So you smile when reading estimated % wich, as stated, are only posted to clarify my point of view... but then state some F1 drivers loose 2-3 seconds on two wet corners?ringo wrote: ↑03 Aug 2018, 06:09Pointless speculation about which car is better in the wet.
Hamilton was just, as usual, on another level in the rain. Simple. no tyre explanation needed.
Also i smile when i see the argument about the car is X% and driver is Y%. This argument works fine when talking about a Dry track and a car driving to its limit, but it doesn't hold at all when it's pouring rain on the track.
A lap can have 20 corners, where two different, but equal cars in every way, can take 18 corners at the same exact pace, but then there are those those 2 pesky and slippery corners where one driver is not going to lose any time driving through it, and the other is going to slip and slide, and decide to back off going through it and subsequently lose 2 seconds over the lap in those two corners. This scenario tosses out that "the driver cannot do more than the car can give" argument.
This is where you see Hamilton smashing out those ridiculous pole lap gaps by 2 and 3 seconds; it has nothing to do with car advantage. He is simply keeping up the pace in the wetter sections of the track where others are backing off or driving the wrong line because they aren't as sure or confident to deal with reacting to the uncertainty of the wet.
I think this is a good example:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ifvbapD8B2Q
Ok if you mean Massa I´ll agree, but he´s out of F1 now