 would sound like the pole lap time of 2019 Spanish GP if you think about it: 2018 had new tarmac and better aero, so a 2s difference sounded about right for 2019 pole, but, NO, Ferrari did it in testing day 1 lol
I guess we just under-estimated the 2019 cars, but over-estimated the effect of the new 2019 regulations?
Yeah it's surprising that they're pushing out of the box, but this is first day of testing. It is unlikely these cars won't be faster than last year, all teams have said that these regulations have zero impact on speed and wake turbulence and Q2 pole time was ~1.16.100yelistener wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 14:36Holy moly Ferrari is fast.
1:18.161 would sound like the pole lap time of 2019 Spanish GP if you think about it: 2018 had new tarmac and better aero, so a 2s difference sounded about right for 2019 pole, but, NO, Ferrari did it in testing day 1 lol
I guess we just under-estimated the 2019 cars, but over-estimated the effect of the new 2019 regulations?
There's no way that the cars will be 2 seconds slower than last years cars from round 5.yelistener wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 14:36Holy moly Ferrari is fast.
1:18.161 would sound like the pole lap time of 2019 Spanish GP if you think about it: 2018 had new tarmac and better aero, so a 2s difference sounded about right for 2019 pole, but, NO, Ferrari did it in testing day 1 lol
I guess we just under-estimated the 2019 cars, but over-estimated the effect of the new 2019 regulations?
The 1.5s figure was always quoted for the first wind tunnel run with the new car - it's a bit disingenuous. They claw that back pretty quickly by adapting to the new flow regime.yelistener wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 14:36Holy moly Ferrari is fast.
1:18.161 would sound like the pole lap time of 2019 Spanish GP if you think about it: 2018 had new tarmac and better aero, so a 2s difference sounded about right for 2019 pole, but, NO, Ferrari did it in testing day 1 lol
I guess we just under-estimated the 2019 cars (or, over-estimated the effect of the new 2019 regulations)?
“We predicted an impact of 1.5s per lap when we [first tested] in the wind tunnel [and] it’s what we got,” said Binotto.