Stradivarius wrote:I am not loading the dice at all, I am simply trying to establish the value of a reliable car and compare it to the disadvantage of having an unreliable car. I am not talking about misfortune in general. You may very well argue that Alonso has had more misfortune than Vettel and that his results are therefore not telling the whole truth, but that is irrelevant as long as I am only considering reliability.
And so long as you continue to only take into consideration 1 factor, then you are in fact loading the dice into your favour.
If have given you irrefutable evidence over the period of the season to more than suggest the Red Bull is
faster and near perfectly equal, reliability wise.
You are skirting around the issue of Vettel's 1 extra failure by ignoring Alonso's extra misfortune. You cannot exclude these results from your analysis.
You mentioned Vettel's failure in Malaysia, it wasn't a "failure" if a driver pierces your tyre is it? According to the parameters you meted out to Alonso, it isn't. So why Vettel? Rhetorical question....
Stradivarius wrote:Kimi is actually out in the dirt when they make contact, so this is definitely Alonsos fault. The only reason he wasn't handed a penalty is probably that Kimi didn't loose anything from what happened why Alonso himself payed the price. This is not an incident I would talk about if I was trying to convince others that Alonso is the best driver.
So the FIA have got it wrong?
Well I differ from your view and I see this as a gap that was always going to disappear.
This is the first corner of suzuka.
Long, fast right hander, correct?
What happens to cars attempting to squeeze on the outside(especially 4/5 cars abreast)? It will run out of road my friend.
When Kimi made contact with Alonso, he had corrected for running off the road AND THEN cut across the back of Alonso's tyre.
You can very clearly see this in the sequence beginning 39seconds-40seconds-41seconds-42seconds.
Kimi, has pulled out of shrinking gaps before, probably more on the off season than GP weekends

but he should know the gap is always going to disappear, and Alonso should be aware too.
There is a problem though,....Where are you looking when you head into a 120mph right hander at the start of the race?
You are reaching verdicts that have officially been disproven, these verdicts which then have far reaching implications in your formula.
The reality is Red Bull is faster, have been faster for longer and are about as reliable as the Ferrari as makes not much difference. The facts bear this out.
Make of that what you wish.