ValeVida46 wrote: ↑09 May 2023, 12:05
basti313 wrote: ↑09 May 2023, 11:29
No. Merc is out of position because their drivers perform bad in Q.
Oh right, ok. So they perform bad on Saturday and then miraculously get it right come Sunday.
Yes. So how many examples of this season should we go through? Maybe a good one and a bad one:
Oz: Good Q3 laps by both drivers. -> two possible podiums.
Miami: Very bad Q2 by Ham. On avarage the track evolution from Q1 to Q2 was around 0.3 to 0.6sec for the ones who brought their Q2 lap together...examples are Ferrari, RedBull, Aston and so on. With the bad Q he starts our of position and makes a very nice return.
On the other hand Russel: With a good lap and some improvement from Q2 to Q3 he would have easily been in front of Gas and Mag. Magnussen was simply out of position as he boosted in a risky lap while others did their safety lap. In the end he ended exactly where he would have started, again in a good position, most probably even on the podium.
And the rest:
In Baku they both bottled their Q2 runs with yellow sectors, same picture by the way as in Miami just with Rus starting out of position. In Saudi it was Ham starting out of position with a bad Q3...
In Bahrain both showed no progress in the last Q3 run while everyone else well improved.
ValeVida46 wrote: ↑09 May 2023, 12:05
It's the perfect comparison. A Haas outqualified both Mercedes and got beat by 30 seconds in the race. What more could you ask for?
....
I compared Russell in a Mercedes vs the Haas of Magnussen, there's no reason to desiccate the point.
Well, first of all you can not really compare the pace in a Q3 where Verstappen ends up behind Magnussen as well, right?
Then you have comparing all other Q sessions maybe a tenth of difference in Q pace from the best Haas to the best Merc. Again consistently good Q by Magnussen, bad Q1 for Rus, bad Q2 for Ham...
We are even not speaking about a Haas that was much better in Q. In the race it was eating through its tires, so I can not see where there is something unusual or rules related.
ValeVida46 wrote: ↑09 May 2023, 12:05
We have repeated examples of cars qualifying faster and falling back, or qualifying slower and moving up the grid in the race. I've given examples from just the last 2 races, and your suggestion is that it's not the car it's the drivers at fault, who then somehow manage to make amends on race day.
Correction:
It is mainly the Merc drivers, so this fits well into this thread, who progress well in the race and Ferrari, Haas dropping back. BUT Ferrari drivers through the season lost a hand full of places while the gain of the Mercs was substantially more.
For others...I do not see much progress...e.g. Stroll....once he qualifies bad he maybe goes to the top of the midfield cars.
ValeVida46 wrote: ↑09 May 2023, 12:05
So you're excusing Ferrari, it's the drivers fault at Mercedes, and Haas just had a one of special lap. Alpine too who fell behind both Ferrari and Mercedes.
Well...Alpine just dropped back as the other drivers did not do well in Q. That is exactly my point.Thank you for this nice example.
For Sainz...he would not have qualified in P3 with a normal Q3. P5 at best, so also nothing unusual here.