Jano11 wrote:NTS wrote:SectorOne wrote:
Start of season
Spain
Monza
Singapore
I think it was:
Start of season (#1)
Spain (re-use of old one from testing, so "#0" )
Monza (use #1 again)
Singapore (completely new #2)
So he has used 3 chassis, one of which was from testing. The media make it look like he gets a new one every race, but from a manufacturing perspective that's almost impossible.
The one in Spain was to see whether it would change anything (so partially psychological), Monza was because of a suspected issue after going off the track in Spa (Horner mentioned something looked strange about it on telemetry and tire usage was very high compared to the other runs and compared to Ricciardo) and the next one in Singapore is a really new one (you could call this chassis #2).
Exactly, but that is not what Vettel's detractors want to hear, nor what will grab the headlines!
No true at all, the burden of proof is on you and RB to provide evidence that Vettel's performance is affected by chassis and to what extent. Until this point there is zero evidence for that. From above case by case:
- "whether it would change anything (so partially psychological)" - no it's 100% psychological. Where is the other part?
- "Horner mentioned something looked strange about it on telemetry and tire usage was very high compared to the other runs and compared to Ricciardo" - so did they check it? Was this "something strange" (so vague it's completely meaningless) related to chassis? It can be anything, but when you use it as Horner did to explain or rather excuse poor performance by piling up suggestions it creates a picture that something is wrong and it's not a driver. That was the intention. BTW again in Monza this "malfunction" must have happened between qualifying (Vettel faster) and the race.
- Singapore - basically confirmed as psychological (and marketing of course). Why is the fact that it's "new" relevant? It's just another trick that suggest that "old" was not good enough which is of course not true. Primitive playing with simple impulse that new is better than old. Chassis good enough to solve mysteries of Vettel's Spa performance in Monza (as decided and confirmed by RB) is not good enough for Singapore because as it turns out it's old? Like they didn't know it? No way, only in marketing universe.
We're talking about changing chassis as a marketing and psychological trick. At worst (wording) as pretended next race solution after relatively poor driving that includes
three different chassis for three consecutive races. Are you saying it's not a lot? So if SV is comparable to DR in Singapore does it mean there was something wrong with chassis in Monza (or I don't why but the one in Spa too)? No, how would that work? I would say it would suggest there was something wrong with Ricciardo's chassis and here we go again
.