FIA Wheel Arches are tested with 2022 car and Bearman is testing unchanged 2024 car as a reserve driver within this test for FIA. Tomorrow Leclerc and Sainz test Imola updates during 200km Filming day.
FIA Wheel Arches are tested with 2022 car and Bearman is testing unchanged 2024 car as a reserve driver within this test for FIA. Tomorrow Leclerc and Sainz test Imola updates during 200km Filming day.
My point does not rely on Norris and Piastri being equally fast. Norris was a solid second faster than Piastri on the restart. Some of that is driver, a small bit of it was tyres, and a decent chunk of it would no doubt be the upgrade. 0,4s is not unreasonable at all IMO, given Piastri also had a few bits on his car.Sphere3758 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 11:41I dont remember a recent occurance where Piastri matched Lando's race pace, so quantifying the upgrade using their pace differential is not a sound argument imo.Cs98 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 10:32Sainz was faster than Piastri in the half upgraded McLaren, enough to pass, yet the fully upgraded McL in the hands of Norris was faster than Sainz. Only a big upgrade would explain such a performance difference.Sphere3758 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 08:34
I am yet to be convinced by the McLaren upgrade. I don’t think they were much faster than the Ferrari with 0 upgrades. It was a race where track position was key and having free air had a big advantage.
The well timed safety car left Lando with the best tyres at the end, while both Max and especially Charles were on old tyres which they had to restart.
Carlos was relatively close in lap times to Lando at the end and I don’t even consider him the reference driver for Ferrari to judge performance .
So, the 4 tenths number sounds audacious. They were not 4 tenths slower than Ferrari before, the gap was around a tenth/ 1.5 tenths.
As for Sainz not being the "reference driver", might need to re-evaluate that considering he was catching Leclerc at the end. Leclerc was on slightly older tyres, but deg was almost zero.
Charles spent a big portion of the last stint around 2s behind Max, trying to protect his tyres by not getting too close. His pace in relatively free air, that Carlos had after he passed Piastri, might have been better. Lets also not forget that he had to "restart" his hard tyres twice : behind the VSC and the SC.
Anyway, historical data makes Leclerc the reference driver for Ferrari. The same way that Lando is the reference driver for McLaren.
There is a very small amount of useful data for both Sainz and Leclerc in terms of pure race pace for the 2024 season.Cs98 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 11:59My point does not rely on Norris and Piastri being equally fast. Norris was a solid second faster than Piastri on the restart. Some of that is driver, a small bit of it was tyres, and a decent chunk of it would no doubt be the upgrade. 0,4s is not unreasonable at all IMO, given Piastri also had a few bits on his car.Sphere3758 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 11:41I dont remember a recent occurance where Piastri matched Lando's race pace, so quantifying the upgrade using their pace differential is not a sound argument imo.Cs98 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 10:32
Sainz was faster than Piastri in the half upgraded McLaren, enough to pass, yet the fully upgraded McL in the hands of Norris was faster than Sainz. Only a big upgrade would explain such a performance difference.
As for Sainz not being the "reference driver", might need to re-evaluate that considering he was catching Leclerc at the end. Leclerc was on slightly older tyres, but deg was almost zero.
Charles spent a big portion of the last stint around 2s behind Max, trying to protect his tyres by not getting too close. His pace in relatively free air, that Carlos had after he passed Piastri, might have been better. Lets also not forget that he had to "restart" his hard tyres twice : behind the VSC and the SC.
Anyway, historical data makes Leclerc the reference driver for Ferrari. The same way that Lando is the reference driver for McLaren.
As for Sainz and Leclerc. Data would suggest they've been quite evenly matched in the SF24, and that they were so in this race as well. Both stints were very close on pace. Holding out hope that Leclerc has another 2-3 tenths in the bag strikes me as delusional when it's disregarding the times in the race in favour of "historical data". He clearly didn't have that pace here relative to Sainz.
Even with those caketins and the ugly HP logo the F1 75 still looks good. She deserved a better fate
Leclerc was passed by Piastri in the first stint, who then followed behind Verstappen at around 3 seconds for the remainder. We can hardly pretend he was being badly held up then when he was passed by the same car. Anyways, you can always find some piece of nuance to avoid comparison, but that's just deflection. Based on quali and the races this season there's no evidence Leclerc has had a gap of any significant kind to Sainz. Most of the time both of them have been able to benchmark the car, as was the case in Miami.Xyz22 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 12:48There is a very small amount of useful data for both Sainz and Leclerc in terms of pure race pace for the 2024 season.Cs98 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 11:59My point does not rely on Norris and Piastri being equally fast. Norris was a solid second faster than Piastri on the restart. Some of that is driver, a small bit of it was tyres, and a decent chunk of it would no doubt be the upgrade. 0,4s is not unreasonable at all IMO, given Piastri also had a few bits on his car.Sphere3758 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 11:41
I dont remember a recent occurance where Piastri matched Lando's race pace, so quantifying the upgrade using their pace differential is not a sound argument imo.
