Yea the Grosjean/Kimi situation is quite interesting.turbof1 wrote:Yeah. you have to feel for the man. Webber moved a bit to the right, forcing Lewis to do that as well, which ended up in Vettel's wing. Nobody can be really blamed. It's bad luck.
Raikkonen really was nowhere today, wasn't he? Since Raikkonen signed for Ferrari, Grosjean is driving suddenly much better compared to the Fin.
But we know for a fact Grosjean has not enjoyed the latest updates in the first half of the season.stefan_ wrote:Since not a lot of updates are coming for Lotus (I don't think they have any),
New parts were never made in pairs, because first of all it may have been be a loss of money if they made 2 parts that didn't work as expected. They were testing on Kimi's car simply because Romain was sorting himself up and Kimi is, theoretically, able to give a better feedback as he is a more experienced driver, and he was in the fight for the title. If a part worked well (ex.: slim rear bodywork) it was brought to Romain also.SectorOne wrote:But we know for a fact Grosjean has not enjoyed the latest updates in the first half of the season.stefan_ wrote:Since not a lot of updates are coming for Lotus (I don't think they have any),
I´m not saying that is the cause for what is happening now but rather that the gap was slightly tweaked by Grosjean not always having the best equipment in the early part of the season.
Most teams bring parts to both drivers, it´s nothing alien to the teams.stefan_ wrote:New parts were never made in pairs, because first of all it may have been be a loss of money if they made 2 parts that didn't work as expected. They were testing on Kimi's car simply because Romain was sorting himself up and Kimi is, theoretically, able to give a better feedback as he is a more experienced driver, and he was in the fight for the title. If a part worked well (ex.: slim rear bodywork) it was brought to Romain also.
I think that is the most important bit. Lotus didn't really introduce alot of new updates the last races. The biggest one was the longer chassis, which I believe both got simultaneously.stefan_ wrote:New parts were never made in pairs, because first of all it may have been be a loss of money if they made 2 parts that didn't work as expected. They were testing on Kimi's car simply because Romain was sorting himself up and Kimi is, theoretically, able to give a better feedback as he is a more experienced driver, and he was in the fight for the title. If a part worked well (ex.: slim rear bodywork) it was brought to Romain also.SectorOne wrote:But we know for a fact Grosjean has not enjoyed the latest updates in the first half of the season.stefan_ wrote:Since not a lot of updates are coming for Lotus (I don't think they have any),
I´m not saying that is the cause for what is happening now but rather that the gap was slightly tweaked by Grosjean not always having the best equipment in the early part of the season.
Joie de vivre wrote:But why is that? Maybe sabotage Kimi after what happened in Korea?turbof1 wrote:Since Raikkonen signed for Ferrari, Grosjean is driving suddenly much better compared to the Fin.
Pretty much. I don't understand the guy who blamed Hamilton, too much bias there.Just_a_fan wrote: Hamilton had gone through the gap though. Vettel was in effect behind him. Hamilton was alongside Webber. It was Webber's swerve that made Hamilton move across and lightly clip Vettel's front wing. In that respect, Webber's swerve worked because it caused one of his competitors to fall back. I bet he'd have been happier if Hamilton had wiped Vettel's nose off completely.
Raikkonen will keep doing what he can there but his job is done. I know some individuals who know very little about racing drivers like to big up Grosjean, mostly for their own bizarre reasons, but the points situation over the past two seasons tells you everything you need to know.Joie de vivre wrote:But why is that? Maybe sabotage Kimi after what happened in Korea?turbof1 wrote:Since Raikkonen signed for Ferrari, Grosjean is driving suddenly much better compared to the Fin.
Kimi usually races very well. However if it weren't for small mistake from Lewis at the start and unsafe release for Rosberg we would likely have another 2 more cars in front of him.foxmulder_ms wrote:How can you guys say Raikkonen was not good in this race? In the race he was great. He took 5th position from starting 10th passing quite competitive cars. One can say he is under performing in qually for last 3 races but in the race he is phenomenal. Gaining more places than anyone else with some great moves.
Well we can't say Kimi is a bad driver, but, the fact is, he gained the postions because his car is better than those cars in midfield (saubers, Mclarens), higher places were untargatable today). Anyway, Grosjean is driving faster than him since Hungaroring/Nurburgring, but the luck and mistakes didn't help Romain, I think Romain would won Hungaroring if there would be no drive thru penalty... anyway, Grosjean is 0.5 sec quicker than Kimi in the same car and Romain's race starts are better than Kimi's, Kimi always drops a place or two on start. Grosjean is realy on a charge now, I think he is the only one who can stop the Vettel's winning streak, and the guys at Redbull should be aware of him.foxmulder_ms wrote:How can you guys say Raikkonen was not good in this race? In the race he was great. He took 5th position from starting 10th passing quite competitive cars. One can say he is under performing in qually for last 3 races but in the race he is phenomenal. Gaining more places than anyone else with some great moves.