Up next, are Bahrain, China and Baku! All power circuits. RB manages to skim down the wing and be fast in Baku, but can Ferrari do the same? Seemingly, they tried in qualifying in here and were a tenth ahead of the RB.
Up next, are Bahrain, China and Baku! All power circuits. RB manages to skim down the wing and be fast in Baku, but can Ferrari do the same? Seemingly, they tried in qualifying in here and were a tenth ahead of the RB.
In next races FER will have to play defensively and try to capitalize everything they can. MER is a much better car at the moment
I agree, he often gets less than ideal strategy. More then once Ferrari tried to use him as a roadblock, but it almost always failed, thus IMO he is useless even as a no.2 driver.Steven wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 10:33Somehow, Kimi was put on crappy strategies fairly often last year.sosic2121 wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 10:29Probably!
That's the only other option they had.
All of this was possible because Bottas wasn't there, just as Kimi wasn't there so many times last season!
Ferrari should have sacked Kimi long time ago! Too often he's just to slow, even for a number 2 driver. Useless!
This weekend, he was faster than Vettel
Chances of a SC are fairly high, maybe Ferrari knowingly gambled for that with Vettel
Also, the only overtakes that I'm aware of were Daniel Ricciardo on Sainz, and then some by Valtteri Bottas.
Super Hard is part of the lobby that the back markers are working out with FIA, to allow them to run 1 set of tyres for the whole of the weekend, to save cost. 3 Engines is already achieved, so it's a little more push. I fully support them. Last heard, Tony Fernandes is working hard on this lobby to bring Caterham back!
Because of this, I was surprised not to see more cars going for 2 stop strategy. Seems like teams have mastered nursing these new tyres already. Or Pirelli haven't made them a step softer, just a bit softer than last year.Fulcrum wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:18How many laps did Vettel run on the Ultra Soft tyres, half the race? And doing so with the car at its heaviest. Surely that is too durable for what is supposed to be the second softest tyre?
And this being the evidence thus far, what on earth was the point of introducing a Super Hard, when I doubt we will see any teams running anything harder than a Medium.
In hindsight they perhaps could've used hyper, ultra and supersoft to force a 2 stop but given that's its the first race of the season and testing was in cold temperatures they opted for a conservative approach. Going forward maybe we can get 2 stop races at other tracks.Fulcrum wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:18How many laps did Vettel run on the Ultra Soft tyres, half the race? And doing so with the car at its heaviest. Surely that is too durable for what is supposed to be the second softest tyre?
And this being the evidence thus far, what on earth was the point of introducing a Super Hard, when I doubt we will see any teams running anything harder than a Medium.
That "something" broke on VES car in lap 4 should hardly come as a surprise as he radio'd it in and RB later confirmed it. But being "sixt sense" he was probably anticipating a spin and fabricating an excuse beforehand.iotar__ wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 11:26Uptade on Verstappen http://www.planetf1.com/news/verstappen ... f-the-car/
Apparently it was "something". I can help them with an algorithm: count what was on the car at the start, what was at the finish, substract, provide info and impact in points of DF and say Sixth Sense couldn't cope with a dreaded lack of something . OK whatever, if it's in the material world it's the reason, but until details, "something" = we couldn't come up with "anything" else.
Yes, will be interesting to see if the SF71 can live with low DF setups. Still they won't have much of a choice. With a Laptime optiised high DF setup they won't have a chance defending against Merc on the straights of more overtaking- friendly circuits. That will on the other hand compromise their Qualifying Laptimes.
Yer just joking right?GPR-A wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:25Super Hard is part of the lobby that the back markers are working out with FIA, to allow them to run 1 set of tyres for the whole of the weekend, to save cost. 3 Engines is already achieved, so it's a little more push. I fully support them. Last heard, Tony Fernandes is working hard on this lobby to bring Caterham back!
He didn't use start mode 14. Did you even watch the race?Chene_Mostert wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 09:55Hamilton was not faster;Restomaniac wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 09:47Vettel was on tyres 8 laps younger than Raikkonen. Vettel was clearly slower than Hamilton until Hamilton decided overtaking was pointless and he turned his engine down. Raikkonen was also clearly holding up Ricciardo who was also on far younger rubber.adb wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 09:34
It's true that Vettel wasn't really making any inroads at Raikkonen in the first stint but he also wasn't losing that much time. But I just can't see how you can say that when you consider Vettel's and Hamilton's pace after restart and how they gapped Raikkonen and Ricciardo
Strat mode 14 was clearly faster to what Seb was using, until Hamilton decided to turn it down.
It was suggested to him, but did he use it? I don't know. It was also mentioned it's not sustainable, meaning it probably uses too much battery.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 13:45He didn't use start mode 14. Did you even watch the race?Chene_Mostert wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 09:55Hamilton was not faster;Restomaniac wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 09:47Vettel was on tyres 8 laps younger than Raikkonen. Vettel was clearly slower than Hamilton until Hamilton decided overtaking was pointless and he turned his engine down. Raikkonen was also clearly holding up Ricciardo who was also on far younger rubber.
Strat mode 14 was clearly faster to what Seb was using, until Hamilton decided to turn it down.