The part that needs to be a concern for RBH is the improvements year on year... In Melbourne they were the team that improved the least compared to 2018 (with the exception of Williams) and in Bahrain that trend continued to show itself with even Williams improving more compared to 2018 in Qualifying... What the data seems to show is that RBH are getting farther from the top 2 and closer to the midfield.godlameroso wrote:I'm going to let you guys in on a little secret, this year, the tires are really the main deciding factor. The chassis, are pretty close, Honda is a little behind, the Red Bull car is good, probably as good as either Ferrari or Mercedes. Could it be better, sure, could the engine be better, sure, but that's not their biggest weakness. The problem for everyone is the tires, the gaps are perfectly explained by them, the cars are so close that just getting the tires in the window can mean half a second of performance. Take a car like the Red Bull which is a second a lap faster than Haas, but with tires outside their window, they're now .5 seconds closer, and if Haas gets the tires in the perfect window, they're .5 seconds faster. The result .087 seconds difference in qualifying.
In the race, the temperatures will average out, they'll get hot in the same places for everyone, and change as the track evolves and the temperature drops. Then it's not about being in the perfect window for one lap, but for the race average. I have no doubt the Red Bull over a race distance will demolish everyone short of McLaren or Haas around here, and even then, there's 3 DRS zones. If Gasly's car is in fact quicker he should end behind Verstappen only. That is of course unless Verstappen Alonso's his way to a podium.
The data below is the gap from every team to the Ultimate Pace time (best sectors in Qualifying). *Data from Lightsoutblog
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