basti313 wrote:As this point is stressed again and again: They shifted 5 mechanics from the pit crew. Not less, not more. They did not shift the data engineers, nor the race engineers.
Furthermore these mechanics do not touch anything in the failed components, they just mount the components to the car with a 2-eye-principle, so an engineer is always watching their hands.
There is simply no coincidence between the 5 exchanged mechanics and the mechanical failures. By the way, where are the rumors coming from? Did Ham say anything like that? There would be rather a coincidence between the bad pitstops and the mechanics exchange.
Why did they changed "just 5 mechanics"? Which other team has done that? What is the exact reason for that?
Lewis Hamilton admits Mercedes' decision to move his mechanics to rival Nico Rosberg's garage has 'all sorts of psychological effects
basti313 wrote:In my point of view this is a completely wrong way to look at it. Three out of 42 is just nonsense statistics as only one ICE failed. Last year the one with the ICE failure was Rosberg, so we would be good on statistics if we count this one...
The other two failures were MGU-H failures, which burned away when using the Q-mode. They survived normal usage during a race, but burned once at Q, so I assume a similar bad batch. It was simply bad luck to get the bad batch and then an understandable coincidence to get, due to the failure, another H of this batch mounted.
More than the number of components, the manner and timing where they fail is more critical.
-The MGU-H popped just before the Q3 started, which is where the Quali Mode is used, meaning the components fail even before qualy mode is used.
-He suffers a repeat of the MGU-H failure in Bahrain, again in Q3. Common sense.
-Lewis suddenly loses power and stalls in Monaco, again in Q3. A restart works just fine, but loses critical banker lap and making him go longer.
-In Russia, the moment he catches Nico and starts chasing him, guess what happens! Water pressure goes off, forcing Lewis to abort the chase and miraculously the car finishes the race with no water at all.
-In Canada, Lewis had a great friday, was over half a second faster consistently. What happens on Saturday, starts losing feel of the car. Luckily manages to get a pole and admits, it wasn't a great lap as he was struggling.
-In Baku, once again Lewis had a great friday and was more than half a second quick in every lap against Nico. Boom! He loses all the balance for Saturday. Pathetic FP3 with too many break locking and finally crashing, in Q3. In race, Lewis loses power mode and significantly loses power. It was said that Nico also had the problem, but he doesn't lose lap time as Lewis does and manages to fix it too. How? When Lewis asks over the radio, should I try different modes, the answer is "we don't suggest that".
- In Singapore, a freak hydraulic leak forces a whole session to be abandoned. A freak hydraulic leak? Who was responsible for it? Generally, both the cars are so similarly set up (by everyone in Mercedes' admission) with very limited variation. Still, Lewis' side of the garage is unable to replicate Nico's data for Lewis' setup. His car was 0.7 seconds off the pace on Qualy. Nico crashes in FP1, but that has no bearing on his car!!!
-From Singapore 2015, Mercedes changed the suspension type that was not attuned to the feeling of the car for Lewis, which started favoring Nico.
-Since last year's Hungary, they have clutch issues and they haven't managed to fix it. A Team that has fixed every single issue, without allowing a recurrence, doesn't want to fix the clutch problem. Why?