German sourceslightly corrected Google translation of Bild.de wrote:That hurts Formula 1 bully Lewis Hamilton (26)!
Mate Jenson Button (31) is the new No. 1 at McLaren, is the first chaser since his victory at Suzuka.
Button instantly made the announcement a boss: "We must win the next four races: When we finish the season on a high, then we have a good base for 2012 to attack Red Bull." McLaren-pupil Hamilton demoted!
And so it came to the new hierarchy in the England team:
• In Suzuka Hamilton (world champion 2008) had to drive FOR button (World Champion 2009) for the first time.
• The contract with Button was already extended, his salary adjusted to that of Hamilton (20 million €).
Reason: Button crashes less, gets more points, and opposed to constantly bad-tempered Hamilton everyone in the team likes him.
Nice to see that puzzles are falling in place now. I thought (and said on this forum ) before season start,that McL will be good with tyres. They have all the experience they need. Remember, they switched tyre manufacturer from Bridgestons to Michelin and back in last 10 years. They had done this before, and they know exactly what they need to do in that situation. Ferrari stayed with Bridgestons, though I'm not convinced their problem is inexperience. Sauber is a bit of mystery, maybe they just hit that sweet spot unaware of it, maybe they just have better engineers there than other teams.Intego wrote:McL and Sauber are the team that have understood the Pirellis at its best.
Maybe I was wrong a bit. Sauber designed a car to be smooth on tyres not to be surprised. It also would not have helped to hold Heidfeld as he tested the first Pirellis who were miles away from the actual ones.kalinka wrote:... Sauber is a bit of mystery, maybe they just hit that sweet spot unaware of it, maybe they just have better engineers there than other teams.Intego wrote:McL and Sauber are the team that have understood the Pirellis at its best.
What is more interesting for me, what'll happen now >
Can McL tweak the MP4-26 for the reamining races to be good at qualy and race too ?
Are the two requirements excluding somewhat each other (race pace vs. qualy-pace ) ?
Did they consider to go with RBR and build a qualy-car from MP4-27, concentrating less on the race pace ?
Odd... Listening to the McLaren's engine noise from onboards, they were definitely lifting very slightly.beelsebob wrote:raymondu999 wrote:Actually I've just been rewatching quali. Even the HRT could DRS through 130.
slowing the action down could labour the actuator whilst moving from closed to open. This could encourage failures.raymondu999 wrote:Why not slow the actuator down? You then press it earlier, but only hitting the full open stance when you would normally have opened it