No, just Bottas lifting where he's told.
No, just Bottas lifting where he's told.
If all this speed trap data is from day 4 then I think everyone seems to be missing a huge point.
Bottas was doing solid laptimes on dry tires before hamilton took over, yet 30 kph down in S2. Anyway, there's a bunch of cars on video using slipstream at various times during the day (gasly 333 kph would mean 2018 honda would dust 2017 mercedes... yeah, no). Then there's a bunch of different ERS deployment strategies, particularly into S1 speed trap. There's a million variables in testing which makes speed trap numbers obsolete in one way or another.NathanOlder wrote: ↑04 Mar 2018, 13:25If all this speed trap data is from day 4 then I think everyone seems to be missing a huge point.
Alonso and Sainz both ran in the afternoon when it was fully dry. Bottas and Hulk only had a small amount of dry time as it was wet in the morning. This blows out any theory for speed trap data and PU performance.
If its day 4 your talking about that is.
How about Ricciardo's 35 lap stint on mediums with a best lap of 1:21.179 on day 1? Supposedly he had around 60 kg of fuel onboard. How would that go down by the same calculations compared to merc and ferrari? 60 kg is worth around 2.5s on this track, no?godlameroso wrote: ↑05 Mar 2018, 16:40The rest is too little to guess, no one was doing long runs, it was all 3 or 4 timed laps.