As Long as I have watched Formula 1 Kimi has claimed steering problems. Very convenient way of blaming the car but not really blaming the car. His last steering change was even a step backwards! But what can he do when he already committed to the excuse!zyphro wrote:Didn't Kimi's steering problem come about in Australia? Why does this problem still persist?
It started on Friday, mind. He did his first FP1 installation lap, then stayed in the pits as the crew did his steering rack. Apparently though they asked Kimi to just lap around the track first, and they could do the steering changes in between FP1 and FP2.ds.raikkonen wrote:Well, if a driver of his caliber was nt quick round Monaco, there must have been a genuine problem with the steering. And it is better to talk about that after the race rather than raving about it on the pit radio during the race.
Donuts wrote:What makes you say that? I think they are even with Vodafone McLaren , in fact I think as soon as Kimi Raikkonen has an error free* "flying lap" in qualifying, he'll take pole position.jamsbong wrote:Eric Boullier will be most critical to Grosjean and he will be swiftly removed if performance is not improved.Donuts wrote:Hmm... I really don't know what to think of Grosjean.
The car (Lotus) is not slow at all. Just a fraction behind RB8 I think. In fact, even the Williams and Sauber look incredibly fast at race trim.
Anyway, Lotus better take advantage of this before the top teams got a handled of the tire behaviours.
I think Lotus F1 Team is a "top team", allready in 2010 this was evident. I am just sorry Kubica is not at the steering wheel.
*Looking at his qualifying lap in Malaysia, he pushed the car to hard, made two-three misstakes(what I could count). I belive him when he said he could have been on pole. He has'nt been perfect in qualifying, that's the truth.