quietly banned?, if they found out they would have been disqualified. So gossip.
The smoking Ferraris seem more suspicious to me as they not only are fastest in a straight line but now also have the fastest car after Melbourne, very strange.....
As for his Job at Williams, yes true he isn't doing much, but you have to account for a wide array of circumstances. Different team, different philosophy, different equipment, DIFFERENT BUDGET, different team GOALS, also it's his second year, first being just an accommodation year etc.
So, virtually everyone agreed the W09 was the fastest car after Barcelona testing. The data showed it was faster than the Ferrari in almost every corner (if not every corner altogether).F1Krof wrote: ↑15 Apr 2018, 21:50W09 is the first heavily influenced James Allison car. They've left the concept going for a higher rake and they believed having the "tyre" guru designing their car would benefit them. Obviously not at all. It's like Diva has reincarnated, and it's whinier than ever. However you cannot take something from them, that being that they've really developed their car, they've done a tremendous job at developing their Diva into a greater Diva, good job really! I've said it hundreds of times James Allison is overrated. If he'd be any good, Ferrari would have kept him for sure. They shouldn't have left Paddy go anywhere. They should bring him back.
Mercedes reverting to 2016 oil spec due to oil burning limitations has something to do with their quali issues, coupled with how ferrari is leaking oil into combustion chamber with some kind of a legal trick. Their car is still a diva. I had mentioned on a McLaren thread, I was having a guess that, with W09 having exact same DNA of W08, might continue to have struggles with tyres. Especially with new PIRELLI tyres, which are a step softer.
2014 and 2015?
It's funny, I pretty much predicted this too and I've been quietly anticipating this happening at the end of last year going into this year. Everyone then was calling me mad. Softer tires, more oil restrictions and an evolution of a car that was already quite difficult to set-up last year.GPR-A wrote: ↑16 Apr 2018, 10:24Mercedes reverting to 2016 oil spec due to oil burning limitations has something to do with their quali issues, coupled with how ferrari is leaking oil into combustion chamber with some kind of a legal trick. Their car is still a diva. I had mentioned on a McLaren thread, I was having a guess that, with W09 having exact same DNA of W08, might continue to have struggles with tyres. Especially with new PIRELLI tyres, which are a step softer.
You predicted everything except Australia and China (harder tyres in the race and Ferrari still quicker). Both races that should have been won by Mercedes (Bahrain was close too). Also forgot about the small matter of engines: huge Merc advantage that wasn't huge. Nothing about drivers' perfromance when it's convenient: a given.Phil wrote: ↑16 Apr 2018, 16:04It's funny, I pretty much predicted this too and I've been quietly anticipating this happening at the end of last year going into this year. Everyone then was calling me mad. Softer tires, more oil restrictions and an evolution of a car that was already quite difficult to set-up last year.GPR-A wrote: ↑16 Apr 2018, 10:24Mercedes reverting to 2016 oil spec due to oil burning limitations has something to do with their quali issues, coupled with how ferrari is leaking oil into combustion chamber with some kind of a legal trick. Their car is still a diva. I had mentioned on a McLaren thread, I was having a guess that, with W09 having exact same DNA of W08, might continue to have struggles with tyres. Especially with new PIRELLI tyres, which are a step softer.