Wynters wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 12:28
Speculation and educated guesswork can, indeed, be an engaging intellectual pursuit. But there is a significant proportion of posters who are cluttering the thread with spurious rubbish and, in turn, creating a prevailing view that is almost entirely baseless. People are free to post what they want but I felt it might be useful to remind people that the testing lap times (particularly at the first test) and the reality of relative performance at Melbourne and beyond are often different and their are a plethora of crucial factors that impact those times that are not easily visible to casual observers.I guess I should apologise for even questioning the approach.
In my opinion, it's more being cluttered with people downplaying everything that is being posted that might all add up to a larger and perhaps not so far-fetched picture. I also feel these very people are mistaking what is being posted as any kind of scientific proof. It isn't. No one is arguing that what is being posted is the definitive pecking order or what will be come Melbourne.
The development race has kicked off already. The cars that are being driven right now are work-in-progress. No one knows who will have the fastest package on day X sometime in the future. That is pretty obvious, yet people are still coming in here wanting to point it out as an answer to eveything. What is being discussed in here, right now, is relevant to testing and perhaps to some degree in the second pre-testing and to some smaller degree when the season kicks off. Why? Because the changes introduced this year have led to larger changes in how teams tackle it. Evidently, the top 3 teams (who will likely remain the top 3 easily) have opted for different aero concepts. What worked in 2017 & 2018 (aka Mercedes's concept) may not work as well in 2019. This is the intriguing story that is being discussed. And because aero concepts can't be changed over night. In other words; most of these teams have gambled on something that they believe to be the best solution across the season. If it is or not, is yet to be seen.
In my personal opinion; Ferrari had the best package last year. They should have won but for many different reasons (predominantly not winning the races they should have won), Mercedes/Hamilton came through yet again. Even the year before, Ferrari had an excellent package, yet Mercedes probably just had that PU edge that carried them through the season. Not last year though and right now, one has to assume Mercedes and Ferrari are equal in terms of engine power & efficiency, if not in Ferrari's slight favor. Honda remains the big mystery at this point, but assuming Honda has closed the gap a bit more and how extremely well that RedBull went with even an underperforming Renault engine last year, I see them as a huge threat to this years championship. To what extent will come down to reliability.
Talking strictly performance, I personally think Mercedes is going to be facing a very difficult year. They can't ride the PU edge they previously enjoyed up to '17 so it will come down to chassis and aero. And in this particular aspect, we have Mercedes as the only team running a low-rake car - for obvious reasons. They know the concept and it has worked so well. I am not saying they won't be fast, but from everything on-track observers and what the teams are saying (you know, the guys with more intel than any of us), it seems that right now, Ferrari seems to be very strong once again and that Mercedes is slightly behind. By how much, who knows. This of course doesn't mean Mercedes won't be come Melbourne (not a representative track anyway) or not be better at the second test, but for now, it is what it seems to be. Nothing less, nothing more.
I'll happily take those opinions and reports over any speculation on lap times at this point, because as many have pointed out - lap times are difficult to quantify without knowing the respective fuel loads and to what degree the engine is being run. To some extent, one can assume that at least Mercedes and Ferrari are running similar tuning states, as it wouldn't make sense for one to go extremely different than the other. Fuel is another matter and purely quantifying that on lap times is difficult. The long runs obviously say more than than the low runs, again for obvious reasons.
One of the largest performance differentiators this year will be how much performance can be extracted from the tires. Mastering tire wear and degredation will be key and just as important as outright pace. I feel this is one of the key areas Mercedes is focusing on. At the same time, that Ferrari just seems to go well once again, easy to extract performance. But again, we're only at testing 1 and assuming the 'experts' have it right and Mercedes are finding themselves behind, I'm very much curious to see if their car and the concept they have chosen allows them to close that gap or if they will be behind indeed once the season hits off.
Or perhaps Mercedes are indeed just selling us for stupid and are hiding some unseen performance, but I very much doubt so (my personal opinion). Doesn't mean they can't still find that edge or blow us away come Melbourne (again, a very unrepresentative track / Bahrain will be way more interesting in regards to the season outlook).