Not sure that's as true now as it used to be, with the growth of street-circuits on the calendar. Not a lot of high-speed corners on those tracks.Mr Brooksy wrote: ↑16 Jun 2026, 23:16It's my understanding that the prevailing view is, if a car works well at Catalunya then it's usually a decent car...
That didn't go too well
https://www.grandprix.com/news/stalled- ... sainz.html"It's clear that what we brought this weekend hasn't worked. We were expecting a significant step forward that hasn't materialised.
"It's starting to become worrying and frustrating because the improvements aren't working."
The four-time grand prix winner believes the problem runs deeper than the new parts themselves.
"When you bring something to the track that shows a lot of laptime in the wind tunnel and in the simulator, and then you see that you've only made a very small step forward, it means there's something not working in our calculations, numbers, development... and that's worrying."
"With this set of rules, for whatever reason we still don't understand, we're not able to develop the car properly."
This is depressing. They can change leadership, engineers, and drivers, but the more things change the more they stay the same. It's starting to appear that the improvements over the last couple seasons were a blip instead of a trend.