Just_a_fan wrote:
The real issue is that the cars are pretty similar in performance and the drivers are also pretty similar in performance (to within a couple of a percent for most of them). The cars rarely suffer issues that slow them appreciably (they usually either work properly or break totally) and the drivers rarely make mistakes even under pressure.
Junior formulae have lots of overtaking because there is a big margin in ability in the grid even in relatively high-performance formulae like GP2.
here we are.change as you like but in GT3 you see how you mix up the field.. put in drivers of all capabilities is more a differentiator there as the strength of the machine ,and all gets a thorough mix with the teams not at all times really on top of their game ,be it race strategy ,organisation or engineering.
In F1 one you miss the boat by two sausages of aero and your driver just can´t figure out how to get the most out of a two lap old set of supersofts and you are done..drying too hard at a pace these tyres will not handle given the abuse or wrong use before its P18 instead of P9 and a very long sunday evening is looming...there are no real loosers in F1 .
I remember B.Senna in Ferrari Challenge in 2007 ,my driver was Roland Asch and the son of a business man .Grandpa Asch ,first time in that kind of car(!)and in silverstone (!) wiped the floor with my little hero ...and if I remember correctly was almost a second quicker in Q1 than no1 driver ..But Senna was another second in front of him..he had tested we had not, ok...but it remained like that the whole weekend....in identical equipment....1 second per lap... astonishing.