To me its not the number of failures. Its when the failures happen. Look at that statistic and you will see that he isnt as lucky as some think. Qualifying failures. Start grid, failing from the lead and so on. Even when it cones to blatant stategix blunders from the lead he's at the brunt of it.
The eeason behind thia bad luck is simply the people who he has to work with in the team. It's their commitment to doing their jobs right that determines if a fuel pipe is coupled properly or if a brake dis was inspected thoroughly. This has nothing to do with the complexity of an f1 car or it being a prototype as these failures arent design failures. The failures are purely down to quality assurance and control. And one guys garage simply doesnt care as much to work as hard as they can to uphold the same standard as the other side. Maybe toto isnt policing hamilton's side as much to get the best out of the mechanics or not much supervision is put into lewis' side and so quality drops. So in my opinion it's a management and humanresource issue relating to many things, one being the perception of hamilton.