basti313 wrote:ringo wrote:GPR-A wrote:What's going on with Ferrari? They brought PU upgrades and a new front wing and landed up 8 tenths behind (Nico's Q2 against Vettel's Q3 best times)? Nico's pole time is actually slower than the Q2 time and it was natural given the fact that Lewis was out of contention. It would be a safe assumption that the times would have been much better on Mercedes' cars if both would have gone for pole, probably dipping under 1:35.xxx. So the difference to Ferrari would have been larger too.
And in Chinese GP, they claimed the gap to Mercedes was just 1 tenth.
I think they are closer, but they are probably not working the tyres well on this track.
Sky showed some nice comparisons. They (Surer) claim the rear suspension to be the gamechanger: Merc is running a much softer suspension and, thus, has more traction out of the corners. It looks nearly like the blown diffusor RedBulls when exiting the corners like on rails. On the other hand the Ferraris had a lot of power oversteer. Surer said most cars you can not run as soft as the Merc as the driver would loose the feeling for the car.
What's wrong with Ferrari? Nothing, it's same as China where they were 0,1 behind:
- China Rosberg - 1st F 0,51 - 2nd F 0,84
- Russia - 1st F 0,71 - 2nd F 1,14
A. Two tenths = Rosberg's lap 0,1 better, better Ferrari 0,1 worse, second Ferrari even worse (driver). Making up 0,8 and using Q2 vs Q3 because you liked it is all wrong. Not everyone got better on the second run in Q3, plus Hamilton wasn't there in China either (wrong anyway).
B. So now it's softs that Ferrari supposedly have a problem with and Merc is perfect at? I thought it was mediums which they don't run at all. How do you explain qualifying then which is on supersofts? I guess that covers all three compounds. Only hope is US and H but the pattern is not optimistic