Here the results f FP3 in m´Monaco anonymized of driver's names. This is in a track where traffic has an enormous effect and which is considered a test of driver's skill. Yes, I know I am nitpicking a single session of a single race, but still...
Monaco GP, FP3 Gap to Gap to team mate next team 1 Mercedes 1’16.758 ----- 2 Red Bull-Renault 1’16.808 0.050 3 Mercedes 1’16.874 0.116 4 Red Bull-Renault 1’17.184 0.376 5 Ferrari 1’17.428 0.620 6 Ferrari 1’17.448 0.020 7 Force India-Mercedes 1’17.725 0.297 8 Force India-Mercedes 1’18.074 0.349 9 Toro Rosso-Renault 1’18.136 0.411 10 Toro Rosso-Renault 1’18.166 0.030 11 McLaren-Mercedes 1’18.249 0.113 12 McLaren-Mercedes 1’18.262 0.013 13 Williams-Mercedes 1’18.430 0.181 14 Williams-Mercedes 1’18.542 0.112 15 Sauber-Ferrari 1’18.598 0.168 16 Lotus-Renault 1’18.776 0.178 17 Marussia-Ferrari 1’18.872 0.096 18 Lotus-Renault 1’19.118 0.342 19 Sauber-Ferrari 1’19.149 0.551 20 Caterham-Renault 1’20.271 1.399 21 Marussia-Ferrari 1’20.394 1.522 22 Caterham-Renault 1’20.589 0.318The driver (plus luck in timing your best lap, traffic, effect of the tire, etc) seems to be worth as much as the distance to the next team in the pecking order. To put it in other words: the driver factor within team mates seems to be worth approximately 1 track position (two at the back). The rest is the team's pecking order.
Nothing that should be new to F1T fellows, but sometimes I wonder why people that are not so much into the tech and development race bother with it at all... and the rest of the time I love it. Go youknowwho! Make you talent worth it two positions!