Where's that Michael quote from?marcush. wrote:x,don´t worry -my feeling is you can count on michael preventing the ingestion of that headsock...or in Michaels words:
last year we were 3 seconds per lap off the pace in Race 1 so we have definitevely maade a huge step as we are more like half a second behind at this time .that´s workable.He sounds positive for the first time .
Disagree. Especially at a circuit like Albert Park. Having dying tyres means you brake earlier; you get on the power later - you get more wheelspin - and you won't even get to your topspeed driving like that.varunf12012 wrote:Tyres graining and degradation hurts in slow corners much than in straights.
Trust me under heavy fuel load the car starts sliding around as the tyres are unable to be switched on by Mercedes. In qualifying the car was ok as fuel load was negligible.raymondu999 wrote:Disagree. Especially at a circuit like Albert Park. Having dying tyres means you brake earlier; you get on the power later - you get more wheelspin - and you won't even get to your topspeed driving like that.varunf12012 wrote:Tyres graining and degradation hurts in slow corners much than in straights.
If Australia temperatures aren't high enough for Mercedes....i have no idea what is.varunf12012 wrote:Tyres graining and degradation hurts in slow corners much than in straights. That is why tracks where there are low temepartures as well as slow corners Mercedes may not perform well to expectations however reverse would be the case on other tracks.
I have my fingers crossed for Malaysia. I need to study in detail what kind of track is Malaysia before jumping into conclusions.
I would study and wld come back with my analysis by evening. Have faith in Merc and Schumi.
You do realise that it's much easier to heat the tyres up in the race, and the fuel load would help the heatup, of course?varunf12012 wrote:Trust me under heavy fuel load the car starts sliding around as the tyres are unable to be switched on by Mercedes. In qualifying the car was ok as fuel load was negligible.
The race started at 5pm local time. Temps where not as high as they could be and in fact are probably below average for a GP.aduka11 wrote:If Australia temperatures aren't high enough for Mercedes....i have no idea what is.
Maybe higher temperatures dont suit Mercedes...
Yeah, but what do they expect to do then in Races like Canada or Silverstone.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:The race started at 5pm local time. Temps where not as high as they could be and in fact are probably below average for a GP.aduka11 wrote:If Australia temperatures aren't high enough for Mercedes....i have no idea what is.
Maybe higher temperatures dont suit Mercedes...
Australian track temp were on the low side my dear. Other tracks should suit them well. The tyres needs to be in the range of 100 DegC to 120 DegC for optimum performance.aduka11 wrote:If Australia temperatures aren't high enough for Mercedes....i have no idea what is.varunf12012 wrote:Tyres graining and degradation hurts in slow corners much than in straights. That is why tracks where there are low temepartures as well as slow corners Mercedes may not perform well to expectations however reverse would be the case on other tracks.
I have my fingers crossed for Malaysia. I need to study in detail what kind of track is Malaysia before jumping into conclusions.
I would study and wld come back with my analysis by evening. Have faith in Merc and Schumi.
Maybe higher temperatures dont suit Mercedes...