They may well see it as being a team advantage to let Bottas win. Hamilton is not likely to get caught by a non Merc driver this year, but Bottas only has a 40 point buffer. If Ferrari or RBR seem to be turning the corner, it could make the difference of having a Merc 1-2 at the end of the season. as for the race, a 1-2 is the same in either order.erudite450 wrote: ↑29 Jun 2019, 20:52I understand what you are saying and the right thing would be to let them race but the team would surely prioritise race victory over driver emotion. Anyway, whatever happens it could be a great race.
I don't think you understand my point. If Bottas gets a great start and leads after the first lap with Hamilton P2, of course they'd let them race like always. I am only wondering what would happen in the event that they are P3 and P4 or P2 and P3 with Hamilton behind seemingly faster and able to match the leading pace. They tend to prioritise race victory- for instance, Monaco 2016, Hungary 2017.Big Tea wrote: ↑29 Jun 2019, 22:07They may well see it as being a team advantage to let Bottas win. Hamilton is not likely to get caught by a non Merc driver this year, but Bottas only has a 40 point buffer. If Ferrari or RBR seem to be turning the corner, it could make the difference of having a Merc 1-2 at the end of the season. as for the race, a 1-2 is the same in either order.erudite450 wrote: ↑29 Jun 2019, 20:52I understand what you are saying and the right thing would be to let them race but the team would surely prioritise race victory over driver emotion. Anyway, whatever happens it could be a great race.
I do not think they would be averse to asking either driver to pass or let according to which fits the teams needs.erudite450 wrote: ↑29 Jun 2019, 22:36I don't think you understand my point. If Bottas gets a great start and leads after the first lap with Hamilton P2, of course they'd let them race like always. I am only wondering what would happen in the event that they are P3 and P4 or P2 and P3 with Hamilton behind seemingly faster and able to match the leading pace. They tend to prioritise race victory- for instance, Monaco 2016, Hungary 2017.Big Tea wrote: ↑29 Jun 2019, 22:07They may well see it as being a team advantage to let Bottas win. Hamilton is not likely to get caught by a non Merc driver this year, but Bottas only has a 40 point buffer. If Ferrari or RBR seem to be turning the corner, it could make the difference of having a Merc 1-2 at the end of the season. as for the race, a 1-2 is the same in either order.erudite450 wrote: ↑29 Jun 2019, 20:52I understand what you are saying and the right thing would be to let them race but the team would surely prioritise race victory over driver emotion. Anyway, whatever happens it could be a great race.
Winning a race is more important than the sensibilities and emotions of drivers. If they are 1 and 2, it's different case, but if the slower driver is holding back the faster driver and another team is running away with the race, then issuing team order is the right thing to do, so that the faster driver is released to have a go for the win.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑30 Jun 2019, 07:45I really hope they don't implement tram orders. There's absolutely no need.
Is it because of the Spec 2 engine though? Did they have such cooling problems with Spec 1 or the races were not as hot/high as Austria?
Yeah it’s a result of the packaging choices this year, irrespective of the Spec.
Thank you for the explanation.zibby43 wrote: ↑30 Jun 2019, 19:29Yeah it’s a result of the packaging choices this year, irrespective of the Spec.
They’ve made steps in improving the cooling but the altitude in Austria, combined with the extraordinarily high temperatures, was just too much for the platform.
Some reports have Merc losing up to 7 tenths of a sec/lap this weekend due to not being able to run higher PU modes and due to the aero performance loss caused by opened up bodywork.
You are very welcome. Yes it is a lot. In terms of breaking down where the time was lost, the extreme cooling bodywork alone was about 5 tenths, and the lower PU modes resulted in a loss of about 2 tenths.Morteza wrote: ↑30 Jun 2019, 19:33Thank you for the explanation.zibby43 wrote: ↑30 Jun 2019, 19:29Yeah it’s a result of the packaging choices this year, irrespective of the Spec.
They’ve made steps in improving the cooling but the altitude in Austria, combined with the extraordinarily high temperatures, was just too much for the platform.
Some reports have Merc losing up to 7 tenths of a sec/lap this weekend due to not being able to run higher PU modes and due to the aero performance loss caused by opened up bodywork.
7 tenths? Wow, that's a lot. They were worse than both RB and Ferrari in the race, which was obvious something isn't right hence Toto's comments about the temperature and cooling issues they had.
In FP3, during the slightly cooler temperatures, I thought Mercedes was absolutely neck-and-neck with Ferrari and qualifying was going to come down to a few hundredths of a second. However, once the temperatures started ramping up later in the day, the first evidence of Merc's pace continuing to drop off came in Q1.