Jonnycraig wrote:Yes, and his opinion of what is wrong differs with what was reported by AMuS (who first reported the issues) as the concern of Red Bull & Mercedes. Added to that, his notion that Vettels driving style is causing problems then raises the question of why Webber, Hamilton & Rosberg are struggling. Webber has a vastly different driving style to Vettel, being infact the complete opposite of what he suggests the issue is, and yet has been wearing his tyres out even quicker than Vettel.zeph wrote:Did you read the article? That is not what Anderson is saying at all.
It certainly seems strange that the two teams with the most downforce are struggling when the answer is apparently just to not drive like Vettel.
http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 01436.html
The AMuS article should you be interested. Claims supposedly from RB & Merc that the new construction with steel ring causes more wear the more downforce you have.
Aided by the fact Alonso failed to finish and Raikonnen was nowhere on the intermediates.zeph wrote:What is more, RBR is not exactly at a disadvantage. They took the double in Malaysia, for crying out loud...
My German isn't all that great, but I think I understand that AMuS article well enough. Like I said in my previous post, I think these tires suck. And I would certainly want to see things differently next season.
But the article also strikes me as the first move in a propaganda war. RBR and Mercedes (both Austro/German-owned, incidentally) may have more trouble adjusting to the new tires than the other teams, so yeah, let's use sympathetic media to rally up support for our POV.
They seem to suggest that the tires were deliberately designed to put high-downforce cars at a disadvantage. While the article does a fairly good job of explaining how that could be, it does not prove that is what happened. It is merely supposition from the RBR camp.
Andersen offers an alternative view, and while I do not dismiss RBR's theory, I find his explanation a sensible one, and his argument that to change the tires now would be unfair to other teams a valid one.
Also, the AMuS header talks about RBR and Mercedes, but the article primarily airs RBR's views, with a lone reference to something Lauda said being about all they have from Mercedes. Andersen only mentions RBR clamoring for new tires.
At the end of the day, they all have the same tires and need to make them work. RBR had similar problems at the start of last season but came back strong in the second half.
Regarding Malaysia, the two teams that complain, RBR and Merc, finished 1, 2, 3 and 4. If you want to attribute that
result to Alonso's exit and Raikkonen's lack of pace (who finished behind Grosjean, btw), I doubt anything I could say would change your mind.