Sevach wrote:SectorOne wrote:The merc havent showed any signs of being prone to eating its rear tires.
In Malaysia they had thermal degradation, not wear. In 60 degree track temps at that.
My prediction is biggest gap to Ferrari of the races we've seen so far.
Don't agree with that, Mercedes biggest advantage is high speed corners, Bahrain is mostly stop and go with some long straights and Ferrari has good straight line speed.
If I remember correctly, Merc always had good exit speeds out of slow corners, even when they were struggling in 2012 and 2013. A classic example of stop and go is Monaco, where they have been consistently good. Their biggest growth in the last couple of years has been on high speed corners and that is how the car has become good.
With the kind of downforce levels Merc is running from 2013, they naturally do not have speed on straights but the Merc customer cars have been topping on the straight line speed. I had mentioned it elsewhere, for Ferrari to take advantage of straight line speed, they have to be right at the tail of a Merc when the straight begins and that is not going to be possible due to the downforce advantage Merc has, which makes them get through the sequence of corners faster than Ferrari and move out of DRS detection range quickly by the time straight starts.
From last week in China, here are the top speeds in 3 sectors (Race).
Sector 1
Kimi 285.4
Vettel 283.9
Nico 282.9
Lewis 280.0
Sector 2
Nico 275.4
Lewis 275.1
Kimi 274.8
Vettel 273.6
Sector 3
Kimi 264.7
Vettel 262.2
Nico 260.5
Lewis 260.4
Qualifying Speed Trap (at the end of Back Straight)
Nico 334.6
Lewis 332.1
Vettel 331.6
Kimi 330.6
Shanghai, having the longest straight, still there wasn't anything on display from Ferrari in terms of their straight line speed.