turbof1 wrote:xpensive wrote:Yes, the initial question remains, but the discussion has gone in the direction of how Kimi needs a perfect setup to perform.
So, in a perfect car, would he leave Alonso behind?
To answer that question, you need to be more specific:
-A car perfectly adapted to Kimi's needs? In that case Kimi would be slightly better then Alonso, since Alonso will have to drive with a car not set up for his needs.
-Or a car perfectly adapted for the highest theoritical performance? In that case Alonso wins.
Yes there's a difference between the 2. Adapting a car to a driver is always compromising on peak car performance.
For me the situation is the same for all the top drivers: EVERYONE can only perform perfect in a car that suits his needs and EVERYONE has different needs.
-Schumacher: His Beneton was so peaky and had such a loose rear end, that other drivers could not drive it. But he was incredibly fast. On the other hand he was beaten by Rosberg in an understeery Merc.
-Hamilton: Mighty on Alonso with the well balanced car and the loose rear end now. Had his problems with the planted rear end of the 2011 McLaren and was not much better than Button.
-Vettel: Mighty with the planted rear end and the EBD, but beaten with the loose rear end now.
-Raikkonen: Destroyed Massa in the well balanced F2007. Seeing no land with the loose end now.
-Alonso: Incredibly fast in peaky cars. Once the car is too planted he gets problems...2007 with Ham and once Ferrari got the EBD working better in late 2012 he could not use it like Massa in the qualifying.
So I think "Adapting a car to a driver is always compromising on peak car performance." is wrong or is not really possible. The car performance is given by the basic design and how good you adapt this design to the rules. Maybe Ferrari did what they could in 2012 to suit Alonso by using a different design philosophy than Redbull. This was nearly a good idea, but the qualifying performance and, thus the performance in clean air of the Bull was too mighty.