If that's the case I am keen to know why guys in the garage and on the pitwall did not noticed that.GPR-A wrote:So, Anthony was almost right when he said, the car was probably not in gear!
If that's the case I am keen to know why guys in the garage and on the pitwall did not noticed that.GPR-A wrote:So, Anthony was almost right when he said, the car was probably not in gear!
It's hard to tell whether you are joking or not but the start system is exactly the same as it was previously.Jolle wrote:"yes yes yes, I know what I'm doing"GPR-A wrote:Anthony Davidson was showing on Skypad a clip of Kimi's onboard at start. what happened on his steering wasn't clear as the display of Kimi's steering was not visible due to the angle of the shot. But he was guessing that, the car wasn't in the gear, because Kimi did released the first clutch and boom, the car didn't move. He then immediately went to manual mode and got the car running. Until Ferrari releases a statement, it would be unclear if it was a clutch that was the culprit or was it a driver error. Following is the only shot I could get from Youtube. This is FOM snap, but the one that was shown on Sky was without the on screen graphic display.ChrisF1 wrote:I think I saw a headline where Kimi was blaming the clutch?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCvnvUPmMQk
it would be quite funny if the most experienced drivers on the grid have trouble with this "old fashion" start system
Let me use the most abused theory here, the theory of diminishing returns. McLaren-Honda have more to gain than Ferrari and Mercedes. Hence, it is more optimistic situation for McLaren-Honda to get out from Q2 to P2, than for Ferrari to get out of P2 to P1. Anything can happen.bhall II wrote:It's much better to be fighting for P2 than it is to be fighting for Q2.Andres125sx wrote:You Ferrari fans think Ferrari should be proud of fighting for 2nd place?
Sorry but you´re insisting on the same, comparing Ferrari with McH so Ferrari doesn´t look that bad, when Ferrari should be comparing with Mercedes, not with the first season of a long term projectbhall II wrote:It's much better to be fighting for P2 than it is to be fighting for Q2.Andres125sx wrote:You Ferrari fans think Ferrari should be proud of fighting for 2nd place?
Yes, i'm happy with the 2nd place. Better be second for now, then be at the back fighting with Manor. And it's not only Ferrari that should be comparing with Mercedes. Mclaren should be doing that too. And if your faith tells you that next year Mclaren will be better, mine tells me that Ferrari will be even better.Andres125sx wrote:Sorry but you´re insisting on the same, comparing Ferrari with McH so Ferrari doesn´t look that bad, when Ferrari should be comparing with Mercedes, not with the first season of a long term projectbhall II wrote:It's much better to be fighting for P2 than it is to be fighting for Q2.Andres125sx wrote:You Ferrari fans think Ferrari should be proud of fighting for 2nd place?
And you didn´t answer the question, as everyone reading this thread. Coincidence? Or maybe Alonso is not far wrong there?
No they shouldn´t. Do you understand what a long term project means?santos wrote: And it's not only Ferrari that should be comparing with Mercedes. Mclaren should be doing that too.
FOXSports.com, January 31, 2015 wrote:"If for three or four seasons in a row the car has the same problems, that means you are not developing in the right directions, and it's the driver's fault," [the legendary Mauro] Forghieri told the Italian website diariodelweb.it.
I guess you didn´t expect anyone comparing F14T and MP4-30 times. Unluckily for you I found it an interesting comparison and took my time to compare, even when we both know this is a bit absurd as track conditions change it all as well as tyres, but anycase the overall picture provide a good reference, at least to prove you wrong. Sorry but reality is reality.bhall II wrote:Given the context of the conversation, the better comparison is MP4-30 vs F14 T - two first-year projects - and the MP4-30 has yet to eclipse last year's Ferrari in any qualifying session. In fact, the deficit is usually no less than 0.6s.
I can agree with this, it´s been a very risky move, but we can´t judge it yetbhall II wrote:So, yeah. Alonso jumped from the frying pan into the fire.
Ferrari has improved a lot, they must have done something good obviously. But not enough yetbhall II wrote:As to the strength of the current Ferrari, I think this speaks volumes...
http://i.imgur.com/dFxW24S.jpg
RB11's revised sidepods strongly suggest Red Bull has already copied Ferrari's winged radiators...
http://i.imgur.com/BMe3RSe.jpg
...and if the Masters of Aero copy you, that's a pretty good indication you're headed in the right direction.
