- 31 Jan 14, 10:41#389854
They perform better in the cooler conditions but the engines are no way stressed as much as they normally are in the dry. Even a little water on track gives the engine a holiday, compared to what it needs to do in the dry.
Why would they turn the power up on a wet track though, to still keep some cards close to their chest? I'd think telemetry data of an engine on full power on a wet track isn't representative of running it in the dry?
The power up / power down doesn't really do anything to their data they can easily work it all out. It's also a good test for the engine to turn the engine up in the wet to get temperatures and everything, we all know the engine will be performing better in the wet (cooler) conditions.
They perform better in the cooler conditions but the engines are no way stressed as much as they normally are in the dry. Even a little water on track gives the engine a holiday, compared to what it needs to do in the dry.
Breaking News:Lewis Hamilton has officially overtaken The Fonz in race wins. With 88 races less. Lol(Without a specially built blown diffuser, illegal front wing, preferential treatment)