Mansell89 wrote: ↑18 Mar 2019, 09:43
Have they mentioned anywhere why they had such a lack of pace this weekend?
Seb said he didn’t have the grip that they had in Barcelona but it was very odd this weekend, almost like something significant had changed on the car.
Do we expect a different animal in Bahrain?
"That was one story; the other was the under-performance of Ferrari. Around a low grip, bumpy track very different to Barcelona, the SF90 simply wasn’t working. “It was not balanced, it struggled with the tyres and none of the different set-ups we tried worked,” surmised Mattia Binotto. It was noticeable that it was running a lot of front wing angle and GPS analysis confirmed that most of the time loss was in Turns One, Three and 13 – i.e. the slow, big steering-lock corners leading onto straights. Meaning it was slow onto the straights and at the end of them. Even with all its front wing angle used up, it still had a front-end grip shortfall."
". . . the Ferrari was lacking in front-end grip. Although its straightline speeds were well down too, this was a just a function of how much slower it was onto the straights (GPS-derived power overlays suggested a negligible difference between Mercedes and Ferrari)."
https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/repo ... rix-report