This is just reaching for all sorts of clickbaity speculation. The authors of that video do not know the downforce levels of Merc, Ferrari or Red Bull with any confidence, neither do you and neither do I. Neither do they have a wind tunnel to test effects of various conditions on the cars. So, whats all the "we know" stuff?giantfan10 wrote: ↑01 Aug 2018, 20:03The actual real reason
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VCJ2o5x8vQ
In direct contradiction of their claims about how the teams use tyres, both Red Bull and Mercedes were in a league beyond Ferrari on a blisteringly hot race (compare Red Bull and Mercs pace and length of time on the softs to Ferrari's).
Whenever any expert starts every sentence with "we know", then you can be certain that they are loading your ears with a pile of croc. The phrase "we know" is the most tired trick of the snake oil salesman.
Lastly, in statistics, there is something called the normal distribution. It evens out chance and farcical arguments based on single events, while making the most accurate predictions about samples of any event. The normal distribution is as scientifically proven as anything can be; it renders the arguments many are making here by trying to pick out race specifics to be outside reasonable expectation.