I don't think so, I remember Lewis said we hope to do a race simulation after Jensons day in the car. However the car had multiple problems that day if I remember. The source is my memory so don't quote me directly on that oneraymondu999 wrote:Jenson said 18 laps, but does anyone know if Lewis did a longer stint during testing?
was'nt the problem that Hamilton was too busy holding his ground with Webber?. Once Hamilton had lost Weber he was quick to catch up with Vettel. I think by Europe will really tell us what the cars can do and who had the upper hand back at the factory when it comes to packages, upgrades. The big questions for me this season will be can McLaren make good of there positive remarks to the press on upcoming upgrades which never caught the Rb last year. And will Newey find away to run KER's in his car without overheating. Whenever Mclaren get confident they tend to fall on there face. I hope thats a trend that stops soon. A few DNF's from Rb this season would definitely help the tv viewers stay tuned. Ferrari will be back in it either the next race or the one after. Im pretty sure about that. Melbourne always throws up anomalies. The biggest problem that the FIA has this season is veiwing figures dropping. The die hards will be there every race but people who switch on to entertained have already started wandering. Two of my freinds sent me scathing texts as Vettel took 5 seconds of hamilton and switched off.CHT wrote:myurr wrote:Don't forget that Hamilton was also slowed because of him damaged splitter.
At the end of the first stint he'd closed up within 2 seconds of Vettel. SB certainly didn't have anything in reserve in that stint, and Lewis was starting to reel him in again in the second stint when the car broke.
I don't think McLaren have the measure of Red Bull in the race just yet, but I think they can run them quite close and there is clearly a lot more to come from their car.
Lewis obviously tried too hard to close in on vettel and thats why he broke his floor isnt it?![]()
Just curious how could you be so certain that Vettel was pushing his car to the limit, during the first and second stint? What about the 3.2 sec gap between vettel and lewis after just 3 laps?
Did Vettel slow down after lap 2, or was Hamilton taking it a bit too easy in the first couple of laps ?raymondu999 wrote:Just to clarify, the gap actually became 2.4 at the end of lap1. Then Vettel pulled 0.8 in lap 2. Then in lap 3-11, the gap was managed at 3.2/3.3s
I don't think so. Gaining an advantage when others were getting up to speed seemed to be something they were counting on. All they did was make sure Vettel pitted earlier first and he gained five seconds after that stop alone knowing that he'd have the performance where Hamilton didn't. If I were other teams I'd be a little perturbed as to how Vettel and Red Bull did that.feynman wrote:Vettel took off yes ... and paid the price for it later. To pull out 3 seconds in the first coupla laps, and be only 1.2 secs ahead at your pitstop tells us pretty much everything we need to know about how aggrieved the tyres felt.
It wasn't for lack of aggression. They simply didn't have the speed, especially on older tyres. Even when they got new tyres on nothing changed.evidenced by their lack of aggression on the undercut.
That was in direct response to the suggestion that Vettel was pacing the first sector, and could have gone faster, I don't think so. You simply do not let a rival get *that* close if you have any extra pace available anywhere, and you don't gamble on a coin toss about who pits first if you have extra speed avaiable to open up a wheel-nut friendlier gap. He didn't have any extra, because we saw he didn't, that speaks clearly for itself.segedunum wrote:I don't think so. Gaining an advantage when others were getting up to speed seemed to be something they were counting on. All they did was make sure Vettel pitted earlier first and he gained five seconds after that stop alone knowing that he'd have the performance where Hamilton didn't. If I were other teams I'd be a little perturbed as to how Vettel and Red Bull did that.feynman wrote:Vettel took off yes ... and paid the price for it later. To pull out 3 seconds in the first coupla laps, and be only 1.2 secs ahead at your pitstop tells us pretty much everything we need to know about how aggrieved the tyres felt.
I wasn't talking about speed, I was talking about them leaving Hamilton out on track for a couple of laps while Vettel was on brand new tyres going faster. That would only ever end one way.segedunum wrote:It wasn't for lack of aggression. They simply didn't have the speed, especially on older tyres. Even when they got new tyres on nothing changed.evidenced by their lack of aggression on the undercut.
I found this :raymondu999 wrote:Actually that's an interesting one. Does anyone have a record of all the laptimes by both drivers? So we can see if Vettel's decreased or Hamilton's increased
segedunum wrote:Well let's face it, they're still the thick end of a second off but thank goodness they've done something because God knows what kind of race we'd have to look forward to otherwise.
They've pulled out some stops and fair play to them, but I'd like to see the car away from Melbourne and going through a few important high speed corners that we see at other circuits before I'd eat that pie.