ESPImperium wrote:First post back after a self inposed F1 two week Olympic shut down for me!
Looking at my data, the teams have gained or lost the following percentage in lap time on average since the first event in Melbourne:
Red Bull-Renault 0.716
McLaren-Mercedes 0.652
Scuderia Ferrari 0.385
Mercedes AMG F1 Team 0.431
Lotus F1-Renault 0.179
Force India-Mercedes -0.497
Sauber-Ferrari -0.135
Scuderia Toro Rosso-Ferrari 0.403
Williams-Renault -0.286
Caterham F1-Renault 0.923
Hispania-Cosworth -1.854
Marussia F1-Cosworth -0.917
1% is a score of 0.758 for those who ask. A positive figure shows gain and a negitive shows the car is going down the grid now.
Ive done the math for you, and the teams have gained or lost the the following time a lap:
Red Bull-Renault 0.944
McLaren-Mercedes 0.860
Scuderia Ferrari 0.508
Mercedes AMG F1 Team 0.569
Lotus F1-Renault 0.236
Force India-Mercedes -0.656
Sauber-Ferrari -0.179
Scuderia Toro Rosso-Ferrari 0.531
Williams-Renault -0.377
Caterham F1-Renault 1.217
Hispania-Cosworth -2.445
Marussia F1-Cosworth -1.209
Those times are from the teams performance from Melbourne in March to Hungary arround 2 weeks ago.
How is this calculated?
I struggle to believe some of the figures that have come out of your method, for several reasons:
1) It shows teams losing time. No team reasonably will lose time from their original car, only lose out relative to other cars that are gaining.
2) It shows Ferrari gaining very little, despite now being at the front of the grid, and early on being midfielders
3) It shows Red Bull gaining enormous amounts, despite not being anywhere near McLaren of late
4) It shows Lotus gaining --- all, despite being pretty front-running now.
5) You have arbitrary scores that you haven't explained the meaning of, which somehow map 0.758 to 1% lap time.