2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

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
raymondu999
54
Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 07:31

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

godlameroso wrote:Two DRS zones for this years race, I imagine it will be on the main and back straights. So even if Vettel takes a 5 place grid penalty for a gearbox change he can still charge up the field.
Any charge up the field is unlikely tbh. How many overtakes did we see last year? I remember 1 or 2 by the Toro Rossos, but that was it. The sand off-line is terrible
失败者找理由,成功者找方法

User avatar
Jackuar
0
Joined: 18 Jun 2012, 16:50

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

godlameroso wrote:Two DRS zones for this years race, I imagine it will be on the main and back straights. So even if Vettel takes a 5 place grid penalty for a gearbox change he can still charge up the field.
Is Vettel taking a penalty already? Or is he due a gearbox change?
Finishing second is being the first one of losers....

User avatar
raymondu999
54
Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 07:31

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

Jackuar wrote:
godlameroso wrote:Two DRS zones for this years race, I imagine it will be on the main and back straights. So even if Vettel takes a 5 place grid penalty for a gearbox change he can still charge up the field.
Is Vettel taking a penalty already? Or is he due a gearbox change?
There has been no announcement of any such penalty. I think godlameroso was just talking in a what-if fashion
失败者找理由,成功者找方法

zztopless
zztopless
8
Joined: 16 Apr 2012, 21:36
Location: Australia

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

Earnard Beccelstone wrote: I think the Tilke tracks are trying to be too many things to too many people.
I think Tilke gets a bad rap because most of his tracks were built in an era that made it incredibly hard to pass on any track. People were frustrated that even with a clean sheet to work with and presumably tasked with designing a track to facilitate passing, this didn't happen (although they weren't any worse than most existing tracks). First impressions have apparently lasted, despite the numbers and quality racing of recent years on his tracks.

Why his tracks (like most) didn't produce the desired results in this period:

a) From the mid 90s up until 2009, the cars were the worst they had ever been in terms of being able to run close to the car in front (despite the incremental regulation changes during this period aimed at addressing this such as the raised front wings in 2005). This is backed up by the low average overtakes per GP during this period.

b) The ability for teams to use fuel strategies meant that if a faster car was stuck behind a slower car, the safest way to overtake was to run the next stint longer and pump in faster laps once the car(s) in front pitted. It also meant that unlike today, where to make the undercut work a driver often has to pass slower cars when he is dropped back into the pack, the driver trying to pass through the stops was running in clean air, while the slower car was generally dropped around cars that were often running faster anyway, due to being lighter (having not stopped).

c) The Bridgestone tyres in 2010 were too conservative to get the most out of the new non-refuellying formula. Even still, the average amount of overtaking moves per race doubled from 14 to 28 from 2009 to 2010, which then increased to 60 in 2011 with the introduction of DRS and Pirelli tyres and then down slightly to 53 for this year to date.

The numbers since the 2010 and 2011 changes:

Non-Tilke tracks averaged 42.7 overtaking moves per race over 2010 and 2011, Tilke tracks averaged 48.14 and Tilke tracks excluding Valencia and Abu Dhabi (where he was constrained by stakeholder desires for street tracks) averaged 51.4 over the same period. For 2010 it was 38.6[31.6] vs 27.2 in favour of Tilke, in 2011 it was 68.5[64.8] vs 58.3, figures in brackets are the Tilke averages including Abu Dhabi and Valencia.

Malaysia, China, Turkey and Korea have all shown they can produce great racing in the last few years, while also having plenty of high speed stuff to show off what an F1 car can do. India has one of the best sequences of corners in F1 today, in my opinion. The run from T5 - T15 is all medium to high speed corners (150kph+) and the crazy direction changes actually make the cars look fast on tv. It should produce more overtaking this year with the steps being taken to clean up the dust. Austin looks amazing too with the potential to allow plenty of wheel to wheel stuff. Even Bahrain produced some great action this year and is mostly let down by its (lack of) natural characteristics (elevation change and landscape).

