Yeah, I probably made it sound more grandiose than I meant to!AshSIreland wrote: ↑04 Sep 2017, 11:45I'd like to know what sorts of variables are in your spreadsheet? For me, I don't have a good source of whether a track is high or low downforce, as there are some compromise tracks, that have long straights but also significant twisty, mid-speed corners (e.g., China)f1316 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2017, 11:13
I want to put it into a spreadsheet when I get the chance between the work I'm supposed to be doing but working it through in my mind I have:
- if all goes how I would expect, Ham wins by 16 points
- if Vettel manages 2nd at the strongest Merc tracks & Kimi gets 2nd in what I see as Ferrari tracks (Sing + AD) then Ham wins by Six points
So all being what I'd call 'normal', Ham wins either way, in my mind. The X factor is whether Ham has the same kind of quali struggles in the low speed high downforce package as he did in Monaco + to a slightly lesser extent Hungary.
As you say, what if an RB gets ahead? What if Bottas and the RBs are ahead on the grid in Singapore?
To me, it kinda needs that kind of thing and/or other unforeseen circumstances for Merc - with zero issues or grid penalties for Vettel - for Ferrari to win the WDC. I personally think it's unlikely that a new PU will bridge the gap we've seen on low downforce unless allied to a much more effective low df package, but this is also based around current relative strengths and weaknesses (for all we know Merc could be stronger in Sing or Ferrari's Spa compromise with a new PU could be the fastest package in Suzuka).
Like I say, I'll try and formulate thoughts into something a bit more illustrative later.
I just meant to track what place finishes I expect each of them to take in each race and, depending on what those are, how many points they'd end up with at the end.
Nothing fancy (but I still haven't got to it anyway )