f1316 wrote:It does occur to me that the conservatively hard pirelli compounds this year have played into Mercedes ' hands.
Given that a) the gap is always bigger with the hard compounds and b) they were complaining of overheating with the softer ones in Singapore, it does seem as if their old tyre wear problems would still be present if pirelli hadn't consciously made more durable tyres this year in order to cope with the increased torque.
I think you'll find the reason Merc's advantage is bigger with harder compounds is because their car performance is shown more so than when using say super-softs, when all the other cars get a lot more grip. Merc gain less from super-soft because they already get a very good lap time out of soft, medium, etc. Niki Lauda said as much as Singapore, that they had a bigger gap with soft, but the others gained on them with the extra grip from super-soft. Also, with regards to tyres, sure Merc may overheat the tyres on a single lap and that's one of the reasons why they can generate good 1 lap pace. This said if you look over the season, Merc have arguably had better tyre management than any other team. Look at Lewis' first stint at Singapore, when all the others behind him dropped off the cliff he was still pumping in very good lap times. This has also been the case at many other circuits, such as China. The only other possibility, which is also likely to an extent is that the reason Vettel for example looked close to Lewis' pace at the start of the first stint is because he was going really slow, to save the tyres, which just highlights how much pace the Mercs have in hand. They can crawl round and save tyres and still be fastest. Either way, they certainly don't have big tyre issues like last year and seem to be able to adapt their setup very well from Friday practice to solve any issues that may arise.