I think some of these things will be clearer with the new engine mode freeze. You couldn't tell before if Hamilton was driving slower unless he was doing a lift and coast into a brake zone. He was still at full throttle in the acceration zones. I'm hoping now with the freeze. You'll see they will not be spending as much time on full throttle, or not using full throttle at all, when they are coasting.godlameroso wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 19:37It's a team sport. Please drivers will drive to the extent of their abilities all race. You cannot afford mistakes. Are you new to f1?Wynters wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 14:22Hamilton was 1.2 seconds slower on his last lap than his previous string of laps. Did he misjudge his tyre and/or fuel? What evidence do you have that his tyres went off a cliff/he had to save fuel so extremely?godlameroso wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 14:10No magic involved. Maybe a magician or two. There is no incorrect extrapolation. You incorrectly assume that Mercedes can go faster.
At the previous race, Hamilton was 1.8 seconds slower on his final lap. Did he misjudge his tyre and/or fuel? What evidence do you have that his tyres went off a cliff/he had to save fuel so extremely?
Why does your calculation deliberately exclude the time the Red Bull gained in the pitstops. You are measuring Verstappen's pace, not pitstop pace, so why include these extra seconds under the 'Verstappen's pace' heading.
Radio traffic for multiple teams show that, if they have a huge cushion at the front, then they aren't running their most powerful engine modes. Similarly, you can track tyre / fuel drop off over the final stint and see if they were going all out. If they are using up every millimetre of tyre and ounce of fuel, why are they often able to have a go at fastest lap in the closing stages of the race? Surely they are already going the fastest they could go and, even if they could extract moree from the car, they are damaging their pace for the remainder of the race by taking so much out for use in just a single lap?godlameroso wrote: ↑24 Aug 2020, 14:10That isn't even logically consistent with anything we've seen.
The idea that drivers are pushing all the time, even if they are alone in the distance out front is absolutely inconsistent with all the commentary from teams, drivers and analysts that emphasise preservation over unnecessary performance.
You have a limited quantity of fuel, you cannot use the most aggressive engine modes for even 1/4th of the race. Energy must be allocated efficiently. If a team gains in the pit stops that counts. Everything counts towards total race time.
From what I'm reading, loverboy is right in that all teams don't carry enough fuel to get to the end of the race at full power setting. They opt to probably carry 75%, obviously this will vary, of the fuel they need. The car will be much faster off the line and more nimble in those first couple of crutial laps because of it. That then forces them into a fuel saving mode a different points of the race which usually coincides with the number of laps the tires can handle. You'll align your fuel with the pace you tires can handle. Typically the more stops you're planning, you might fuel more from the start with the idea you'll be able to push the tires harder. That all depends on how many laps you can do at what pace.
In closing it's really hard to dial in and figure out what teams are doing during a race unless they are close enough to attack each other outright. If they are in clear air, you can flip a coin and guess.