Shovs interview with sky he said they're tried setup changes that didnt work in fp2. The team felt they were reasonably competitive in fp1 and that they were expected wet weather tomorrow and cooler weather Sunday so I didn't matter so much anyway.chrisc90 wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 22:08Also completely different to what Shovlin said in interviews:vanburin wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 22:02He doesn't necessarily say rain on Sunday, just different weather conditions. I would say a forecasted high temperature of 9-10 degrees C less than today would be a drastic difference.chrisc90 wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 21:56
Thats odd, the weather for Sunday looks pretty good, with only Saturday looking wet at current. Clutching at straws for the poor show they put on today more than likely and blaming the weather 2 days ahead. #PR63
https://www.myweather2.com/Motor-Racing ... spx?sday=2
It's not clutching at straws if they say "we tried some things and they didn't work". It's being honest.chrisc90 wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 21:56Thats odd, the weather for Sunday looks pretty good, with only Saturday looking wet at current. Clutching at straws for the poor show they put on today more than likely and blaming the weather 2 days ahead. #PR63vanburin wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 21:53This is pretty much exactly what Russell indicated after FP2. Let's see what tomorrow brings.GrizzleBoy wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 21:39We could be seeing these times looking out of place due to cars being setup expecting a wet track.
Maybe things will be more status quo come tomorrow
Although he agreed it was not a smooth day for Mercedes, Russell explained that the team experimented a bit to try and get to the bottom of its struggles given the expecting rain on Saturday.
"The conditions for Sunday are going to be drastically different, so we were trying quite a few things with the car, using it as a bit of a test session because to be honest," Russell said.
"You can try and optimise a few things for today, but there's no use of that, it's all for the rest of the weekend.
"Even though it was a very tough day, I think it's been a productive one."
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/hami ... /10345303/
https://www.myweather2.com/Motor-Racing ... spx?sday=2
Nothing will change. But you’re free to think that some teams have been cheating with fancy illegal floors and will suddenly lose a second to Mercedes come next race.djones wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 17:42Literally, nobody thought that about this race.sunny1304r wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 17:40Merc fans (who thought they will be the strongest here) : Mercedes is sandbagging .......
The next race however is where the tables may very well turn.
I think the suggestion about the next race is because it is rumoured that Mercedes will have a big upgrade package and a new spec of PU that will allow them to run it fully rather than their current situation where they can't reliably run it to its full performance.LM10 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 00:04Nothing will change. But you’re free to think that some teams have been cheating with fancy illegal floors and will suddenly lose a second to Mercedes come next race.djones wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 17:42Literally, nobody thought that about this race.sunny1304r wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 17:40Merc fans (who thought they will be the strongest here) : Mercedes is sandbagging .......
The next race however is where the tables may very well turn.
On a side note, Ferrari brought a new floor to the last race and it’s reasonable to think that they will not come up with a new floor at the next race again. Especially in times of a budget cap.
Given the history of the posts of that poster I’m 100% sure that he’s referring to the supposed illegal floors.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 00:33I think the suggestion about the next race is because it is rumoured that Mercedes will have a big upgrade package and a new spec of PU that will allow them to run it fully rather than their current situation where they can't reliably run it to its full performance.LM10 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 00:04Nothing will change. But you’re free to think that some teams have been cheating with fancy illegal floors and will suddenly lose a second to Mercedes come next race.
On a side note, Ferrari brought a new floor to the last race and it’s reasonable to think that they will not come up with a new floor at the next race again. Especially in times of a budget cap.
But, as said, it's all rumours at the moment.
Austria trough Singapore are all Sainz tracks based on previous results so he should be close to LEC regardless if LEC is down or not. Hungary is one of LECs weakest tracks...Chuckjr wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 03:31Ferrari looks untouchable, but I’ve no confidence in their reliability. Sainz should pounce right now while Leclerc is having his issues. Now’s the time to take advantage before Leclerc recovers and regains confidence. Hit him while he’s down, and it will make Leclerc’s recovery all the tougher to come by. Play to win Sainz. Sainz won’t get another chance as Leclerc will recover if he ever hopes to be championship material. He’s not shown enough of that yet, but neither have really, so it’s still up for grabs in Maranello me thinks.
Right on. Good to know. I always appreciate comments from the folks here that know the detailed history of all the drivers. Cheers-deadhead wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 03:37Austria trough Singapore are all Sainz tracks based on previous results so he should be close to LEC regardless if LEC is down or not. Hungary is one of LECs weakest tracks...Chuckjr wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 03:31Ferrari looks untouchable, but I’ve no confidence in their reliability. Sainz should pounce right now while Leclerc is having his issues. Now’s the time to take advantage before Leclerc recovers and regains confidence. Hit him while he’s down, and it will make Leclerc’s recovery all the tougher to come by. Play to win Sainz. Sainz won’t get another chance as Leclerc will recover if he ever hopes to be championship material. He’s not shown enough of that yet, but neither have really, so it’s still up for grabs in Maranello me thinks.
Right on but keep in mind that LEC is a relatively new driver and still developing. Also, I think this is the first F1 car that seems to suit his driving style, so maybe past performance isn't that great of indicator for him specifically, but so far the two tracks Sainz did very well against him last year, Austria and France, were both very close this year as well so..Chuckjr wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 03:44Right on. Good to know. I always appreciate comments from the folks here that know the detailed history of all the drivers. Cheers-deadhead wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 03:37Austria trough Singapore are all Sainz tracks based on previous results so he should be close to LEC regardless if LEC is down or not. Hungary is one of LECs weakest tracks...Chuckjr wrote: ↑30 Jul 2022, 03:31Ferrari looks untouchable, but I’ve no confidence in their reliability. Sainz should pounce right now while Leclerc is having his issues. Now’s the time to take advantage before Leclerc recovers and regains confidence. Hit him while he’s down, and it will make Leclerc’s recovery all the tougher to come by. Play to win Sainz. Sainz won’t get another chance as Leclerc will recover if he ever hopes to be championship material. He’s not shown enough of that yet, but neither have really, so it’s still up for grabs in Maranello me thinks.
I know it's unrealistic, but let me dream...Just_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 19:33If McLaren can do those times on hard tyres, they're effectively up there with Red Bull.mendis wrote: ↑29 Jul 2022, 19:30Average long run pace.
1. Ferrari (1.23.6/Mediums)
2. Red Bull (1.24.2/Mediums)
3. Aston Martin (1.24.5/Mediums)
4. McLaren (1.24.6/Hards)
5. Mercedes (1.25.2/Mediums)
6. Alpine (1.25.3/Mediums)
7. Alfa Romeo (1.25.3/Mediums)
8. Alpha Tauri (1.25.5/Mediums)
9. Haas (1.25.7/Mediums)
10. Williams (1.25.8/Mediums)