That's not true either. Sochi is not that easy to overtake at in general. Obviously more power helps, but the differences between the top 3 manufacturers aren't large enough where one just clearly passes another, it's all down to strategy of the driver, making sure he harvests enough energy to defend in the known overtaking zones and he keeps on being smart, hard to keep that level of concentration. If you watch Kvyat, he was faster overall than Ocon and faster down the straights (actually he posted the fastest speed of all this weekend), but Ocon was defending perfectly. Sochi isn't the easiest to overtake at, as noted by most of the drivers._cerber1 wrote: ↑28 Sep 2020, 07:55In fact, McLaren in Sochi was at the bottom of the top speed rankings. They clearly relied on turns, sacrificing speed on the straights, so that the comparison is not correct. In general, I do not understand people who judge the power of the motor, by the speed on the straight lines, there are several dozen factors that can affect this.Mahurora wrote: ↑27 Sep 2020, 21:02I guess it has been overshadowed by the crash in the openning lap and Lewis' penalty today but it was awseome to see that drag race between Norris and Albon after the SC.
It was on lap 6, Albon got his exit out of turn 10 wrong which lead to getting past by Norris who had a much cleaner turn around the corner thus much faster exit speed. Then suddenly the Redbull accelerating like 80's turbo Honda and catching up and getting ahead by turn 13. Unfortunately Albon was on the outside so he got past once more but I guess Yamamoto wasn't talking out of nothing concerning his recent claims.
Look at the Ocon-Kvyat duel? Kvyat had a softer line-up, 12 laps younger, slipstream and DRS, but he could not overtake Renault. Under these conditions, having a more powerful motor, overtaking becomes easy.
This screwed a lot of people. Raikkonen was doing the same, defending fantastically even with a speed disadvantage and holding a few people up.