I guess I just get a bit frustrated with people jumping on the Tilke-bashing bandwagon based largely on unchecked assumptions. Aside from the two street circuits (which shouldn't count for obvious reasons), his tracks produce more overtaking opportunities on average (both pre and post DRS & Pirelli) compared to the tracks he didn't design. He also manages to incorporate medium and high-speed corners, even with the strict FIA safety standards. Of course he gets criticized by many for the amount of run-off required to incorporate such elements.

One more thing that doesn't get commented on or noticed much either in the online fan community or by the TV presenters is the fact that today's F1 cars can follow closer to car in front, as a result of the 2009 aero changes. Having watched a few old raced from 2004 and 2007 over the last week, it really is noticeable just how much closer they can now follow and that they can stay close for longer. This was the primary purpose of the 2009 regulation changes and doesn't seem to get it's share of the credit for the better racing we see today.

Overtaking stats are from: http://cliptheapex.com/community/overtaking
Last edited by zztopless on 20 Oct 2012, 14:23, edited 3 times in total.

beelsebob
beelsebob
85
Joined: 23 Mar 2011, 15:49
Location: Cupertino, California

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

Really nice analysis zztopless. I suspect there's one other reason why people dislike the tilke tracks though... People like familiar things, and they like local things. Most F1 fans are europeans, so they liked the familiar, all-europe season, and didn't like tilke tracks in far flung places replacing them.

zonk
zonk
69
Joined: 17 Jun 2010, 00:56

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

+1 from me too. I think people don't like Tilke for what he did to Hockenheim.
Indian GP is really good track.

AlpineF1
AlpineF1
0
Joined: 02 Jul 2012, 13:21

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

Very good observation, does anybody thing that anything other than a Red Bull will win?
And so you touch this limit, something happens and you suddenly can go a little bit further. With your mind power, your determination, your instinct, and the experience as well, you can fly very high.
Ayrton Senna

My blog
Twitter
Facebook

User avatar
FW17
168
Joined: 06 Jan 2010, 10:56

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

zztopless wrote:
Earnard Beccelstone wrote: I think the Tilke tracks are trying to be too many things to too many people.
I think Tilke gets a bad rap because most of his tracks were built in an era that made it incredibly hard to pass on any track. People were frustrated that even with a clean sheet to work with and presumably tasked with designing a track to facilitate passing, this didn't happen (although they weren't any worse than most existing tracks). First impressions have apparently lasted, despite the numbers and quality racing of recent years on his tracks.

Why his tracks (like most) didn't produce the desired results in this period:

a) From the mid 90s up until 2009, the cars were the worst they had ever been in terms of being able to run close to the car in front (despite the incremental regulation changes during this period aimed at addressing this such as the raised front wings in 2005). This is backed up by the low average overtakes per GP during this period.

b) The ability for teams to use fuel strategies meant that if a faster car was stuck behind a slower car, the safest way to overtake was to run the next stint longer and pump in faster laps once the car(s) in front pitted. It also meant that unlike today, where to make the undercut work a driver often has to pass slower cars when he is dropped back into the pack, the driver trying to pass through the stops was running in clean air, while the slower car was generally dropped around cars that were often running faster anyway, due to being lighter (having not stopped).

c) The Bridgestone tyres in 2010 were too conservative to get the most out of the new non-refuellying formula. Even still, the average amount of overtaking moves per race doubled from 14 to 28 from 2009 to 2010, which then increased to 60 in 2011 with the introduction of DRS and Pirelli tyres and then down slightly to 53 for this year to date.

The numbers since the 2010 and 2011 changes:

Non-Tilke tracks averaged 42.7 overtaking moves per race over 2010 and 2011, Tilke tracks averaged 48.14 and Tilke tracks excluding Valencia and Abu Dhabi (where he was constrained by stakeholder desires for street tracks) averaged 51.4 over the same period. For 2010 it was 38.6[31.6] vs 27.2 in favour of Tilke, in 2011 it was 68.5[64.8] vs 58.3, figures in brackets are the Tilke averages including Abu Dhabi and Valencia.