Charles spent a big portion of the last stint around 2s behind Max, trying to protect his tyres by not getting too close. His pace in relatively free air, that Carlos had after he passed Piastri, might have been better. Lets also not forget that he had to "restart" his hard tyres twice : behind the VSC and the SC.
Anyway, historical data makes Leclerc the reference driver for Ferrari. The same way that Lando is the reference driver for McLaren.
As for Sainz and Leclerc. Data would suggest they've been quite evenly matched in the SF24, and that they were so in this race as well. Both stints were very close on pace. Holding out hope that Leclerc has another 2-3 tenths in the bag strikes me as delusional when it's disregarding the times in the race in favour of "historical data". He clearly didn't have that pace here relative to Sainz.
In Bahrain Leclerc had a significant issues regarding the brakes, negatively impacting his pace in the race
In Jeddah Sainz didn't race
In Australia Leclerc was stuck behind the McL at the start and was put on a suboptimal strategy (in terms of pure laptime) to get track position on Norris (which worked)
In Suzuka Leclerc started way back, was stuck behind traffic and once again run a suboptimal strategy to gain positions (which worked)
Even China was partially compromised by the traffic in the first stint and Sainz had tyres 4 laps older in the second stint.
In Miami, both Leclerc and Sainz were stuck behind Piastri in the first stint. Leclerc then had tyres 8 laps older in the second stint, while Sainz spent multiple laps behind Piastri once again.
I agree that specifically in Miami there wasn't a huge difference between the pace of the two drivers (even though we don't have a reliable benchmark due to what happened in the race), but it is also true that historically, on average, Leclerc has been quicker.
What a strange thing to say. The relative performance between two cars can change during a race. For example a specific car (or even a specific driving style) can require more time to warm up the tyres. Using this approach would also indicate that Leclerc was way better than Sainz at managing tyres as he dropped him by as far as 2s in the first stint, while is possible that Sainz simply started managing more on purpose.Cs98 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 13:48Leclerc was passed by Piastri in the first stint, who then followed behind Verstappen at around 3 seconds for the remainder. We can hardly pretend he was being badly held up then when he was passed by the same car. Anyways, you can always find some piece of nuance to avoid comparison, but that's just deflection. Based on quali and the races this season there's no evidence Leclerc has had a gap of any significant kind to Sainz. Most of the time both of them have been able to benchmark the car, as was the case in Miami.Xyz22 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 12:48There is a very small amount of useful data for both Sainz and Leclerc in terms of pure race pace for the 2024 season.Cs98 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 11:59
My point does not rely on Norris and Piastri being equally fast. Norris was a solid second faster than Piastri on the restart. Some of that is driver, a small bit of it was tyres, and a decent chunk of it would no doubt be the upgrade. 0,4s is not unreasonable at all IMO, given Piastri also had a few bits on his car.
As for Sainz and Leclerc. Data would suggest they've been quite evenly matched in the SF24, and that they were so in this race as well. Both stints were very close on pace. Holding out hope that Leclerc has another 2-3 tenths in the bag strikes me as delusional when it's disregarding the times in the race in favour of "historical data". He clearly didn't have that pace here relative to Sainz.
In Bahrain Leclerc had a significant issues regarding the brakes, negatively impacting his pace in the race
In Jeddah Sainz didn't race
In Australia Leclerc was stuck behind the McL at the start and was put on a suboptimal strategy (in terms of pure laptime) to get track position on Norris (which worked)
In Suzuka Leclerc started way back, was stuck behind traffic and once again run a suboptimal strategy to gain positions (which worked)
Even China was partially compromised by the traffic in the first stint and Sainz had tyres 4 laps older in the second stint.
In Miami, both Leclerc and Sainz were stuck behind Piastri in the first stint. Leclerc then had tyres 8 laps older in the second stint, while Sainz spent multiple laps behind Piastri once again.
I agree that specifically in Miami there wasn't a huge difference between the pace of the two drivers (even though we don't have a reliable benchmark due to what happened in the race), but it is also true that historically, on average, Leclerc has been quicker.
Too much hype. One hope is that, it was mentioned in the first formula uno article on the overbite, that the RBR engineers Ferrari traded for Laurent Mekies (Ferrari were apparently already on the concept) they were able to input. Hopefully, they might have acted as a sanity check on the new direction from their experience in RBR.Xyz22 wrote: ↑09 May 2024, 15:28This is the biggest upgrade package Ferrari has worked on since i'd say 2012. In recent years, they have never brought a massive package to a single race weekend. The Spain update last year was an outlier as the goal was to start getting real track data on the downwash concept.
I can't wait to see the changes and the impact on car behavior. It will be a very significant test for the Technical team as well now that is completely under the leadership of Enrico Cardile.