Race 1-2s and front row lockouts are dependent on driver, so you can't use those. You have to take the performance of the lead car as the marker, the second driver just didn't maximise the car.SectorOne wrote:What you look at isDiesel wrote:If you want to try to measure the dominance based on pace, look at fastest laps. Still not perfect, because the lead car is likely to coast to the finish towards the end of the race, when the cars tend to be quicker.
1, points
1, wins
2, front row lockouts
3, race 1-2´s
4, reliability
5, time delta on average to nearest competitor
The RB7 was a very dominant car but it was not as dominant as the Mercedes.
Yes points wise it was fairly close but only because of point 4 in regards to the Mercedes.
In terms of actual pace compared to it´s rivals the RB7 is not even in the same solar system.
The RB7 got beaten on pure pace at venues like Nurburgring and Suzuka.
The W05 by contrast has never been beaten on pure pace.
I never said the RB7 was more dominant, or equal, it just said it wasn't that far behind, the F2004 was probably even closer.