After Lewis made his mistake, he was pushing in pretty clear air to get back to the back of Seb - in fact it was a very similar scenario as with DR catching back up to the back of Kimi, having previously dropped back. So I think his previous fastest lap is comparable with DR’s and so the Red Bull very impressive.NathanOlder wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 08:38The trouble is Hamilton was never in clean air and pushing as hard as he could. The few laps he was in clean air and fresh tyres , he still had over half a tank of fuel, and he was told by the team he is safe in front of Kimi and clear of Vettel if a VSC/SC happened (obviously wrong)Artur Craft wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 04:39after his mistake, Lewis had clean air and his fastest lap was a lot slower than that of Ricciardo. Obviously Daniel had newer tyres but it is still a good sign that maybe Red Bull can challenge on race pace. Not that I'm delluding myself thinking Mercedes isn't dominant. I just think this little sample(was hard to read proper race pace on this race due to traffic that the RBs had) can indicate to a possible fights on particular tracks
So Red Bulls pace and Mercedes pace cant be compared just yet. First half of the race, Red Bull had traffic, 2nd half , Merc had traffic.
I tend to agree. Hamilton was much faster on qualy and he was confortably in the lead before the VSC. It wasn´t like last year when Ferrari showed a great race pace. They need to solve that fuel consumption problema if they want to push Mercedes. Bahrain with those straights would help Lewis to overtake Sebastian.
I think you already figured out, but yes, when they pitted, LH was onviously driving to delta and according to the software, the team figured they had a sufficient gap to Vettel incase a safety car or VSC would happen.Brenton wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 02:35In Post Race on Sky, Toto was saying that it was a software glitch. But in the interview, I'm still not understanding what the problem was. What does the pit window estimation error have to do with the fact that he lost the lead? I don't understand how knowing that they were going to lose the lead vs not knowing they were going to lose the lead was relevant ???
I don't see it at all. I mean, its pretty much an evolution of last years car (which had Ferrari's suspension, gearbox, engine and everything they legally could use). Only big change from last years car are sidepods, but then again several other team copied Ferrari's sidepods.Andres125sx wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 09:07Yeah it looks pretty similar to Ferrari 2017, but that´s just a coincidencearal wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 18:42It seems that you havent realised that HAAS actually use a Dallara chassis.Andres125sx wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 17:48Wheelgungate: When Haas, as a payback to Ferrari because of using their past season chassis, sabotage their own cars to cause a SC wich gifted vitory to Ferrari
Any credit?
Before any Haas retired, I was thinking about how happy should be Ferrari because of Hass pace with their old chassis, as they were holding back RBR letting Ferrari to focus on Mercedes. Then one Haas fails almost causing a SC but didn´t. Then the second fails again finally causing a SC and gifting victory to Ferrari...
I usually don´t buy coincidences in F1
Anycase, I was refering to aero, the chassis is basically the survival cell
They need to introduce some serious updates on the rear because the car lacks balance, plus the already mentioned consumption problem. They are two serious problems so I think it was pretty good to be second and third in the qualy. Anyway, the change in the wheelbase´s lenght is causing them more problems than benefits so far..poz wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 16:08AFAIK they have aero balance problems as the rear don't generate expected DF levels so they had to set down the front.henra wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 13:12
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.
Vettel is suffering a lot form this because he likes a very stable rear on the car
In business there is often a rebate to lubricate deals.ferkan wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 09:53I don't see it at all. I mean, its pretty much an evolution of last years car (which had Ferrari's suspension, gearbox, engine and everything they legally could use). Only big change from last years car are sidepods, but then again several other team copied Ferrari's sidepods.Andres125sx wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 09:07Yeah it looks pretty similar to Ferrari 2017, but that´s just a coincidence
Anycase, I was refering to aero, the chassis is basically the survival cell
22pts lost for Haas, that is awful lot of money. Awful lot.
Dont the long wheelbase cars lose it when they do go (example Bottas)Vasconia wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 09:56They need to introduce some serious updates on the rear because the car lacks balance, plus the already mentioned consumption problem. They are two serious problems so I think it was pretty good to be second and third in the qualy. Anyway, the change in the wheelbase´s lenght is causing them more problems than benefits so far..poz wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 16:08AFAIK they have aero balance problems as the rear don't generate expected DF levels so they had to set down the front.henra wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 13:12
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.
Vettel is suffering a lot form this because he likes a very stable rear on the car
johnny comelately wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 10:03Dont the long wheelbase cars lose it when they do go (example Bottas)Vasconia wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 09:56They need to introduce some serious updates on the rear because the car lacks balance, plus the already mentioned consumption problem. They are two serious problems so I think it was pretty good to be second and third in the qualy. Anyway, the change in the wheelbase´s lenght is causing them more problems than benefits so far.
Interestingly, Vettel isn't so sure:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/43532673"We do get a bit of data, GPS data and stuff like that," he said. "I think they did turn it up for Q3 but not by seven-tenths.
"I don't think the gain that he had in time was down to engine. Probably a tenth, a little bit more, but not seven-tenths.
"So, the credit is for his lap that he did and not for the engine power. It's completely fine what they're doing because they didn't do anything special. Not more than they did last year, probably even a bit less by the looks of it. So, it was clear that he just had a very good lap and he drove well."
I doubt that this year with the fuel saving issues it is a viable strategy. The fuel is the limiting factor, not the tires. At least in Melbourne it was.matt_b wrote: ↑25 Mar 2018, 12:34In 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.
On German TV it was mentioned that the cars HAVE to stop the moment they realise a wheel is not properly secured. Grosjean in that instance was right to stop immediately. That is according to the rules.RZS10 wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 00:56There's just one thing that made me think - both Haas cars had a similar issue ...
One driver, Magnussen, drove it to a place where it could be recovered safely with a simple double yellow (after the second DRS zone, corners 3/4).
The other driver, Grosjean, decided to just park it on the grass so poorly that the marshalls were unable to move the car into what looked like one of those emergency exits (was it a dedicated one though? aren't those marked somehow?) and had to get a crane which resulted in the (V)SC
I personally believe the first 'solution' was clearly the safer one since the cars have the improved/additional safety bolts/retainers on the nuts which are supposed to keep the wheel on the car, the latter way of doing things firstly was more dangerous for the marshalls who struggled to recover the car and secondly it had a major influence on the race ...
What's the exact wording on the rules regarding the unsafe release with a loose nut and what are the drivers supposed to do? Stop immediately? Bring it to a marshall post?
Or asking a different question: who acted correctly, Magnussen or Grosjean?
The likelyhood of another SC AFTER the VSC was very small. Hence Vettel was massively disadvantaged and Hamilton was able to sustain the lead after the first round of pitstops.NathanOlder wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 00:26Hamilton won in China because the VSC ........ Erm..... No.
The guy who stuck it on pole, got away at the front and didnt pit under the VSC won the race due to the VSC.
It started wet, and was drying. Vettel pitted under VSC as a gamble. Giovinazzi smashed it in the wall and the SC came out. Who ever didnt pit before , now was able to pit and Lewis walked away from the rest and won comfortably.
Any your saying Lewis won because of VRS helping him like today with Vettel in Melbourne
I found Vettel both on the radio as well as in the PC very much humble and knowing that it wasn't based on superior Ferrari pace. Care to elaborate or was it just the average rant?