Pandamasque wrote:
That is nonsense. DRS is designed to work on the straights. That's exactly where the following car has an advantage of the dirty air. It's called the slipstream.
DRS is the same if FIFA or UEFA changed the football rules, so that the players could use hands, but only on the opponent's side of the pitch, so that the attacking team would get an advantage, artificially invented to achieve overall higher scores.
DRS is just designed to enhance the slipstream, I didn't see you complaining when McLaren turned up with the f-duct last year?
The way the FIA are setting up the DRS zones this year, it doesn't provide an actual pass, just an opportunity, the driver still needs the skills to overtake.
I guess the whole idea is to prevent the sort of thing we saw last year in Abu Dhabi where Petrov was able to hold Alonso back in a slower car with incredible ease (not that I didn't enjoy that!).
It's early days yet. If Pirelli can keep on top of this tyre compound stuff, and keep giving us 3 stop races, then I think it's possible we could lose DRS and still keep some overtaking. However, I think alot of the 'tyre-overtaking' we are seeing is down to teams not quite understanding the Pirelli tyres yet. Once everyone understand how they work, how long they last etc. and what strategies are best, everybody will be on the same strategy - the fastest one - and we will probably see less overtaking.
KERS. It might be expensive, but I feel this has probably been the biggest game changer, you just can't see it like you can see DRS. After winning in China, Hamilton described how he saved up his KERS for a specific point on the track, knowing Vettel wouldn't expect a pass there. This for me is brilliant race craft.
I'm not saying KERS is king or anything like that, but you've got to admit, they way it works is great for racing. What would be a cheaper alternative to KERS?