i was surprised to see this also on a power track like Canada. It looks like Renault has made a good step on the power unit. Spa and Italy should reveal more.
i was surprised to see this also on a power track like Canada. It looks like Renault has made a good step on the power unit. Spa and Italy should reveal more.
Renault power unit does seem strong, however Kvyat with Honda did pass Sainz with Renault for points position also. So the Honda doesn't seem to be that bad.
Agreed, Norris cruised past Verstappen very early in the race, before DRS had come in. He might have fried his brakes though, but certainly the Renault engines were a fair match today, Max ended up on fresher tyres by the end and so he restored his position , but overall splitting the redbulls on a power track is a fair reflection of Renault's progress..... and instead we can mention that MERC had the only failure on Stroll's car,,,JordanMugen wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 09:33Renault power unit does seem strong, however Kvyat with Honda did pass Sainz with Renault for points position also. So the Honda doesn't seem to be that bad.
McLaren ran less wing, helping out massively on the straight, Norris was on softs, giving him much better traction out of the hairpin as Max was on hards (two compounds difference) that for sure were not optimally in the window on lap2. Even with that being the case Norris made a braking error and that allowed Max to slot in, but only just before Norris, giving him an optimal tow. Max post race also said he didn’t want to risk braking out Norris in the chicane, too much risk for little gain. He did overtake Norris a few laps later.PowerandtheGlory wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 09:41Agreed, Norris cruised past Verstappen very early in the race, before DRS had come in. He might have fried his brakes though, but certainly the Renault engines were a fair match today, Max ended up on fresher tyres by the end and so he restored his position , but overall splitting the redbulls on a power track is a fair reflection of Renault's progress..... and instead we can mention that MERC had the only failure on Stroll's car,,,JordanMugen wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 09:33Renault power unit does seem strong, however Kvyat with Honda did pass Sainz with Renault for points position also. So the Honda doesn't seem to be that bad.
I'll accept that were obviously looooooads of other factors that you add into the equation.. grip, aero setup, Montreal Groundhogs.....Sieper wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 10:49McLaren ran less wing, helping out massively on the straight, Norris was on softs, giving him much better traction out of the hairpin as Max was on hards (two compounds difference) that for sure were not optimally in the window on lap2. Even with that being the case Norris made a braking error and that allowed Max to slot in, but only just before Norris, giving him an optimal tow. Max post race also said he didn’t want to risk braking out Norris in the chicane, too much risk for little gain. He did overtake Norris a few laps later.PowerandtheGlory wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 09:41Agreed, Norris cruised past Verstappen very early in the race, before DRS had come in. He might have fried his brakes though, but certainly the Renault engines were a fair match today, Max ended up on fresher tyres by the end and so he restored his position , but overall splitting the redbulls on a power track is a fair reflection of Renault's progress..... and instead we can mention that MERC had the only failure on Stroll's car,,,JordanMugen wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 09:33
Renault power unit does seem strong, however Kvyat with Honda did pass Sainz with Renault for points position also. So the Honda doesn't seem to be that bad.
I am not contesting the Renault power gains, but that overtake was due to different reasons then better PU power.
Not ridiculing you Sieper, just humouring you with the Groundhogs.Sieper wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 12:21There is at the moment very little difference in HP between the 2. Latest gps data was Honda up by 7hp I think. That is really the only “evidence” And since Renault has made reliability improvement (which means more hp to be used).
I think I gave Fair factors on how the Norris contra overtake happened, no need to ridicule me.
Sainz had dead tires (+66 laps old afair)JordanMugen wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 09:33Renault power unit does seem strong, however Kvyat with Honda did pass Sainz with Renault for points position also. So the Honda doesn't seem to be that bad.
OK, Fair enough! Plussed that. Sometimes I need to lighter up, always think people are out to get me whilst it could just as well be a good intended bit of humour.PowerandtheGlory wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 15:18Not ridiculing you Sieper, just humouring you with the Groundhogs.Sieper wrote: ↑10 Jun 2019, 12:21There is at the moment very little difference in HP between the 2. Latest gps data was Honda up by 7hp I think. That is really the only “evidence” And since Renault has made reliability improvement (which means more hp to be used).
I think I gave Fair factors on how the Norris contra overtake happened, no need to ridicule me.
There seems to be plenty of Data on both sides to dispute the performance claims of both Renault and Honda PU's
This site posts some speeds after Quali which read very favourably for Renault;
https://f1i.com/news/343863-montreal-sp ... m-all.html
And yet on the Official FiA site the data seems to be different..
So, if we can remove the Quantative data, and look at the subjective qualitative data..
There was some good speed and HP and performance shown by the Renault Engines at a race track sensitive to PU power. The works renault cars split the Redbulls in a race distance with all factors included, traffic etc.
But still got lapped by the leaders... Objective and unbiased