I don't know who else understood this post, but I didn't.ringo wrote: ↑21 Mar 2023, 13:27Just simple math. The two redbulls were closer with their gap. Hamilton's lap was an outlier. He does have those, and Rosberg and Bottas are qualifying specialists compared to Perez.
So Hamilton is right when judgeing that the rb19 is the most dominant car ever.
It's still very close to 2015 yes in terms of race pace. But more to come to determine that this year.
Last race in Bahrain, Max was 0.14 ahead of Perez and 3 tenths ahead of Leclerc.
In Saudi, Perez was 0.15 ahead of Charles.
Is that on par with W05/W06/W07?
As far race pace, Alonso was hanging with Perez with similar times in the first stint. Once, it was clear that he wasn't going to make a difference, he went into managing his potential 3rd place. Last stint, it was race between Max and Perez and they pushed, while Alonso was just consolidating. Last few laps, he showed the same kind of pace that Red Bulls were on.
Can someone call that, W05/06/07 like advantage?
Bottas is being beaten by Zhou more consistently as he has got good understanding of the car with a bit of experience under his belt. If Bottas is a qualifying specialist, then Zhou is at Lewis' level.