After looking at the lap timesheet, initially I thought 16 seconds might be pretty accurate actually - after a closer inspection though, I think it's closer to 18-19 seconds.turbof1 wrote:I think a net loss of about 16 seconds could be for a normal pit stop; a rough guess.
Alonso's lap time suggest this:
Lap 27 1:47.661
Lap 28 1:50.021 P (+ 2.4s)
Lap 29 2:06.690 (+ 16.6s)
Lap 30 1:47.525
Kimi's lap times:
Lap 30 1:47.621
Lap 31 1:49.410 P (+ 1.8s)
Lap 32 2:06.245 (+ 16.8s)
Lap 33 1:46.055
When looking at drivers who did not pit during the safety-car, the figures seem roughly the same. The lap preceeding the pit-stop is around 2 seconds slower and then the following lap another 16+ seconds. I suspect that's because the pit-stop is along the straight, so it affects two laps effectively. If you add those two together, you are in fact closer to 18-19 seconds.
Regardless if it's 16 or 19 seconds though - it doesn't really change my prior argument at all.
EDIT: Actually, my times in the brackets are the difference to the preceeding lap. If you take 1:47.xxx as the nominal time without the pitstop, it's another 2 seconds putting it just in the ballpark of 20 seconds of a net-loss.