It's not only up to power. Ferrari is a quite efficient car. Less downforce, less drag.
Leclerc's 1st Q3 lap is just as mind-blowing through the S's. T7 apex speed 227km/h, 15km/h higher than Max. He also had a mighty T19.Juzh wrote: ↑03 Nov 2019, 00:55verstappen's p2 lap
https://streamable.com/rrstf
https://streamable.com/rrstf
vs vettel - that turn 1 lockup really haunts him troughout the lap, otherwise a very good run. Speed trough S section is mind boggling. Max carries 17 kmh more apex speed trough T6 compared to vettel. Ferrari still stretches it's legs on the straights, so this new technical dirrective does not seem to be hampering them that much.
https://streamable.com/hl4yb
https://streamable.com/hl4yb
These things (making it up and/or finding it) to me is the JamesBondishness of F1 that's so cool ..."On Saturday morning in Austin, the FIA issued a technical directive to the F1 teams detailing a system that Red Bull had proposed that might have allowed the team to run more than the allowed amount of fuel flow.
The system was, of course, rejected by the FIA as being illegal. It is clear, however, that Red Bull did this for a reason, knowing it would be rejected but in order to have the FIA clarify what was acceptable and what was not acceptable and thus draw a line in the sand. Red Bull suspected that other teams might be using such a system, or something similar to it.
Getting more than the allowed fuel flow could create a situation in which a team might be able to burn more fuel at certain points in a race weekend, which would give the engine a little bit of extra power when it was most needed, particularly when accelerating at slow speeds, which would allow the car to carry the additional speed up through the acceleration curve and so produce a higher top speed.
It seems that the system that Red Bull created, based on experiments it conducted, allowed pulses going from the fuel flow meter, which samples what is going on, to be disrupted by external electrical “noise”. This gray area has now been closed and it will be interesting to see if it has any impact on the different levels of performance of the different F1 teams."
Juzh's recent video uploading is telling on this front.
Especially at the start of the year it felt like RB went too conservative on their gearbox ratio's, as they seemed to be surprised by the PU's overall power.
as far as i could see it was in almost all gears.....langedweil wrote: ↑03 Nov 2019, 16:05Especially at the start of the year it felt like RB went too conservative on their gearbox ratio's, as they seemed to be surprised by the PU's overall power.
But as the ratio's are fixed over the year (why is that anyways, cost ?) they had to workaround it this year in the mappings.
But good find Capharol, hadn't noticed it. It's quite a difference .. tho it's only
3rd.