elFranZ wrote:In my opinion, what we all saw in Singapore was more than just track related.
Beware: this is a very rude reconstuction, maybe totally wrong, and I'll be very happy if someone can furtherly expand the matter.
Starting in Singapore, Pirelli's advices on tyres pressures and angles have become mandatory. That is the only variable from the previous races. The higher pressures allowed by the new rule translate into a smaller contact area between the tyre and the tarmac, which is a very elaborate way to say: less grip.
So the car became suddenly more confortable with the new specs. That happened also on the RB11, which is generally recognised as a good chassis.
Of course track layout played a major role in the total account of pure lap times (23 turns, 5kms, about 2 min/lap), but I suspect there's much more. No way in two weeks to get about two seconds on the dominant car, so something happened on tyres for me.
I understand two things:
1) We're about to go off topic big time and
2) The way I heard people talk about tyre pressures (and by people I mainly mean Niki Lauda (Merc), who is working for German broadcaster RTL as a co-host and Toto Wolff (Also Merc, so there goes the credibility of my sources...)), I don't think the Pirelli advice is mandatory now, but even if it were, tyre pressures were only upped for the high-speed circuit of monza after Vettel and Rosberg's tyre failures in Belgium. The adviced tyre pressure is now back down to pre-vettel's-outburst races. So, assuming it were now mandatory to follow Pirellis advice, that would mean that Merc had not followed that advice before at all, not even by a long shot.
Then again, all Merc staff have told the media they couldn't make the tyres work and they didn't know why.
I do not understand what I saw last weekend but I also do not see how a track layout can cost Merc 2secs. The Red Bulls clearly performed so well because engine power was not kernel in Singapore and apparently their chassis is quite okay, so they'll be off the pace again for the rest of the year (maybe not in Russia, that layout is similar to SIngapore in my head).
Which leaves us at The SF15-T (or FIST, as I read it to myself when nobody's listening
). The car performes well on the straight now as we've seen in monza, and Ferrari can make it behave in faster corners (like in Spain). So all in all, Japan is going to be a one-two