
Lewis Hamilton defended after latest Ferrari complaint
Lewis Hamilton's complaint that the Ferrari SF-26 feels different from the simulator has been backed by James Hinchcliffe, who says simulation can never fully replicate real car feedback.
Lewis Hamilton's latest complaint about a mismatch between Ferrari's simulator and the actual SF-26 has found support from former IndyCar driver James Hinchcliffe. After a difficult Miami Grand Prix weekend where Hamilton was well off the leading pace, he insisted the car behaved very differently from the sim, prompting a change in approach for the upcoming Canadian Grand Prix.
Why it matters:
Simulator correlation remains a critical factor in F1 performance, especially under new regulations where teams rely heavily on virtual development. For a driver of Hamilton's caliber, trust in the simulator is essential to fine-tune setups and build confidence. His public frustration underscores a challenge that even top teams face when bridging the digital and real worlds.
The details:
- Hamilton, 41, is not a fan of simulators and prefers direct work with engineers over virtual sessions.
- Hinchcliffe, speaking on the F1 Nation podcast, called Hamilton's complaint "very plausible" and shared his own past experiences.
- He explained that while simulators have improved immensely, they still cannot replicate the visceral feedback of an actual race car.
- Getting tire models, aero models, and track models right is tough but possible; the missing element is the physical sensation of G-forces and chassis communication.
- The same setup in the sim can feel completely different on track because the driver's seat-of-the-pants input is irreplaceable.
What's next:
Ferrari and Hamilton are now pivoting to Canada with a revised approach that relies less on simulator data and more on real-world engineering feedback. If the correlation gap can be narrowed, Hamilton could unlock more performance from the SF-26 and close the gap to the frontrunners.
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