So, maybe Forghieri was correct...
FOXSports.com, January 31, 2015 wrote:"If for three or four seasons in a row the car has the same problems, that means you are not developing in the right directions, and it's the driver's fault," [the legendary Mauro] Forghieri told the Italian website diariodelweb.it.
Maybe if you´d read a bit more carefully...bhall II wrote:I don't know where you got those numbers, but I certainly hope you didn't have to pay to get them...
http://i.imgur.com/VLjm4Jn.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/dJ5nvvj.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/Ngl3GrJ.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/Jm5HNPa.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/74pQSCN.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/LAIlj8r.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/JYTQChW.jpg
EDIT: If the next step is to argue about track conditions, I'd rather not. I've said my piece.
And you obviously missed this too...Andres125sx wrote:Comparing MP4-30 with last season´s F14T, and comparing always Alonso laps as he drove/drive both cars (except Melbourne), in same session (Q1 mainly). Basically comparing same driver in same session with both cars.
You´re comparing Alonso vs Button or Alonso vs Kimi, while I´m comparing Alonso vs Alonso, what IMHO is a lot more accurate if you´re trying to compare cars that have been driven by the same driver in consecutive seasons.Andres125sx wrote:If you compare fastest times in qualifying F14T wins obvisously (maybe that´s what you did), because with same laptimes F14T passed to Q3 so there was more rubber on track, temperatures always increase in that period, and track conditions always improve, so it´s more fair to compare in same session
I read every word. They just don't make a whole lot of sense to me. For example...Andres125sx wrote:Maybe if you´d read a bit more carefully...
Spain: Pole was 3 seconds slower this season so I guess track conditions were too different.
Comparing same driver, in same session, MP4-30 is around 1 tenth faster than F14T in average, even the links you posted show this
Brilliant, just had the post downvoted and marked as incorrect So which part is actually incorrect:alexx_88 wrote:The performance of this year's Ferrari finally shows the stupidity of the claim that drivers actually have a significant role in car development. This year's Ferrari was developed while Alonso was there, as the last 4 cars were as well. Wouldn't you say that it's much more plausible the improvement came from the engineers that were hired and from the complete 180 degrees change in approach that happened with Ferrari's leadership?
Although Forghieri is a legend, he probably lacks the understanding of today's data acquisition systems and how useless driver feedback is for a power unit which has 3 motors and 2 generators.
Fair enough, I made a mistake with Spain GP, but that doesn´t change the picture that much, I didn´t consider that GP when it´s 1 tenth slower. Nothing change to the point you were stating (6 tenths slower at least)bhall II wrote:I read every word. They just don't make a whole lot of sense to me. For example...Andres125sx wrote:Maybe if you´d read a bit more carefully...
http://i.imgur.com/kR9zTNq.jpgSpain: Pole was 3 seconds slower this season so I guess track conditions were too different.
I can't wrap my head around this one at all...
http://i.imgur.com/ruOWpgr.jpgComparing same driver, in same session, MP4-30 is around 1 tenth faster than F14T in average, even the links you posted show this
Heros? Supernatural intervention?bhall II wrote:Given your metric, are we to assume that instances in which the hero hasn't outqualified his teammate are examples of supernatural intervention?
No it´s not. Different drivers perform different on different tracks. Kimi may be faster at track A while Alonso may be faster at track B. Even car setups are different what means one can be faster at some track and slower at some other. Comparing different drivers you´re bringing more variables wich may distort car comparison, while a driver may make some mistake loosing some tenth but on any Q they usually do more than one attempt, so driver mistakes are minimized.bhall II wrote: Or is it more logical to understand that a car's pace is better defined by its quickest laptimes, regardless of the driver?
You´re several seasons outdated. Alonso´s manager is Luis García Abad for at least 5-6 seasons nowbhall II wrote: Plus, he has a truly awful manager in Flavio Briatore, a man who should be utterly ashamed of himself for the way he's handled Alonso's career. Where a competent manager tries to talk his client down from the edge, Briatore encourages the jump.