SmallSoldier wrote: ↑21 Jun 2021, 18:53
mwillems wrote:SmallSoldier wrote: ↑21 Jun 2021, 17:42
Red Bull run a very low downforce wing compared to the rest of the field, that may have masked any issues from the stricter rear wing tests.
Ferrari’s struggles were more related to tire behavior than outright straight line speed… While their tires were working, Sainz was maintaining pace at the front of pack and fending off the AT behind them… Daniel was pitted early to perform the undercut and get out from the DRS train.
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Yes but without a more flexible wing do they have to lower rear DF to get some more speed and therefore compromise their tyre management and tyre life?
I agree with you, their problems with tires could very well be a consequence of running a lower downforce configuration… Been said that, they were already struggling with tires in a few GP’s before this one when the bendy wings were still in full use.
Track temperature and probably more important, the fact that the track was greener after the rain the night before may have been a bigger factor.
My point was that “straight line speed” wasn’t really the issue for Ferrari, it was the fact that they may have prioritized it that made their tires struggle and the graining / degradation is what ultimately made them lose a lot of pace.
On tracks where tire degradation is not that high, Ferrari will have a better showing… The Championship will be interesting, there is still not a very defined pattern of where teams will struggle and where they will have great pace.
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Agreed, it wasn't there issue per se, but I suspect it is all tied together.
In the article that f1rules kindly posted about Ferrari's issues, they blame the green track a little, which makes sense for the first set of tyres. But after that the track was not green, it had had 20 cars doing 18 laps each, by the next stint even more, yet they still went backwards like a steam train in reverse.
Thinking about straight line speed though, I would still have expected more from Ferrari by the end of that straight and it seems or feels more than just tyre issues. Yeah you'd expect them to be slow to get up to speed, but given enough straight, of which there was plenty, they should still be pretty fast even on knackered tyres, don't you think? At least faster than where they were. I dunno, I just feel like there is something else. Something to do with deployment perhaps.