2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

For ease of use, there is one thread per grand prix where you can discuss everything during that specific GP weekend. You can find these threads here.
User avatar
PlatinumZealot
559
Joined: 12 Jun 2008, 03:45

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

TAG wrote:Image

Can't hardly wait.
Putin can smile?!!
:o :o
🖐️✌️☝️👀👌✍️🐎🏆🙏

Racing Green in 2028

f1316
f1316
84
Joined: 22 Feb 2012, 18:36

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

Vasconia wrote:
f1316 wrote:But let's be honest: the track doesn't usually 'make' the race. What was the consensus on spa and Suzuka as circuits? Great, right? But were the races particularly entertaining? No.
.
Spa has been always my favourite race track but I find quite worrying that last years races habe been quite boring for this track´s standards. Should I blame the cars or its simply a coincidence?

The lack of rains plays also a role.
No, blame the lack of competitiveness at the front. And yeah, the blame is with the other big teams/engine manufacturers for not doing as well as Mercedes, not Mercedes for doing so well

giantfan10
giantfan10
27
Joined: 27 Nov 2014, 18:05
Location: USA

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

f1316 wrote:
Vasconia wrote:
f1316 wrote:But let's be honest: the track doesn't usually 'make' the race. What was the consensus on spa and Suzuka as circuits? Great, right? But were the races particularly entertaining? No.
.
Spa has been always my favourite race track but I find quite worrying that last years races habe been quite boring for this track´s standards. Should I blame the cars or its simply a coincidence?

The lack of rains plays also a role.
No, blame the lack of competitiveness at the front. And yeah, the blame is with the other big teams/engine manufacturers for not doing as well as Mercedes, not Mercedes for doing so well
i dont agree... i blame the idiotic engine restrictions .
i would much rather watch teams pushing the envelope and blowing up engines than have the one manufacturer that got it right coast with a built in advantage... so much so that at the halfway point of the season they are testing solutions for next year.
i could care less how much formula 1 teams spend or would spend in a wide open arms race....its their money..let them spend it and give us fans real innovation andtrue competition

User avatar
dans79
267
Joined: 03 Mar 2013, 19:33
Location: USA

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

giantfan10 wrote: i would much rather watch teams pushing the envelope and blowing up engines than have the one manufacturer that got it right coast with a built in advantage...
So you must not have watched many races this season, because Renault or Honda engines are blowing left and right.
202 105 104 9 9 7

pimpwerx
pimpwerx
6
Joined: 03 Feb 2015, 17:48

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

giantfan10 wrote: i dont agree... i blame the idiotic engine restrictions .
i would much rather watch teams pushing the envelope and blowing up engines than have the one manufacturer that got it right coast with a built in advantage... so much so that at the halfway point of the season they are testing solutions for next year.
i could care less how much formula 1 teams spend or would spend in a wide open arms race....its their money..let them spend it and give us fans real innovation andtrue competition
Merc had the most powerful engine even before the token system. And there's no telling of the gap would shrink or expand with no restrictions. After all, the manufacturer that managed to get turbo V6s right first would be equally likely to be the first to see more gains early as well. They were considerably ahead of the other engines last year, and would've been building on that powerplant more, while everyone else was scrapping their original designs and creating new ones. It's really hard to say how development would've gone. All we know is teams agreed on the current system without the aid of hindsight. This was an acceptable solution at the time. PEACE.

User avatar
GPR-A duplicate2
64
Joined: 07 Aug 2014, 09:00

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

pimpwerx wrote:
giantfan10 wrote: i dont agree... i blame the idiotic engine restrictions .
i would much rather watch teams pushing the envelope and blowing up engines than have the one manufacturer that got it right coast with a built in advantage... so much so that at the halfway point of the season they are testing solutions for next year.
i could care less how much formula 1 teams spend or would spend in a wide open arms race....its their money..let them spend it and give us fans real innovation andtrue competition
Merc had the most powerful engine even before the token system. And there's no telling of the gap would shrink or expand with no restrictions. After all, the manufacturer that managed to get turbo V6s right first would be equally likely to be the first to see more gains early as well. They were considerably ahead of the other engines last year, and would've been building on that powerplant more, while everyone else was scrapping their original designs and creating new ones. It's really hard to say how development would've gone. All we know is teams agreed on the current system without the aid of hindsight. This was an acceptable solution at the time. PEACE.
Rightly said. Look at Honda. For one full year, they had their hands laid on the class leading PU in 2014, with McLaren then using the Merc PU. When they had no restriction of tokens in 2014 to develop their PU, there was no in season development of PU allowed for Merc, Ferrari and Renault. Still, Honda totally screwed it and even with the help of tokens this year, they haven't got it right. There is nothing to strongly suggest that, even if there were no restrictions on PU development, the manufacturer who got it right first time and has immense budget and capabilities to develop, would have been outdone by others who got it wrong first time.

On the con side. Just like the way it is today, Manufacturers are pushing the cost of development to customers and if there was a free for all development, the manufacturers would have spent billions and would have continued to push it to customers. As it is, teams like Force India and Sauber have been surviving with some favors from their manufacturers and if in case of free development, these teams would have clearly quit the competition due to heavy costs which couldn't have afforded. Let's not even talk about Manors and Haas'.

