"Significant"? oh boy
"Significant"? oh boy
F1 cars had mirrors? Didn't know that have completely forgotten all about them
It was as dominant as any. Sainz was struggling to keep AM and Merc behind. RedBull ordered their drivers to cruise to the end... 1 second a lap faster than anyone else is not dominant? 7 seconds on Ferarri in the opening 10 laps when Ferrari had brand spanking new tyres?! ok then.ME4ME wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 19:04While it was a comfortable weekend for Red Bull I don't yet buy that they'll be totally dominant this season. For one Leclerc could've matched them in qualifying or been pretty close. And secondly Perez was exactly flying past Leclerc early in the race.
Seems to me that RB isn't that far ahead in ultimate performance. However they're much more consistent and reliable over a stint and race then Ferrari. Aston Martin is consistent over a stint too but maybe lacks two tenths.
I think you are allowed to change the electronic deployment of the engine which is likely what they did. I believe if you reduced to a very low level of deployment, you would also decrease the load on the engine through lowering RPM - or am I mistaken?Juzh wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 23:40I went trough verstappen's onboard, nothing remarkable to report, except for unreal amounts of lift and coast from lap 1 till the end and just general driving at 7/10s for literally the whole race. You can see it in car behaviour that it's just not being pushed. Leaving meters of tarmac unused on exits and stuff like that. You wonder how it's possible to be fast this way, but here we are.
At some point because of all this not pushing front brakes stared to develop a split in temps, so he had to brake harder on some laps to remedy the situation.
Engine got detuned with about 8-10 laps remaining. Engine 6, position 1 - looks like this reduces performance in some way. I dont believe you can actually go back up on the engine once you lower it, can anyone confirm this? Seems unlikely with locked engine maps from quali onwards.
Other than that just constant reminders of laptime targets.
Very hard to know, it could be any number of things, however in terms of energy deployment this can't be. I know red bull uses "modes" for energy deployment management. Their sustained mode is usually mode 7 or mode 8, depending on track, and they usually never go higher than mode 6. That said this weekend they even went to mode 5 for some laps because they probably had way too much energy available with all that coasting, but that's an odd one out.organic wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 23:43I think you are allowed to change the electronic deployment of the engine which is likely what they did. I believe if you reduced to a very low level of deployment, you would also decrease the load on the engine through lowering RPM - or am I mistaken?Juzh wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 23:40I went trough verstappen's onboard, nothing remarkable to report, except for unreal amounts of lift and coast from lap 1 till the end and just general driving at 7/10s for literally the whole race. You can see it in car behaviour that it's just not being pushed. Leaving meters of tarmac unused on exits and stuff like that. You wonder how it's possible to be fast this way, but here we are.
At some point because of all this not pushing front brakes stared to develop a split in temps, so he had to brake harder on some laps to remedy the situation.
Engine got detuned with about 8-10 laps remaining. Engine 6, position 1 - looks like this reduces performance in some way. I dont believe you can actually go back up on the engine once you lower it, can anyone confirm this? Seems unlikely with locked engine maps from quali onwards.
Other than that just constant reminders of laptime targets.
Also lowering engine modes during a race requires a reliability reason and has to go through the FIA process of being approved I believe
they were, given Horner's comments recently, about 10kg overweight at Bahrain last year. That's only 3 tenths. In qualifying RB improved 9 tenths relative to last year, so 6 tenths of real development, although some of that would've been in-season last year.TNTHead wrote: ↑07 Mar 2023, 00:19Isn't what we are seeing just the RB18 but then underweighted? If the real updates are yet to come than probably dominance is under way.
I think you can also say that they have all the crucial areas for the shortest race time under control: power, downforce, balance, tyres, strategy. The team has fought and developed in the years to overcome the Mercs. That was a perfect school to learn. Now they have hit bulls eye with their concept. Was the ground effect Valkerie car on purpose a side project as a training camp for the real deal?
One wonders, are they so good or are the others sub par?
They changed some oil pipes just before the race. It could be that.organic wrote: ↑07 Mar 2023, 02:21In recent F1 nation podcast they interview Adrian Newey and he talks about an unexpected reliability problem that the team found during Friday free practices. anyone have an idea what this could be?
All I can think of is the plank wear and floor raising that was suggested in the media?