
Hamilton 7th up Vettel, with Verstappen a few tenths behind it. Good solid performance of HAAS and an early swallow for McLaren (they were 11 and 12 last year)
That whole thing smacks of a situation where they had chosen to not renew Kravitz and then they got a viewer base backlash and had to throw something together. Chandhok is very knowledgable but it do think they have him in the wrong place and why remove Kravitz if the replacement doesn’t do a replacement to Ted’s notebook?F1Fan2018 wrote: ↑16 Mar 2019, 10:57Sky Said yesterday Ted will be back next week with a new show I think, not sure if Teds notebook will continue but he will still be on sky not too sure in what capacity though.Sierra117 wrote: ↑16 Mar 2019, 10:52Yeah, what's the deal with that? Why no Notebook? All my years I cannot understand why people decide to leave out the one thing nobody asked to be removed like the headphone jack, removable batteries etc. etc. absolutely bizarre. I hope it comes back for the next qualies.NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Mar 2019, 10:03You will get a proper analysis tomorrow in the pre race build up. Shame there's no teds notebook for the qualy like usual.
Matrix I memberyelistener wrote: ↑16 Mar 2019, 09:09Whoever was on the Ferrari hype train, now
https://media.giphy.com/media/dCdGHgF7yFHFK/giphy.gif
- Not really accurate, neither were most of the predictions. Yes, it's Australia.
And on the othe hand, Mercedes beats RB at every middle-slow corner. RB was known to be the best through middle-slow corner, so that is definitely not a good sign if we dont to see Mercedes knocks everyone else out in 2019.Juzh wrote: ↑16 Mar 2019, 11:16https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtkFZqfc-hs
Either ferrari/merc have been hit hard on their party modes with the extra restrictions put in place on the PUs this year, or honda has practically closed the gap completely, which would be quite astonishing.
It seems to me that Ferrari and Merc have noticeable advantage in high speed corners, so maybe RBR is running less DF, or they just have a crappier chassis which i find difficult to believe.Juzh wrote: ↑16 Mar 2019, 11:16https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtkFZqfc-hs
Either ferrari/merc have been hit hard on their party modes with the extra restrictions put in place on the PUs this year, or honda has practically closed the gap completely, which would be quite astonishing.
I'm guessing your comment was a sarcastic one. I think Red Bull had a lot to prove after the divorce with Renault and I for one was expecting them to fall behind Renault and be the 4th best team. However, 4th to start off with a brand new partner and to go through that whole integration process with what looks like decent reliability is a brilliant start. If you've followed the sport for the last decade, Red Bull are always slow starters but almost certainly end up with the best chassis by year end.
Sorry Sir but this is some kind of illusion. Mercedes are currently on the verge of 6th straight double championship (not achieved by any team in history), proved themselves to be best while fighting from behind and you are calling RBR the best team in a decade?Schuttelberg wrote: ↑16 Mar 2019, 11:56I'm guessing your comment was a sarcastic one. I think Red Bull had a lot to prove after the divorce with Renault and I for one was expecting them to fall behind Renault and be the 4th best team. However, 4th to start off with a brand new partner and to go through that whole integration process with what looks like decent reliability is a brilliant start. If you've followed the sport for the last decade, Red Bull are always slow starters but almost certainly end up with the best chassis by year end.
I think for them to convincingly be third best at least shows that the move to Honda basically lost them nothing but gives them factory backing and works status from a manufacturer who have had a hard time but also won a lot in F1 previously.
It's just one qualifying, but initial impressions definitely indicate that Red Bull's decision was the correct one and this at least offers them some hope of parity in terms of power against rival manufacturers.
To be honest, I think Horner might be the happiest bloke in the paddock. Even more so than the Mercedes group. I have no doubt that Red Bull is the best team of this decade in terms of operations. They're not very likeable, but that's the first thing you need to be to succeed in F1.