Reliability is a prerequisite of winning. As Ron Dennis said, to finish first, first you have to finish.peewon wrote: ↑08 Jun 2023, 08:33Yes, but that stat can also be easily muddied by mitigating circumstances. The 3 races that Mercedes failed to win in 2014 were due to mechanical issues (Canada) or two drivers coming together (Spa) or a combination of the two (Hungary). So it doent mean that their competitors were any loser to them on performance. Mercs routinely pulled out 1+secs/lap, sometime even 2, on race starts and restarts. On pure performance they were definitely higher than RB19. The tires of the mid 2010s also degraded more quickly and had a more dramatic cliff, leading to more varied strategies which meant more likelihood of out of sequence cars leading a GP. If RB has flawless reliability throughout the season then we can recalibrate the argument to include that.
Merc engine was 50-70HP up on everyone. There is no way any aero advantage can ever make that much of a difference in today's regulations. Then the engine token system baked in that advantage for 3 years meaning it was impossible to catch them. The longevity of the dominance also should matter here.
And, as CheeRS said , squeezing in a metric/stat/incident to curve fit isn't going to lead to a conclusive outcome.
As for engines, they were meant to be frozen but due to the Merc advantage were opened up at the end of the 2014 season(1st season). Ferrari managed to jump leaps and bounds into 2015 (2nd season)with Vettel taking 3 wins and 11 podiums finishing 100 points behind Hamilton. After less than half the season Verstappen is already 71 points ahead of the next non-RB car after 7 races. Giving a far greater points-to-race ratio gap than we have ever seen after 7 races.
If you compare it further, I could throw in some very valid curveballs.
Primarily budget caps. How do teams close a gap of a second in race trim? Surely this is a baked in advantage in a far more restrictive fashion than the engine token system which allowed manufactures to change over 75% of the engine at any point, and without budgetary restriction. You could even change the other 25% of the engine if you could prove it economically beneficial, or more reliable to make the change.
Mercedes and Ferrari can change their pods but they're restricted to the chassis they use which comes with a host of issues. They also cannot throw updates at the car constantly as this will risk the budget cap restriction.
By exaggerating the previous era's limitation, and not addressing the current era's limitations, it leads to a skewing of the outcome.
After 7 races:
2014: Mercedes were 61 points ahead of next non Merc driver.
2015: Mercedes were 43 points ahead of next non Merc driver.
2016: Mercedes were 38 points ahead of next non Merc driver.
2017: Mercedes were 12 points behind Ferrari
2018: Mercedes were 1 point behind Ferrari
You can see that by the second season the trend of dominance started to come down, led by the changes to the PU regs. This is simply not happening now and has the potential to be the case until 2025, given the 71 point gap in the second season of these regs.