arguably virtually impossible at a team such as Redbull with a reigning world champion whom will/logically automatically gets benefit over the 'new guy'.basti313 wrote:He had the same software for qually with a special mapping for the new sensor, but his engineers gave him the wrong mapping (just a number to pick on the steering wheel).alexx_88 wrote:Still, Manoah2u has a point.
If Vettel's car was hit by software problems in FP3, why not copy the one that Ricciardo was using?
Why they did not use the same mapping as for Ric? Possibly just no communication in the garage during qually. Silly fault in the garage, not more.
the simple fact remains; even if they really did make such a ' mindblowing' mistake, - supposedly a 'silly fault' - then they could still have easily switched it pre-race. they certainly were quite busy on vettel's car just before the race. So they had all the material, all the software and all the posibilities at hand. But for some reason, they didn't, and then, when the race commenced, it was too late.
I got the impression seeing patterns of Vettel's car not functioning 'correctly', similar as to how it behaved during (parts of) testing. It even sounded the same when it went for the grid.
This to me suggests RedBull didn't have a bad car at all, all along - but they were trying to 'play' around during testing on a 'theoretical' setup that might give the RB10 a big extra. They still haven't worked that out, and imho, that's what happened this weekend.
So yes, again, there were tech issues with vettel's car, but seemingly that was the result of a setting they 'stubbornly' maintained or kept using, because again - Ricky's car purred like a kitten. That fact tells you all you need to know. Simple as that.