HampusA wrote:I´m thinking the latter. Either you have built a car that handles the tyres well or you dont.
That's not true at all. All cars have an optimum operating range. Some cars are fast in a range of conditions, others are ultimately faster but more on a knife edge so that when outside their optimum temperature (for example) their performance is much worse.
A recent example was last years Red Bull that was the class of the field for most of the season, but when the temperatures got too high there was a window where other cars were still okay but the Red Bull overworked the tyres and suffered. In 2007 this was true of the McLaren and Ferrari where the latter was ultimately the faster car when everything was perfect but the McLaren coped better when things weren't quite right for the car. We've also seen years where McLaren were quick to get temperature into the tyres but Ferrari struggled. This lead to McLaren having a qualifying advantage with the Ferrari being the better race car, and the Ferrari being the faster car in really hot weather.
Pirelli are making a lot of noises about the tyres being much better in hotter weather. At the same time if teams that are able to work the tyres well in this cold weather continue to work the tyres as hard in the hot weather then they could well overheat the tyres. McLaren, in contrast, if they're too gentle on the tyres now and aren't getting enough heat into them could come into their own when the temperatures are higher.
Whether that is or is not the case we'll need to wait and see, but it's definitely a possibility.