User avatar
SiLo
139
Joined: 25 Jul 2010, 19:09

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

GPR-A wrote:
pimpwerx wrote:
giantfan10 wrote: i dont agree... i blame the idiotic engine restrictions .
i would much rather watch teams pushing the envelope and blowing up engines than have the one manufacturer that got it right coast with a built in advantage... so much so that at the halfway point of the season they are testing solutions for next year.
i could care less how much formula 1 teams spend or would spend in a wide open arms race....its their money..let them spend it and give us fans real innovation andtrue competition
Merc had the most powerful engine even before the token system. And there's no telling of the gap would shrink or expand with no restrictions. After all, the manufacturer that managed to get turbo V6s right first would be equally likely to be the first to see more gains early as well. They were considerably ahead of the other engines last year, and would've been building on that powerplant more, while everyone else was scrapping their original designs and creating new ones. It's really hard to say how development would've gone. All we know is teams agreed on the current system without the aid of hindsight. This was an acceptable solution at the time. PEACE.
Rightly said. Look at Honda. For one full year, they had their hands laid on the class leading PU in 2014, with McLaren then using the Merc PU. When they had no restriction of tokens in 2014 to develop their PU, there was no in season development of PU allowed for Merc, Ferrari and Renault. Still, Honda totally screwed it and even with the help of tokens this year, they haven't got it right. There is nothing to strongly suggest that, even if there were no restrictions on PU development, the manufacturer who got it right first time and has immense budget and capabilities to develop, would have been outdone by others who got it wrong first time.

On the con side. Just like the way it is today, Manufacturers are pushing the cost of development to customers and if there was a free for all development, the manufacturers would have spent billions and would have continued to push it to customers. As it is, teams like Force India and Sauber have been surviving with some favors from their manufacturers and if in case of free development, these teams would have clearly quit the competition due to heavy costs which couldn't have afforded. Let's not even talk about Manors and Haas'.
I doubt they had much access to the engine, but I'm certain they did learn a few things from it.
Felipe Baby!

User avatar
Vasconia
6
Joined: 30 Aug 2012, 10:45
Location: Basque Country

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

f1316 wrote:
Vasconia wrote:
f1316 wrote:But let's be honest: the track doesn't usually 'make' the race. What was the consensus on spa and Suzuka as circuits? Great, right? But were the races particularly entertaining? No.
.
Spa has been always my favourite race track but I find quite worrying that last years races habe been quite boring for this track´s standards. Should I blame the cars or its simply a coincidence?

The lack of rains plays also a role.
No, blame the lack of competitiveness at the front. And yeah, the blame is with the other big teams/engine manufacturers for not doing as well as Mercedes, not Mercedes for doing so well
I was refering to those two specificic examples. And what happens with SPA began before the Mercedes domination.

But I agree, Mercedes did a great job, Honda and Renault terrible and Ferrari is doing its homework in 2015.

f1316
f1316
84
Joined: 22 Feb 2012, 18:36

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

Yeah, good points in all of the above, to be fair. My take is that less restrictions allow more back and forth in performance, less predictability, and as Ron Dennis said, the cost saved is negated/outweighed by the constant reliability tests on the dynos.

But it does still boggle my mind that Ferrari, for one, failed to invest enough in 2014 - it was like it was all a bit of a shock to them. This was their chance, as a complete *car* developer - all inclusive under the one roof - to get ahead of Red Bull, who they weren't able to beat on chassis dev during the preceding years. It was also patently obvious for years prior that Mercedes were super confident - Ross Brawn mentioned it all the time - so why this didn't make Ferrari twig that they needed to fully capitalise is beyond me.

But yeah, you're all right that the regs preventing people from catching up does not help.

Mastudio
Mastudio
0
Joined: 21 Jul 2015, 17:28

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post


Manoah2u
Manoah2u
61
Joined: 24 Feb 2013, 14:07

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

Image
Image
Image
"Explain the ending to F1 in football terms"
"Hamilton was beating Verstappen 7-0, then the ref decided F%$& rules, next goal wins
while also sending off 4 Hamilton players to make it more interesting"

User avatar
Vasconia
6
Joined: 30 Aug 2012, 10:45
Location: Basque Country

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

f1316 wrote:Yeah, good points in all of the above, to be fair. My take is that less restrictions allow more back and forth in performance, less predictability, and as Ron Dennis said, the cost saved is negated/outweighed by the constant reliability tests on the dynos.

But it does still boggle my mind that Ferrari, for one, failed to invest enough in 2014 - it was like it was all a bit of a shock to them. This was their chance, as a complete *car* developer - all inclusive under the one roof - to get ahead of Red Bull, who they weren't able to beat on chassis dev during the preceding years. It was also patently obvious for years prior that Mercedes were super confident - Ross Brawn mentioned it all the time - so why this didn't make Ferrari twig that they needed to fully capitalise is beyond me.

But yeah, you're all right that the regs preventing people from catching up does not help.
What happened with Ferrari was a huge failure. As you have correctly mentioned this was the perfect chance for them to show how to build a car with a great engine and good balance between chasis and PU. Fortunately taking into account how much they have improved they could be a contender in 2016.


User avatar
GPR-A duplicate2
64
Joined: 07 Aug 2014, 09:00

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post


User avatar
Mattchu
59
Joined: 07 Jul 2014, 19:37

Re: 2015 Russian Grand Prix - Sochi, October 09-11

Post

Image


One of the most powerful men in the world, with many friends in high places.....and Vladimir Putin :-P

But getting back to the Sochi race, is there anything they can possibly do to make this race any less boring than it was last year? There doesn`t seem to be any sections of the circuit that grasp your attention (maybe 3-5) or when watched from on-board you don`t seem to get any sense of the speed and g-forces being exerted. It also seems a very one line circuit.
Maybe the switch to the softer tyres will help but that could well be mitigated by the other formulas running round and rubbering the track in!
Lets hope for the worst, then maybe we`ll get a crackerjack :)

My prediction: Mercs first and second closely followed by the Ferarris. Next a Force India+Williams (could be either way round) then one or more of the Red Bull quintet with Lotus rounding out the points...