CAR (UK)

F1 insight: same engine, very di erent results

This season Alex Albon has driven both the midfield Toro Rosso and front-running Red Bull. How do they compare?

- TOM CLARKSON

IT’S THE SLOWER TORO ROSSO THAT’S THE FRIENDLIER CAR

While both cars use Honda power, the 2019 Toro Rosso and Red Bull are very different beasts. The Red Bull has won twice. The ‘B team’ Toro Rosso’s best finish is a sixth, in the hands of rookie Alex Albon in the German GP. Two races later he was promoted to the Red Bull, effectivel­y swapping places with the slightly miffed Pierre Gasly. This means the two men are able to compare a top-flight F1 car with a merely good one.

‘The Toro Rosso is the more forgiving car to drive,’ says Albon. ‘You can be rougher with it in terms of your inputs in the cockpit without compromisi­ng the lap time.’ The perfect car for a rookie learning his trade, then, as Albon’s stellar debut season has proved. ‘The Toro Rosso allows me to drive in a much more natural way,’ agreed Gasly at Spa, after his demotion to the slower car. In other words, the STR14 performanc­e window is wider and the car is easier to drive

THE RED BULL’S INTRINSICA­LLY MORE HIGHLY STRUNG

The top three 2019 F1 cars embody different philosophi­es, and are all different lengths: the Mercedes is 5733mm, the Ferrari 5688mm and the Red Bull 5654mm. They also differ in their suspension geometries and rake angles (the difference between front and rear ride heights). Red Bull’s RB15 has the steepest rake (1.93º) and Mercedes the shallowest (1.16º), which results in the Red Bull having higher peak downforce but being generally less consistent and trickier to drive. ‘I have to be much smoother with all of my inputs in the RB15,’ says Albon. ‘I’ve had to change my throttle and steering inputs compared to before, smoothing everything out.’

THE RB15 IS FASTER… IF YOU CAN SET IT UP AND DRIVE IT PROPERLY The Red Bull is undoubtedl­y harder to set-up (something Albon has worked on with his engineer Mike Lugg since he started racing for the team at Spa) but it can hit higher highs.

Get the car into its finicky window, not least in terms of Pirelli tyre temperatur­e – as Max Verstappen is apparently able to do all day long – and the possibilit­ies are endless. Gasly, racing for Red Bull for the first half of this season, clearly struggled.

But Albon is a highly intelligen­t racer, and clearly an adaptable one. His results in the Red Bull have already eclipsed those he managed in the ‘easier’ Toro Rosso. When he’s fully on top of the RB15, wins will surely follow.

 ??  ?? The slower, easier Red Bull ahead of the faster, trickier one; Albon, left, has raced both
The slower, easier Red Bull ahead of the faster, trickier one; Albon, left, has raced both
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