reallocating resources (on-track resources as in assistance) and giving Irvine the optimum strategy: yes. Schumacher would have been 100% confirmed to be out for atleast that race.mnmracer wrote:There was roughly (from the top of my head) half an hour between Schumacher's crash and the restart of the race. Even without knowing anything about the season, does it make sense that during that half an hour, Ferrari re-assigns resources, redesigns and rebuilds the car for that very same race? Relocating, redesigning and rebuilding in half an hour?turbof1 wrote:Again, I'm not intending on getting tangled up too much in this. And I don't know enough about that season to do so anyway, only that Schumacher broke his leg and that Irvine was a contender until the penultimate race, at which point Schumacher was back in the fray and duly handed his place over to Irvine.
reallocating and rebuilding the car specific for Irvine is a bit far fetched. Again the development path of the car would not have been changed. Updates that bring extra horsepower and/or extra downforce would be there with or without the accident. Very, very small details perhaps would have been altered to suite Irvine, but I even doubt that. car setup is more then enough to adapt a car to a driver's likings. And I think Irvine was able to extract more out of this after the British gp, once the situation was fully clear.
I think dialing this back to Vettel and Ricciardo is matter of perspective. I also believe Vettel struggles more then Ricciardo with the car due a lack of df (especially low speed df). Does that automatically mean Vettel had a no. 1 position at red bull when he was teamed up with Webber? No; extra downforce benefits every driver, how much you extract from that depends from driver to driver. Vettel extracted more out of the extra low speed downforce then Webber did, while webber lost less performance then Vettel when that downforce wasn't there.
And I think this is the same here: Vettel will eventually adapt to it, but at the moment he's struggling more then Ricciardo. Yes, there's absolutely no denial Vettel has a huge portion of bad luck so far, but the moments the 2 are on equal grounds Ricciardo has that extra confidence.