Always find it funny to read comments taken out of the blue.
Read his comments again and you´ll see it differs quite a lot from your "rant" on RBR.
Autosport.comHowever, Raikkonen is not convinced that Pirelli should have been singled out as the key element – because he reckons that the ban on refuelling is a big contributing factor too.
"I don't think the nature [of F1] is different because of that," Raikkonen told Finnish newspaper Turun Sanomat about the impact of Pirelli.
"It's because of the amount of the fuel on board. I don't think there would be that much problem with these tyres, if we would race with 50 or 60 kilos, when we start.
"Previously the pitstops were made usually after every 20 laps, while we had less fuel. I think it would have been the same situation with Michelins and Bridgestones if we would have this much fuel as we have now.
"These tyres are good in qualifying: they have a good grip and all in all they are good tyres."
Refuelling was banned at the start of the 2010 season that witnessed four different winners in the first five races, and produced a four-way championship finale in Abu Dhabi.
Helmut Marko wrote: "Can I explain how Maldonado gains with his tires eight tenths in sector three? Mind you, not over a single lap, but only in one sector," marvelled Red Bull's motorsport advisor Helmut Marko after the Barcelona weekend.
"And who knows why the car within two hours, suddenly loses all its grip?"
I'm pretty sure about that. They already have personnel embedded in the teams and I hear they are pretty competitive among themselves. It's up to the team engineers to prove they are good enough and can unlock the tyres.SiLo wrote:...
I bet even Pirelli couldn't do it if they had their own car running a race.
Where did Mr Sulkypants Marko get that figure from exactly?elf341 wrote:Thanks MrBlacky, one quote stood out for me:
Helmut Marko wrote: "Can I explain how Maldonado gains with his tires eight tenths in sector three? Mind you, not over a single lap, but only in one sector," marvelled Red Bull's motorsport advisor Helmut Marko after the Barcelona weekend.
"And who knows why the car within two hours, suddenly loses all its grip?"
Well Vettel's fastest lap was quicker than Maldonado's, so I doubt it'd be on that lap. Perhaps if someone trawled through the sector times for every single lap then they'd be able to find the one lap where Marko was correct.elf341 wrote:I got the impression he was talking about the race. I haven't checked, but maybe it was sector 3 where the RB8 was really trailing the FW34?
Yeah I consider Marko to be a bit of a joke - freely admit to being biased against him.elf341 wrote:Yeah, maybe. Anyway I kind of see your sentiment on Marko that he's a bit of a joke - I just found it more interesting that we've now have three senior Red Bull guys come out expressing either concern, or confusion.
Newey did seem rather agnostic when questioned about the tyres in the pre-barc press conference, however, but as is often quoted on this board there's often no smoke without fire. Whilst they may be leading the championships on points, it can't have escaped them that they had real trouble with Webber behind Hulkenberg, and certainly a lot of other teams have experienced a lot of bad luck (e.g. McLaren, Merc, Sauber). "You make your own luck", I know, but if that bad luck stops I think RB has reason to be quite concerned.
I think 300% is a bit too slow. I can think of a myriad problematic scenarios that could result from a car coasting around as much as 3x slower than cars on hot laps. The current rule is 145%, and I think that's proven to be effective, simply because the issue never even comes up.ESPImperium wrote:Each car must be back to the pits within 300% of their fast lap and have 1L of fuel in case of sample as well.