I think you're way off here on this comment. I think it's much easier for Ferrari to find a huge chunk of lap time versus McLaren for instance. McLaren is much closer to the upper potential of their car(per se) than Ferrari who is 0.8s or more off the top car.bonjon1979 wrote:
This is one way of looking at it. However, you should give some more thought to the knock on effects of having a car that doesn't do what it should do unlike 'well born cars'. Ferrari will have had several months of planned upgrades that they would've been preparing for the F2012 long before the first test in Jerez. The problem they have is it's possible that a lot of these plans may've had to be been scrapped as the car's behaviour was quite different to what they thought. They're having to develop from a platform that they struggled to understand. Cars that have done as expected will be able to refine/bring forwards developments that have been in the pipeline for months and so have more potential to deliver results. The China package for Mclaren would've been well developed since before the race in Melbourne but I'm not sure the same could be said of Ferrari who were still fire fighting back then.
As far as Ferrari, they know what their problems are, and have been working towards fixing them since the 2nd Barcelona test. It's plenty of time. Fernando has already said they don't expect any huge gains in China, you can't turn around a car that quickly. What matters for Ferrari is that the updates for Spain work and work well.