Pitstop corrected? Whatever, VET was behind several other cars than HAM and would have been fallen further behind.
If the SC was pure luck than what was the VSC?
Pitstop corrected? Whatever, VET was behind several other cars than HAM and would have been fallen further behind.
Seem like ALO had 2 left side wheels off and mashed the power peddle and spun the left rear hard while the right rear was on dry tarmac and may have killed the driveshaft.
On Sky they showed that Verstappen nearly did the same thing as Bottas, he just managed to save it: https://streamable.com/am88eRestomaniac wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 10:24Bottas spun whilst warming his tyres up. That's surly a rookie mistake, Bottas isn't a rookie.
True but Verstappen is a far more inexperinced driver. Bottas should know better.Godius wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 11:05On Sky they showed that Verstappen nearly did the same thing as Bottas, he just managed to save it: https://streamable.com/am88eRestomaniac wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 10:24Bottas spun whilst warming his tyres up. That's surly a rookie mistake, Bottas isn't a rookie.
The wrong assumption is, that the Inters were still competitive. Vet put 1sec in the one free sector on Ham. within one lap the Soft would have been easily 3sec faster than the Inters, because it had more grip in the corners at that point.Phil wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 10:54The only nonsense here is suggesting that the safety car put RedBull ahead of Ferrari.
Again: Ferrari pitted under the VSC which put them BEHIND RedBull. At that point, RedBull had track position as a result of staying out. Fact. Indisputable.
If there were no crash and no resulting safety car, the RedBulls had still been ahead and it is anyones guess if the Ferrari on slicks would have had the pace to overtake cars on inters on that damp/wet track.
Bear in mind, inters = quicker in the corners and damp patches, slicks quicker on the dry parts. Also assuming any car on slick tires attempting an overtake would have to go off line to pass and on to the damp parts makes me think that attempting passes would be difficult.
Yes, over the course of 5-10 laps, the inters would have died eventually and normal pit stops more costly, so in this hypothetical scenario, i would have expected Ferrari to get past the Bulls (assuming no crashes or loss of control), but not into the lead.
There is a clear rule. Vettel was close to breaking that rule, but had right enough of the car (1/2) in the starting box. This was often discussed last year with Ham starting not straight. Here Vet seemed to try to avoid the rubber lines.
Are talking about the same Ricciardo who schooled Vettel in 2014? Ricciardo is doing a great job IMO and might have been able to pass Verstappen had there been a couple more laps left in the race.
Jester Maroc wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 11:40Are talking about the same Ricciardo who schooled Vettel in 2014? Ricciardo is doing a great job IMO and might have been able to pass Verstappen had there been a couple more laps left in the race.iotar__ wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 09:52OP thinks refuelling is the solution, another nonsense that can't die after 'durable tyres will help overtaking' and 'pushing 100% 1 stoppers are exciting'. I watched the second half only, except for Grosjean's overtakes nothing interesting. Is the first part worth watching? Probably will anyway.
Verstappen - what a whiner, begging for FIA's help again . Look, if the FIA hadn't gifted you position with bogus penalties, maybe you wouldn't have to deal with Grosjean in the first place. Brawn or Ecclestone, no difference, the same corrupted clique ruining this sport, stole some points from Haas and helped marketing chosen ones. Ricciardo is mediocre btw.
S1 was more or less equal, S2 was much faster by Vet. The gap was not big, the stop under VSC cost much less than usual. Both had a clear S2 and at the end of the lap (20sec before Gio crashed), Vet hat a 17.896sec gap to Ham, 8sec clear air in front with all 5 cars in front at more or less equal pace.Phil wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 11:40And yet some drivers literally binned it at much lower speeds during the safety car. The 1 second in a sector is irrelevant without knowing the circumstance. Did the Sauber crash impact Hamiltons time earlier? In which sector was Seb when the VSC was released being half a lap down the order? How would have the traffic impacted him if he had been genuinly faster?
You are right, S2 was much faster, while the last corner was wet, so S3 was not faster. But the track was drying quickly. We were right at the crossover, the whole field changed to slicks one lap later when the SC was deployed (ok, easy call...).
Exactly 0.030s per lap in last stint between Vettel and Bottas with Ham further behind. Mercs on new S, Vet on used. I think it was extremely close. Hard to judge when Vettel was stuck behind train. He was 6.3s behind by the end, got out with 10.6s deficit.f1316 wrote: ↑09 Apr 2017, 12:18I think today showed a slight pace advantage for the Mercedes that continued into the race; I don't believe - in these conditions at least - that the Ferrari was the better race car, in fact I think there was probably a tenth or two advantage to the Mercedes. Given it's a front limited circuit, given the cool conditions, this may well explain the difference in how the cars were treating their tyres vs Melbourne.
On the SC debate: Vettel was 17 secs off the lead before Giovanazzi's accident; that's not enough for Lewis to pit and retain the lead. Regardless though, it was a gamble to pit early and it didn't pay off - that's just the way it is; luck/bad luck is all irrelevant.