Nomore wrote:With what we saw in China, Ferrari is the favorite to win the race.
Disagree, on the grounds that China is a very different circuit layout to Bahrain, with very different demands on the cars. Also, it's an entirely different climate. China is a very cold race - Bahrain is a very hot race.
Maelstrom wrote:The Lotus was the quickest car in Melbourne but was off the pace in Malaysia. But they were quick again in China.
Very oddly (IMO) the common denominator was that China/Melbourne were very cold races - Malaysia was hot.
Red Bull wasn't the quickest in China but were 1-2 in Malaysia.
A hot race.
Nomore wrote:I think Ferrari was the fastest car in Melbourne
Alonso did his final stop on lap 39, and did his fastest racing lap on lap 53 - 14 laps into the stint. Raikkonen did his final stop on lap 34, and did his fastest racing lap on lap 56 - 22 laps into the stint. Alonso did his fastest lap of 1:29.560 - compared to Raikkonen's 1:29.274, which is 0.286 faster.
Taking into account decreasing fuel loads - if we normalise the fuel effect at 1 tenth per lap, that means that Alonso was 0.286-0.300 = 0.014s faster than Raikkonen. Problem is, Raikkonen's lap was done on 22 lap old tyres, not 14.
In conclusion - Alonso on tyres 8 laps younger, was an *entire* 0.014s faster. Considering the tyre ages, I'd have to say they *weren't* the fastest in Melbourne.
In china it was simple, Ferrari was the fastest car.
Agreed. Though it is of course "China" and not "china."
There isn't any type of data or any type of logical connection to suggest RB will win Bahrain in normal conditions.
There isn't any type of data or any type of logical connection to suggest Ferrari will win Bahrain in normal conditions.
Bear in mind:
Bahrain has a very abrasive track surface - Shanghai has a very smooth track surface.
Bahrain is always very hot - Shanghai is always very cold
Bahrain is very rear-limited - Shanghai is very front-limited
Bahrain is very stop-start - Shanghai isn't.
rssh wrote:Is Bahrain a rear limited track ?
Yep!
I don't want to make bold predictions but Lotus may have an edge here because they were good here last year
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Also I would watch out for FI because they have good balance in hot conditions (European and Bahrain last year)
Interestingly - those two teams have generally performed better in the two cold races this year (rather than the hot race)