Live timing with sector times:
http://www.f1lt.com/
Should work for the race.
yeah but on this track its very difficult to overtake theres that chicane at the end by the time driver in front has accelerated theyll be several metre infront heading onto straight wich makes it diffucult to overtake.J0rd4n wrote:Why so? Lewis was able to get the job done on the same strategy plenty of times last year. Ferrari don't look very close around here so I assume it will just be a similar story to the races last year.arahman_93 wrote:Lewis has to surely do the opposite of Rosbergs strategy if he wants a shot at the win.
Would love to see role reverse of last year, lewis to use the meduim at the end.
That would make a good climax.
giantfan10 wrote: After ferrari installs their race engine get back to me with what the gap is....... they arre running the engine they took out of race rotation after china.....
OK. As you asked, I am back after Ferrari installed their race engine. With that, in qualifying Ferrari has fallen behind, compared to Bahrain. From 4 tenth gap in Bahrain to 8 tenth in Barcelona, with a 70% new car. Again, Vettel is a saving grace for Ferrari like Alonso used to be. Kimi being just the same donkey.giantfan10 wrote:if you think the gap is half a second you can go ahead and believe that i'm going to wait for qualifying and the race....you're not going to convince me otherwise so that should be the end of that.
After all, the trend hasn't changed much. Big talks of upgrades hasn't change the scenario at all. If anything, atleast Ferrari have gone back in their qualifying performance (Kimi with the old side pods and new rear wing, a 1.7 seconds behind pole of Merc !!!). Mercedes hasn't introduced anything big, just optimization and still moving forward. Mr. Arrivebenne, welcome to the world of useless Ferrari upgrades.GPR-A (22 Apr 2015, 04:57) wrote:One of the trends that I have seen over the last few years is that, whenever there is a GREATER news/speculation/rumor about BIG upgrades, it turns out to be a dud. Most of the efficient upgrades comes on a car, without making any news. One trend that was with Red Bull was that, when they were ready to bolt a good upgrade, they kept the highest confidentiality and when they were in soup, Horner kept speaking big about THINGS IN PIPELINE and blah blah blah. Until now, we have not witnessed the RUMORED 50 BHP gain from Merc engines, that we kept hearing about, before and in the winter testing cycle. 500 bar, log exhaust, ERS, blah blah blah, only to see them just being where they were end of last season or a bit more. There were no such HIGHLY ANTICIPATED rumours/speculations of a Ferrari resurgence. No one really expected Ferrari to bounce back with such vengeance and although some news was being made here and there, NO ONE anticipated the Ferrari resurgence. Last year same time, many people, inlcuding Red Bull were anticipating major changes from Barcelona, only see the lead of Merc rising. I remember last year, before Malaysia, Ron Dennis beating his chest and declaring HALF A SECOND gain upgrade, only to see them being just about stagnant.
With that been the trend, I would keep reading THE BIG UPGRADE news/speculations/rumors with A BOTTLE OF SALT.
It has never happened in Formula one in recent memory that A TEAM STARTED the season with handsome lead and then another team raised from ashes to win the championship by beating the leading team, although credible successors rise though the season. So, let's see how the dice rolls in European leg.
Lauda said it was just him not liking the setup, the car had too much understeer.Phillyred wrote:What was up with Lewis' middle sector? Did he comment on it yet??
Ah fair enough, I completely forgot about the overtaking difficulty on this track. Lewis might be leading into turn 1 anyway and then none of this might matter. But hopefully not so the race is exciting,arahman_93 wrote:yeah but on this track its very difficult to overtake theres that chicane at the end by the time driver in front has accelerated theyll be several metre infront heading onto straight wich makes it diffucult to overtake.J0rd4n wrote:Why so? Lewis was able to get the job done on the same strategy plenty of times last year. Ferrari don't look very close around here so I assume it will just be a similar story to the races last year.arahman_93 wrote:Lewis has to surely do the opposite of Rosbergs strategy if he wants a shot at the win.
Would love to see role reverse of last year, lewis to use the meduim at the end.
That would make a good climax.
personally i'd do the oposite (its a chance) to whatever tyres rosberg puts on for the first pit stop, theres nothing to loose by doing that we saw that with kimi last grand prix.(low fuel faster tyre and you never know with saftey car)
we shall see anyway hoping for a good race that's all that matters. [-o<
So when it suits Merc fans, Australia/China comes up to show Merc advantage is bigger. And when it comes to showing Ferrari haven't improved with their updates, they choose the qualifying where Ferrari are closer?prince wrote:giantfan10 wrote: After ferrari installs their race engine get back to me with what the gap is....... they arre running the engine they took out of race rotation after china.....OK. As you asked, I am back after Ferrari installed their race engine. With that, in qualifying Ferrari has fallen behind, compared to Bahrain. From 4 tenth gap in Bahrain to 8 tenth in Barcelona, with a 70% new car. Again, Vettel is a saving grace for Ferrari like Alonso used to be. Kimi being just the same donkey.giantfan10 wrote:if you think the gap is half a second you can go ahead and believe that i'm going to wait for qualifying and the race....you're not going to convince me otherwise so that should be the end of that.
Kimi being considerably slower than Vettel was his own fault, it was an very poor lap. This isn't a very good indicator of how much they've improved, but Sky seem to think their upgrades haven't had the impact they desired.evered7 wrote:So when it suits Merc fans, Australia/China comes up to show Merc advantage is bigger. And when it comes to showing Ferrari haven't improved with their updates, they choose the qualifying where Ferrari are closer?prince wrote:giantfan10 wrote: After ferrari installs their race engine get back to me with what the gap is....... they arre running the engine they took out of race rotation after china.....OK. As you asked, I am back after Ferrari installed their race engine. With that, in qualifying Ferrari has fallen behind, compared to Bahrain. From 4 tenth gap in Bahrain to 8 tenth in Barcelona, with a 70% new car. Again, Vettel is a saving grace for Ferrari like Alonso used to be. Kimi being just the same donkey.giantfan10 wrote:if you think the gap is half a second you can go ahead and believe that i'm going to wait for qualifying and the race....you're not going to convince me otherwise so that should be the end of that.
The car has improved no doubt. Kimi with old sidepods being considerably slower than Vettel.
Vettel is .77 behind Mercedes. How do we know if Vettel would have gone faster with the old spec of parts? Only Kimi ran with that spec and was nowhere near the top 3 in Q1/Q3. Considering the gap in China/Australia, it looks like they have improved.J0rd4n wrote:Kimi being considerably slower than Vettel was his own fault, it was an very poor lap. This isn't a very good indicator of how much they've improved, but Sky seem to think their upgrades haven't had the impact they desired.evered7 wrote:
So when it suits Merc fans, Australia/China comes up to show Merc advantage is bigger. And when it comes to showing Ferrari haven't improved with their updates, they choose the qualifying where Ferrari are closer?
The car has improved no doubt. Kimi with old sidepods being considerably slower than Vettel.