Unless there's a major outbreak in Melbourne itself in next few days, chances of race being cancelled at this stage are slim imo. This one will go forward, and probably Bahrain as well, for anything else it's way too early to tell.
Unless there's a major outbreak in Melbourne itself in next few days, chances of race being cancelled at this stage are slim imo. This one will go forward, and probably Bahrain as well, for anything else it's way too early to tell.
Bottas driving with DAS in Australia or not, that is not the post that I commented on. I specifically commented when the discussion was more about how it affects a driver, whether the driver can overtake and stuff like that. Read my post again.
I wish the same for Honda but how you see this leap in reliability from them? From the test in Barcelona?Bill wrote:70% of the lap in Melbourne is under full throttle,by any measure it is a power circuit. I think people are overrating Mercedes and under estimating the competition especially Honda who have made gains on pu with reliability to match .the same cannot be said about Mercedes.
Do you think that we can not see reliability at tests?bluechris wrote: ↑09 Mar 2020, 22:37I wish the same for Honda but how you see this leap in reliability from them? From the test in Barcelona?Bill wrote:70% of the lap in Melbourne is under full throttle,by any measure it is a power circuit. I think people are overrating Mercedes and under estimating the competition especially Honda who have made gains on pu with reliability to match .the same cannot be said about Mercedes.
Not directly no, because we don't know how over or under cooled the PU's might have been in testing.
At the official site, there is an article in which they analysed cornering data from winter tests: https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/arti ... OiAIG.htmlgodlameroso wrote: ↑09 Mar 2020, 03:25
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Frankly, with regards to bumps and kerbs, I think the RB16 is the class of the field, so even with Mercedes' having a very slow corner advantage, I think it balances out. It may swing the balance of power, luckily now Mercedes no longer have a big downforce advantage in the high-speed stuff like they had last year. So although RB has lost a bit of their low-speed corner advantage, they gained in other areas. They'll be very close, closer than they were last year, and the Honda engine is progressing nicely as well.
Is the Ferrari being best at low speed just because of the one time Seb cut the chicane? And according to that Mercedes have nearly the least power and downforce, so i wouldn't pay any attention to it at all, it is junk. Hang on for Q3 and embrace the suspenseatanatizante wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 00:43Yeah, I know that those data can`t be pretty accurate for not knowing the fuel levels, PU modes and so on, but apparently it seems (at least to me) that Merc has gained a lot in the low and middle-speed corners vs Red Bull
and over the entire lap, they seem to have gained some 5 tenths:
https://postimages.org/
Even if the data analysis is not so accurate regarding the real figures we could better assume the car behaviour both from on-track observers and many video footage at the tests.
Taking into account the above cornering data, I wanna know how many low, medium and high-speed corners do we have here in Melbourne in order to have some a more or less superficial conclusion regarding the race pace between the teams ...
I don't know how they came to that conclusion, but surely not because of some chicane cutting. In their first week's analysis they claimed Ferrari to be fastest in slow speed sections as well. It's not based on sector times, though. Otherwise Alfa Romero should have been up there as Kimi had the fastest S3 time by cutting the chicane.izzy wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 01:22Is the Ferrari being best at low speed just because of the one time Seb cut the chicane? And according to that Mercedes have nearly the least power and downforce, so i wouldn't pay any attention to it at all, it is junk. Hang on for Q3 and embrace the suspenseatanatizante wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 00:43Yeah, I know that those data can`t be pretty accurate for not knowing the fuel levels, PU modes and so on, but apparently it seems (at least to me) that Merc has gained a lot in the low and middle-speed corners vs Red Bull
and over the entire lap, they seem to have gained some 5 tenths:
https://postimages.org/
Even if the data analysis is not so accurate regarding the real figures we could better assume the car behaviour both from on-track observers and many video footage at the tests.
Taking into account the above cornering data, I wanna know how many low, medium and high-speed corners do we have here in Melbourne in order to have some a more or less superficial conclusion regarding the race pace between the teams ...![]()
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