Malaysia, China, Turkey and Korea have all shown they can produce great racing in the last few years, while also having plenty of high speed stuff to show off what an F1 car can do. India has one of the best sequences of corners in F1 today, in my opinion. The run from T5 - T15 is all medium to high speed corners (150kph+) and the crazy direction changes actually make the cars look fast on tv. It should produce more overtaking this year with the steps being taken to clean up the dust. Austin looks amazing too with the potential to allow plenty of wheel to wheel stuff. Even Bahrain produced some great action this year and is mostly let down by its (lack of) natural characteristics (elevation change and landscape).

I guess I just get a bit frustrated with people jumping on the Tilke-bashing bandwagon based largely on unchecked assumptions. Aside from the two street circuits (which shouldn't count for obvious reasons), his tracks produce more overtaking opportunities on average (both pre and post DRS & Pirelli) compared to the tracks he didn't design. He also manages to incorporate medium and high-speed corners, even with the strict FIA safety standards. Of course he gets criticized by many for the amount of run-off required to incorporate such elements.

One more thing that doesn't get commented on or noticed much either in the online fan community or by the TV presenters is the fact that today's F1 cars can follow closer to car in front, as a result of the 2009 aero changes. Having watched a few old raced from 2004 and 2007 over the last week, it really is noticeable just how much closer they can now follow and that they can stay close for longer. This was the primary purpose of the 2009 regulation changes and doesn't seem to get it's share of the credit for the better racing we see today.

Overtaking stats are from: http://cliptheapex.com/community/overtaking

You seem to be missing a point

A track is not judged by the overtaking opportunities it offers. Imola before and after 1994 was a difficult track to pass, still it was an exciting drive (for an example).

User avatar
raymondu999
54
Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 07:31

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

I think a big conundrum with this circuit is it basically has no opening corners - just tightening corners. Even the longest corner on the circuit is tightening, and even the hairpins tighten (they are wider on entry than on exit)
失败者找理由,成功者找方法

zonk
zonk
69
Joined: 17 Jun 2010, 00:56

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post


User avatar
FW17
168
Joined: 06 Jan 2010, 10:56

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

raymondu999 wrote:and even the hairpins tighten (they are wider on entry than on exit)

What ever happened to regular hairpins as Adelaide hairpin or la source that Tilke had to engineer a hairpin? Tilke circuit design for BIC is just unnecessarily complicated.

Image

SamH123
SamH123
0
Joined: 12 May 2012, 12:18

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

Do tightening hairpins make this circuit one of the slower ones?
It might not play to Ferrari's strengths if their upgrades don't work...

beelsebob
beelsebob
85
Joined: 23 Mar 2011, 15:49
Location: Cupertino, California

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

SamH123 wrote:Do tightening hairpins make this circuit one of the slower ones?
It might not play to Ferrari's strengths if their upgrades don't work...
No, they actually make it slightly faster... The hairpins are less "tightenning" than "extremely open entry".

SamH123
SamH123
0
Joined: 12 May 2012, 12:18

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

beelsebob wrote:
SamH123 wrote:Do tightening hairpins make this circuit one of the slower ones?
It might not play to Ferrari's strengths if their upgrades don't work...
No, they actually make it slightly faster... The hairpins are less "tightenning" than "extremely open entry".
ahh ok I see. this track looks similar to S. Korea on balance? Maybe slightly fewer fast corners

User avatar
godlameroso
309
Joined: 16 Jan 2010, 21:27
Location: Miami FL

Re: 2012 Indian Grand Prix - Buddh

Post

Actually there are far more fast corners here than in Korea, aside from the three hairpins only two turns are taken at less than 180kph, both in the third sector, and exactly where Red Bull was crushing everyone. It might be that Vettel was taking a lot of curbing on the third sector, which will certainly be mitigated this year. The level of downforce is similar to what you would run in Malaysia actually, possibly a bit more.

Here's a lap comparison

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IppFPksBVM0[/youtube]

It seems that under 160kph the RB is producing the most downforce, but over 160kph they seem to be equal to Ferrari, and slightly less than Mclaren, but McLaren chews it's tires up worse than Ferrari or Red Bull. If the qualifying pace is similar then the Ferrari can usually overtake in the race, but Red Bull seems to have over half second gaps during quali and that can't be attributed to the driver, but rather a faster package.
Saishū kōnā