They are running a completely different setup today. And lewis just went purple 1:23:022 on softs so 0.25 up on massa and kimi's super soft runs.henra wrote:Hmm, that would leave some hope. Massa did a 1:23.963 with the softs today.Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:1:23.648 with the soft tyres for Hamilton
Having seen Rosbergs incredible time from yesterday there still is a good chance today's time didn't reflect the full potential of the W06.
Autosport Live wrote:15:48 Something we haven't really talked about yet is the speed trap data, which is supplied by the circuit. Here's yesterday's start-finish line speeds:
Bottas - 288.0km/h
Nasr - 287.2km/h
Maldonado - 285.7km/h
Rosberg - 282.7km/h
Verstappen - 281.9km/h
Kvyat - 279.7km/h
Hulkenberg - 279.0km/h
Vettel - 278.3km/h
Button - 274.8km/h
I guess that means they'll turn up the power. And I don't think anybody was expecting McHonda to show up and be competitive at the first race after testing.Felipe 92 wrote:McLaren press conference :
Boullier: "Reliability is still a worry. It'll take a few races. We may start being competitive once we get to Europe"
Arai confirmed they will test the durability of the engine tomorrow and Boullier said they're not sure they'll be able to make a race sim.
I wasn`t expecting that they`ll be competitive, but I was expecting some race sims and more than 12 laps in a single stint.dren wrote:I guess that means they'll turn up the power. And I don't think anybody was expecting McHonda to show up and be competitive at the first race after testing.Felipe 92 wrote:McLaren press conference :
Boullier: "Reliability is still a worry. It'll take a few races. We may start being competitive once we get to Europe"
Arai confirmed they will test the durability of the engine tomorrow and Boullier said they're not sure they'll be able to make a race sim.
This actually is the case for some other F1 drivers, they got the opportunity because of sponsors, not because of talentturbof1 wrote:Removed the sexist crap in the topic for following reasons:
-Criticism shouldn't be about somebodies looks, should be about the way he or she drives. I tent to agree she did not earn her position, but let's not involve idiotic, nonsensical reasons.
-It is off topic, and belongs in the lotus team thread, where ironically the discussion is on point about Carmen's driving ability
Right, I fully get that. However some of the comments here were still born out of the prejudgement woman can't be as good as man. I fully underline this sexist crap is sowed across motorsport, but does NOT mean any of us should be enforcing it.Andres125sx wrote:This actually is the case for some other F1 drivers, they got the opportunity because of sponsors, not because of talentturbof1 wrote:Removed the sexist crap in the topic for following reasons:
-Criticism shouldn't be about somebodies looks, should be about the way he or she drives. I tent to agree she did not earn her position, but let's not involve idiotic, nonsensical reasons.
-It is off topic, and belongs in the lotus team thread, where ironically the discussion is on point about Carmen's driving ability
But if the driver is a woman, then this is not ignored as it usually is when the driver is a man
F1 is about politics and money, nothing new
Wow, they've written off two months and 4 grand prix. It's quite a statement, especially when McLaren are not renowned for accurately predicting their return to competitiveness.Felipe 92 wrote:McLaren press conference :
Boullier: "Reliability is still a worry. It'll take a few races. We may start being competitive once we get to Europe"