Well. Max on his opening lap with Perez on his back is told to go to mode 7 and then start 8 in the straights to cover. Very very odd. Its lap1, surely this isn't allowed. His engine was fine then.
Engine anomalies, he was stopped as a precaution because it was likely he wasn't going to score points.
Since when a Mclaren can stop a Mercedes? In a race where top speed is critical to make a pass and Mercedes running more downforce than Mclaren (and Mclaren in taking advantage of the tow), the Merc just didn’t had the pace to execute the pass... Not that much different than Max been stuck behind Bottas too for the first stint of the race without been able to pull a move.mem wrote:i couldn't disagree more and i don't think any one can agree with you, since when mclaren can stop a mercs?SmallSoldier wrote: ↑06 Sep 2020, 20:47Because Bottas was on a train of cars with more pace than the ones Hamilton was against... The Mclaren’s with their low DF setup were very hard to catch even with DRS... If you add the overheating issues that Bottas had since the beginning of the race, it explains why Hamilton moved so much up the grid... But they do hold a significant pace advantage (which Hamilton also showed at the beginning of the race).
Since they can’t change ICE modes during the race, his PU damage wouldn’t be much higher than the rest of the field.
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Hamilton pace at the start due to having a midfield car behind him.
but to be honest iam lost now because clearly drivers changed mode during the race and i have no clue what is going on...
When the car is not working, I want to hear the same. Same explicit words, which I didn't heard at the momentgodlameroso wrote: ↑06 Sep 2020, 23:52If the engine was not working what is he to do? He's now lost more ground to Mercedes. Shame really, on to the next one.
If you asked me a couple of days ago, I would also have thought that Honda are slightly behind.Sayeman wrote: ↑07 Sep 2020, 01:24Season's lost anyway. Max is not gonna be the youngest world champion despite Dr. Helmet parroting it around. Highly doubt points earned today would have made any difference to the championship.
RBR's chassis struggles is not gonna be good for Honda's morale for sure. Every year they start on the backfoot, then Horner will come out and say "Newey's interested in F1 again!" then will improve a bit. Since 2014 I don't think RBR/Mclaren had even a single year where their chassis was superior to Mercedes. Even Ferrari had a great car in 2018. Max is out as soon as Lewis retires and his Merc seat is ripe for taking.
Honda needs to improve for sure, its lagging compared to Merc and maybe even Renault. But if you dont have the confidence in RBR to produce a good chassis, you wont have the motivation to keep pushing.
When the car is not working, but the car is still on track, there is less frustration than when a driver loses places due to an engine issue and then it gives him a feeling that it is going to be terminal and then it becomes terminal. Bottas was also frustrated when his engine was getting hot and he was being constantly asked to get out of slip stream which was overheating.Marti_EF3 wrote: ↑07 Sep 2020, 01:14When the car is not working, I want to hear the same. Same explicit words, which I didn't heard at the momentgodlameroso wrote: ↑06 Sep 2020, 23:52If the engine was not working what is he to do? He's now lost more ground to Mercedes. Shame really, on to the next one.