fiohaa wrote:Ferraripilot wrote: While this is a step in the right direction for W03s back end, I'm wondering how much headway it's going to give them against the still fundamentally-flawed F2012 which Ferrari have managed to make lemonade with.
i dont understand how you can say the f2012 is 'fundamentally flawed' after being a quick car for most of the season..fundamentally. IF it wasn't a good enough car....Alonso would not be scoring points with it. You can be the best driver in the world, without the car youre not much.
so please, im asking as a genuine question, why do you think the f2012 is still 'fundamentally flawed'. if anything has been fundamentally flawed, its arguably been the Merc, which has consistently demonstrated its high tyre wear...all season.
This may be better in the F2012 thread, but Ferrari spent half the season bringing F2012 into a somewhat competent car, and it's victories were very situational and weather assisted and IIRC by their own statements they have said they are the slowest of the top teams. W03 OTOH is I believe an overall better and cleaner design with one issue, tire wear, and the crux of that issue has proven it's not as easily corrected by the way W03 has been performing not to mention Mercedes' infrastructure isn't yet quite what Ferrari's has proven to be. At the end of the day, F2012 on its best day is not MP4-27, RB8, E20, and if W03 has their upgrade package right then I'd have no issue saying it would be better than F2012 too. The odd front end suspension, constant exhaust changing the first half, very odd sidepod design and internal cooling configuration, inconsistent results (great in the wet though! just like W02!) and I believe they designed this car so only one man can drive it which to me makes no sense. Just my opinion.