FP3 is where we will see the potential for this weekend.
Not sure what is Lawson's program today, but he looks like he is struggling.
I am not writing off Yuki qualifying ahead of Lawson in RBR.
Era’s come to an end. It happens, especially at the end of a regulation. It’s been a great run, but the signs have been there from the drop off in performance from last year. I’d be amazed if Max isn’t eyeing up Aston Martin for 26’ in some shape or form.
AM is about 3 to 4 years from success. That how long AN took to build a team around him.
Too much distortion from engine modes. Leclerc is in race mode and also cooled down his tyres for half a lap (picked it up on the onboard), pretty sure Norris is in race mode + he has a tow, Russell has less deployment but similar engine mode to Norris, Verstappen has lower mode and less deployment on all but the first straight.venkyhere wrote: ↑14 Mar 2025, 14:41Amidst all the doom & gloom (so what if they lost people and lost their way, isn't it normal ? dominance is always cyclic) in this thread, may be some 'data' will be a welcome change to look at :
Spent some time with long run data from F1-tempo, with one race pace lap each from the top four teams.
Made sure I selected laps where LEC was not stuck behind VER and where NOR was not stuck behind ANT.
https://i.imgur.com/KLY6Prd.png
Observations & inferences (could be totally wrong)
- McLaren and Redbull on lower wing settings than Ferrari and Mercedes, it looks like, they are the ones who have to lift the most through T5 & T9-T10
- McLaren seems to be more heavily laden with fuel than Ferrari
- Ferrari is masterful through T12, they can get to higher gear much earlier than others
- Redbull (Max) doing some weird things in slow corners, they are one gear lower than others :
a) either because the car is simply refusing to rotate in slow corners (3,11,13)
b) or because they want to 'hide-pace' by downshifting extra, thus delaying the speed buildup for the section after the corner.
(I think 'a' is the likely reason)
- Redbull (Max) sandbagging by refusing to upshift for pit straight and delaying upshift between T2 and T3 & delaying downshift for T9-T10 (which would've given better engine braking before and better traction after, the 'chicane')
- Ferrari and McLaren are delaying upshift (sandbagging) too, for the pit straight.
- Mercedes seems to be the 'relatively honest' team in terms of showing their hand.
- Mclaren are the kings of the high speed section (can't see evidence of any derating by others) that is sector2.
- Ferrari/Mercedes/Redbull are almost similar (w.r.t time consumed) through the sector2 high speed section ; though Redbull seems to struggle with T6 (which in turn means more time in pocket for sector2).