Is there anything coming from the team or otherwise that suggests this season isn't another write-off?
Is there anything coming from the team or otherwise that suggests this season isn't another write-off?
Race pace:
Stint 1 (all softs):
VER, 38.196
LEC, +0.656
PER, +0.700 (more laps)
SAI, +1.414
HAM, +1.610
ALO, +1.834
RUS, +1.849
Stint 3: (all hards)
VER, 36.804 (less laps)
PER, +0.233
ALO, +0.276
RUS, +0.791
SAI, +0.831
HAM, +0.885
Vasseur says that the tyre deg is a set-up issue. Big question is, will they be able to fix it this season? At the end of the day, nothing has changed since France 22. Why should we be able to fix it in the first place?
they tried the wobbling rear wing.
but its difficult to believe its all are related to set-up. according to what our drivers said, for example, leclerc said something like: we knew during the tests that we were behind AM and RB in the race pace. during the practice, we thought it might be not true, but in the race, we understood that all our predictions in the tests were right.
dude, everyone says like that
https://twitter.com/marcamotor/statu...QUgX78Nmg&s=19
After the test I think we were hoping that we were wrong in predicting things. (rumours about the race pace better than Ferrari during the testing) But we were right. We are very far from them in race pace, and that was unfortunately unexpected
Charles Leclerc
So during qualifying, they shut down Leclerc to "save the tires."
Then Ferrari decided to change the ERS and CE on Leclerc's car......to include Sainz's car whom had the CE(?) changed as well.
So did Ferrari stop Leclerc during qualifying to just "save the tires" or did they see something regarding the ERS or CE and stopped him early so they could change it later.
hmmmmm....something to think about it.
It's not how start but how you finish.
I am fundamentally optimistic when tackling those types of questions, so I apologise if I sound too naïve to some. France 2022 was a special event with a front-limited track, where Ferrari was not ready for the challenge. In Bahrain, a race-winner car is a car with excellent motricity out of corners. This characteristic was a defining factor of our previous car but was surprisingly gone since. But if we step back, we must recognise that Bahrain is a pretty unique track in what it demands and that teams have spent countless kilometres trying to set up their cars on this non-representative race. I can see two types of teams: The ones that have used these thousands of km to optimise their car for this unique race as much as they can but will probably struggle when they have to discover their cars in a totally different environment. On the other hand, some teams might have tried to use this track to test many different options, not necessarily adapted for this particular race track but anticipating the need for a broader range of setups for other and different tracks.
I think Ferrari is in the latter category, and I hope this explains why the performance was relatively poor today. As described, we have spent much of our testing time trying setups, different wings, and low downforce configurations. But it is possible that we were a bit carried away by those different tests and did not dedicate enough time to prepare for this event compared to other teams. As such, despite these thousands of km done on this track, we did not come up with the right set-up. Mercedes seems to also be in that situation since they were still comparing different rear wings during FP3.
I hope teams like AM or RB have focused so much on preparing this first event (hence their good results) that they will be a bit lost with their cars when it is about preparing them for other tracks. Although, to be honest, this does not sound like RB, but I would not be surprised if that were the case for Aston Martin or Williams.
*sigh*
-Lou(is)
Forza Ferrari 16/15
Totus Tuus
Forza Ferrari
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This is too optimistic. Even if that’s the case, RB has an advantage of +1 second, even if it’s just 0.5 seconds on other tracks, the difference is too great to overcome.
Ferrari need to bring on the developments and transform the SF23 as the best car of 2023. They did it last year with the F1-75, before TD39 kicked in, they can do it again.
AM is not a concern. Charles had them covered and would've finished P3 easily. He had no threats from anyone behind, until his retirement.
But the RB19 is a perfect car. It doesn't have any weakness. In an abrasive track surface of Bahrain, it literally had zero tyre drop off. We only show a glimpse of its pace when Perez was pushing hard in his pursuit of Charles. Max on the other hand was in a cruse mode. It is scary to thing what he could've done if he actually had to push.
I'm stunned the kind of leap AM has taken. When was the last time a team improved this much between two seasons under same regulations? And how good is Dan Fallows?
to my knowledge Ferrari did this twice with Barnard: once in the late 80ies (paid him away from McLaren) (build him a developmentcenter called Guildford Technical Office (GTO)) and then again in the mid 90ies (again new company Ferrari Design and Development center in Shalford, Surrey, the 94 Hockenheim winner was a Barnard car). But the success was ... we know all.
Todt was the man back then who brought everything together again in '96 where then Brawn and Bryne took over in Maranello. The rest is history.
the most memorable from the Ferrari - Barnard relationship was the sem-automatic gear
First yes because it was a Pink Mercedes with Mercedes PU etc. in it ... easy
but now the interesting thing you are playing down so easy: its a RB Copy designed for a exclusive HONDA PU that seems working not that bad with a completely different Mercedes PU an back (different engine layout, cooling, suspension geo, etc. etc.) ...
but as it seems all so easy ... your application in Maranello is welcome
Last edited by Senna4Ever; 6th March 2023 at 09:51.
"If I was driving for Red Bull [from 2008] probably I would have more championships, but because they were dominating between 2010 and 2014 probably I would never have driven for Ferrari. I am very happy and very proud to drive for Ferrari, all my time there.
Maybe we need to throw money to the best engineers, I don’t know. We are already facing a penalty with one of our drivers, and it’s only the second race. Two clear weaknesses which we weren’t able to solve for the first race, we looked unprepared and overwhelmed. What were they doing last year, after they decided to concentrate for 2023?
We shouldn't be focusing on the titles right now. The focus should be on solving the reliability and tyre wear issues. Both can be fixed quickly.
I still think that the SF23 is a very good car and it will win more races than the F1-75. Hopefully, starting from Jeddah, we will see some massive improvements. Ferrari must bring the new front and rear wings there.
Why will Charles have a penalty?
Forza Ferrari
No confirmation, but according to following source it was a battery pack problem. My understanding is that it’s the part they changed before the race. Maybe they can still use the first pack.
https://t.co/dqPd4WIPFV
Taking small positives (because what else can we do!) at least there was no mistakes on the wall, good double stack and the car can defend in a straight line even against DRS.
I just don't see how we solve the tyre issue when we had the whole winter to solve a problem we knew a lot about and clearly didn't prioritise or did think we solved because the simulation said we did when in reality it didn't correlate to what happened on track.
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