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- 18th December 2013, 5:44 at 5:44 am #247240raymondu999Participant
I think Vettel will pick either 15 or 5. His STR year was #15 (Monza 08 victory anyone?) and his first RBR year was 15. Then he became Red 5, and then became champion.
Pastor should do P45TOR. That way the team only has to erase the “TOR” afterwards
18th November 2013, 6:35 at 6:35 am #245355raymondu999ParticipantI like to think it’s all a matter of mathematics. If you imagine each driver has two stats… “money” and “talent..” then obviously for a team short of cash money has more weighting value. But if a driver has enough talent then it’s enough to outweigh said monetary stat.
14th October 2013, 8:04 at 8:04 am #243073raymondu999ParticipantRosberg on (forgot name) at Dunlop
18th September 2013, 4:25 at 4:25 am #241840raymondu999Participant@matthijs Yes, that was to stop the car understeering under trail braking – the net effect is the same (eliminating understeer vs inducing oversteer)
17th September 2013, 3:42 at 3:42 am #241837raymondu999Participant@dedischado I’ve never heard of left-to-right brake bias settings – but that wouldn’t be quite useful anyways, because a left brake bias would mean the car brakes harder on the left side – ie makes the left slower than the right, which would send it on a circular path without even steering.
Development of the brakes is indeed allowed – and there have been numerous advances there, though not on performance terms. Development of brakes generally has been on longevity terms as they seek to better cool brakes, etc. In terms of braking power, you’d have to find another material that is capable of a higher friction coefficient between caliper and pad – which isn’t easy.
And not only is it not easy, it wouldn’t do much. As it is today, F1 braking isn’t limited by the brakes at all, counterintuitively – it’s grip limited. At speed with downforce, a driver can push the pedal all he wants and he wouldn’t have enough power to lock the brakes, thanks to all the downforce and grip the tyres have. Then as the speed bleeds off, you have less downforce and have to decrease your braking.
If a human cannot even produce enough foot power to fully utilise the current brakes at speed, and the car doesn’t have enough grip to fully utilise the brakes at low speed – then adding brakes would be like switching from the sea to the ocean as a water source.
17th September 2013, 3:36 at 3:36 am #241779raymondu999ParticipantDRS should be a “dirty air counter” as opposed to “an overtaking aid”
As such, in the perfect world, the DRS effect would equal the dirty air time loss. And on some circuits, such as Spa and Canada, the DRS effect seems to exceed the dirty air time loss.
With this in mind, either we crank up the dirty air time loss, or decrease the DRS effect, and as such my solution would be to decrease the DRS activation length on some of these circuits, and not only that – but also reduce the required time gap. Instead of 1s, how does 7 tenths sound? Then the car is clearly quicker anyways, and the other car is being held up. It would make us psychologically less bothered by DRS as we can compartmentalise the fact that the car was going past, with or without DRS
16th September 2013, 17:39 at 5:39 pm #232273raymondu999Participant@Kingshark On average across the season’s racetracks, 10kg is worth about 3.5 tenths – and so 90kg of reduction would mean an average of 3.15s laptime decrease (quicker)
13th September 2013, 4:18 at 4:18 am #237747raymondu999Participant@mnmracer I think @boris is just saying that Vettel has what is, on average, 2013’s fastest car. I don’t think there’s doubting that at this point. There is no doubt he is an amazing driver – he’s recognised as one of F1’s top 3 at the moment, but you cannot deny that, over a season-so-far average, his car is probably better than the Lotus, Mercedes or Ferrari.
12th September 2013, 7:47 at 7:47 am #237736raymondu999ParticipantWhen double diffusers were banned, before Newey was able to engineer back some of that rear downforce, Vettel was similarly paced to Webber
When double diffusers were banned Vettel produced the most dominated year since the Schumacher era.
In fact – Webber says that more rear downforce helps himself and hurts Vettel, as Vettel prefers the rear to be loose so that he can get the car to change direction quickly with a spike of oversteer.
12th September 2013, 7:01 at 7:01 am #240365raymondu999Participant@zantkiller When did I ever say that was going to be the layout? I just said a picture speaks a thousand words – a preview of what the corner will look like, based on current track prep.
12th September 2013, 4:26 at 4:26 am #241700raymondu999ParticipantHere’s proof of Alonso’s adaptability:
I would love to post it here, but for some stupid reason I can’t. So here’s a post I made a while back on Alonso’s adaptability: http://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=8843&p=398556#p398556
12th September 2013, 4:22 at 4:22 am #241699raymondu999ParticipantKimi has a very distinct style. He builds up the turn with an early, smooth turn in. As such, he likes the car to be “on the nose” – ie to have a responsive front – because if he were to have the car more understeery, the smooth turn in would just mean the car never gets to turn in.
Alonso is much more adaptable – tell him how to drive the car and he’ll do it.
12th September 2013, 2:41 at 2:41 am #182182raymondu999ParticipantI still recommend Turn 2 Grandstand, A2 section. That’s where I sat in 2011 – clean view of the start head-on, and you get to see turn 1. You also get to see the cars move around a fair bit for the Turn 1-2-3 complex, so all’s good.
12th September 2013, 2:40 at 2:40 am #240362raymondu999ParticipantA picture speaks a thousand words
11th September 2013, 10:58 at 10:58 am #241684raymondu999Participant@npf1 Heh! I expect the same (0 poles)
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