I think they interact, so yes the engineers design the car by the numbers as you say, and then they develop it and do the setups with feedback from the drivers. And they all want a neutral car that goes where they point it at both ends, at every track all race long, but they can't have that so they have to settle for some dullness or sharpness at various stages. There are different ways to drive the cars too, like Lewis steers with the back end more than Valtteri, and differences at different stages of each corner.Big Tea wrote: ↑28 Aug 2019, 17:44
Its probably more a car(designer) thing than a driver thing. The design team get it matching the figures that give the right numbers on the screen and its down to the driver to get it around in the time they estimate.
If a driver has been driving a car with a different 'seat of the pants' feel, say a planted car, and he gets into a jittery car he will not be comfortable when it gives the same feed back the other one did just when it was going to let go catastrophically, even if he knows this one will be far less abrupt. and the longer he was driving the other car the more it will take for him to 'get it' I can only think to compare it the first time you drive a 4x4 quickly after you have always driven rear wheel drive only.
And now with Max I feel he can manage more time with a sharp car and that is faster than the other way round. Red Bull aren't talking about it being a difficult car any more, it suits Max fine, but it still didn't suit Pierre. And some of this, it seems to me, has to be about physiological attributes like sense of balance and proprioceptive muscle control, that they can't train beyond a certain point they just have what they've got.
So these are the points i'm joining up to think it wouldn't work for Seb at Red Bull any more, and what I'm a bit anxious about for Alex - whether physically he is that special. He might be of course, i can't wait to see anyway.