With rain it is not so much through the turns. BEcause usually the engine is turned down in rain. However on the straight he could have lost up to 30 hp. The exhaust was not blocked but you could see a big dent at the end of the pipe.Formula one fan wrote:Anyone know or care to guess how much power his engine lost from first lap wreck that damaged his exhaust in brazil??
Yes - but he's not asking how much it hurt Vettel. He's just asking, with that damaged exhaust, how much power did Vettel lose? It was a simple engine question, not an aero question.n smikle wrote:With rain it is not so much through the turns. BEcause usually the engine is turned down in rain. However on the straight he could have lost up to 30 hp. The exhaust was not blocked but you could see a big dent at the end of the pipe.
Very likely Loss of downforce hurt him more.
I thought the wet weather didnt really help Alonso too. under dry weather condition, I think Vettel will struggle to recover from the back. Under dry condition, Vettel will most likely suffer over heating issue.WhiteBlue wrote:The answer would be: Not much. His performance in the dry suffered for two reasons.
1. his rear tyres were over heating due to the damage
2. his aerodynamics were not working correctly
So his real piece of luck was the turn of the weather. In the dry Alonso had become champion, of that I'm convinced. When it started to rain the damaged RB8 became much more competitive, which sealed the WDC for Vettel.
The ferrari did well in every wet session and race, there were races where ferrari had no pace but in the wet they always did wellCHT wrote:
I thought the wet weather didnt really help Alonso too. under dry weather condition, I think Vettel will struggle to recover from the back. Under dry condition, Vettel will most likely suffer over heating issue.
Having said that, its glad that the new alternator is actually trouble free.
How was VET doomed if the dry weather continued? Surely he was in a decent position?WhiteBlue wrote:Yeah, this was a particular situation that was brought up by the OP. It has no relevance to other races. You simply had to watch live timing to immediately realize that Vettel was doomed had the dry weather continued. The race had all elements of a classic Brazil finale on par with Reikkönen's and Hamilton's championship finals.
Because maybe the rain helped to cool the exhaust and prevent it from cracking. If it had cracked, the bodywork would have probably caught fire resulting in retirement from the race. Also, the floor was badly messed up which badly affected aero performance. I guess this was masked by the wet weather conditions.mbvinnie wrote:How was VET doomed if the dry weather continued? Surely he was in a decent position?WhiteBlue wrote:Yeah, this was a particular situation that was brought up by the OP. It has no relevance to other races. You simply had to watch live timing to immediately realize that Vettel was doomed had the dry weather continued. The race had all elements of a classic Brazil finale on par with Reikkönen's and Hamilton's championship finals.
Or am I remembering it wrong?
I seriously doubt that rain could have cooled the exhaust. It is air that cools it, and the exhaust, damaged or not, would not be exposed to rain, particularly at 200mph!the user wrote:Because maybe the rain helped to cool the exhaust and prevent it from cracking. If it had cracked, the bodywork would have probably caught fire resulting in retirement from the race. Also, the floor was badly messed up which badly affected aero performance. I guess this was masked by the wet weather conditions.mbvinnie wrote:How was VET doomed if the dry weather continued? Surely he was in a decent position?WhiteBlue wrote:Yeah, this was a particular situation that was brought up by the OP. It has no relevance to other races. You simply had to watch live timing to immediately realize that Vettel was doomed had the dry weather continued. The race had all elements of a classic Brazil finale on par with Reikkönen's and Hamilton's championship finals.
Or am I remembering it wrong?
It wasn't so much the rain itself, but due the spray. That spray flows along the airflow and that does comes along the exhaust.gilgen wrote: I seriously doubt that rain could have cooled the exhaust. It is air that cools it, and the exhaust, damaged or not, would not be exposed to rain, particularly at 200mph!