ringo wrote:There is some element of waning attention given to Hamilton's power unit, be it intentional or accidental. You don't meticulously assemble and test an engine for hundreds of laps and then all of a sudden you repeat the same simple mistake with the ERS for 2 races in a row. There is obviously some lack of attention in the factory or the garage when it comes to assembling or quality control when the same thing fails twice. So mercedes does deserve all the shtick they are getting over the reliability problems.
A cracked water pipe is also another inexcusable failure. Whatever happened to non-destructive testing and pressure testing?
When it comes to such elite engineering operations, these failures aren't just "racing" as we think most times. You have to look on it like a product that has a guarantee of quality once it leaves the factory; regardless if these are prototypes.
I agree Mercedes must do better. But why is their specific and vociferous criticism of "reliability" when a specific side of the garage suffers? Rosberg himself had an issue in Sochi with the PU after all.
Not to say that Rosberg would have won last year, but at Belgium he was 28 points behind Hamilton and four races later in Russia it was 73 points. Both suffered issues but it hit Rosberg far harder in terms of pivoting the championship to a forgone conclusion.
Then we look at the direct competition, who themselves have had a less than stellar 2016 in terms of reliability.
Ferrari? Look how that is turning out for Vettel. Yet people understand Ferrari are pushing like crazy, therefore it is understandable.
However, would it not be the case for Mercedes to react to this threat and push back in return? New fuel lines in Russia are testimony that Mercedes themselves are looking to eek out every ounce of performance wherever that may come from.
So yes, it has been an abysmal start for Hamilton. Not by design, but by circumstance and luck. As another poster intimated, if the next bout of reliability issues strike Mercedes again, it is 50% likely to strike Hamilton as it is Rosberg. When tossing the coin sometimes you'll get head(s) 10 times in a row(
). The coin doesn't remember the previous result when flipped again.
Following this, nor does luck have a recollection of results to dish out evenly. Some people get all the luck, others make their own, while others sit and weep at their misfortune.
What has been highlighted to me, is that Hamilton has demonstrated a good deal of restraint and tact throughout this series of unfortunate events. And that can only be a positive right?