At the same time, Williams and Mclaren had anti-ferrari deal(source Adrian Newey's book).
At the same time, Williams and Mclaren had anti-ferrari deal(source Adrian Newey's book).
Overtaking a complete POS car with a car that has great brakes and traction is almost impossible here. I think I'm remembering a race in which Kovalainen in that terrible old Lotus held up Button in must have been a Mclaren for was it most of a Monaco race?Jolle wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 20:42Vettel managing fuel wouldn’t be an issue. Go for 100% fuel flow for a few laps, gain track position and, especially with a limping car behind you, you could almost come to a stand still, save all the fuel you want.atanatizante wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 20:26I can`t figure out how Vettel had lost this race, coz Ricci was 30km/h down at the end of the tunnel and Vettel couldn`t get near him not to mention pass him. The only reason I could see is that he was massively fuel managing bearing in mind we had no safety car ... I don`t think that crap excuse at the press conference when he said his front tyres were graining and he couldn`t get a good exit in Portier heading for the tunnel in order to have a good getaway ...
Apparently, overtaking a car in Monaco that is brilliant under braking and super in/out of corners is very very difficult.
Plus, Vettel lost the championship last year by not seeing the big picture. Hamilton had a 100% finish score last year, taking a risk, especially when you already in front of him, is not done. I think we’ll have a very well behaved and calculating Vettel this year.
Indeed. Just for reference, ten years ago on this track Kimi got a drive through penalty for the same reason.foxmulder_ms wrote: ↑27 May 2018, 20:56By the way, the Strokin penalty is joke. They could never dare to give a penalty like that to top three. Terrible referees.
It was on lap 28, 12 laps into the second stint, 50 laps still to go when Ricciardo, just as he was thinking it was all under control, felt the sickening sudden loss of power. Not just a small reduction – but a full 160bhp. The ERS-k had failed. “Yes, we see the problem,” the team radioed. They could see the temperature of the unit had gone sky high.
The loss of power was alarming – but not immediately debilitating. Ricciardo was amazed that Vettel had not just immediately devoured him, but the Ferrari had problems of its own. Its front left was graining badly and in fact he locked up into the chicane as he tried to take advantage of the Red Bull’s problem.
I suppose then from that point, the top teams were too afraid to be the only one to pit twice and finish 5th. It's a shame we didn't end up with a Singapore 2016 last minute strategy change/dash to the line. Vettel pitting twice could have triggered a chain reaction of the top 5 (except RIC) pitting.zeph wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 21:49Mark Hughes explains why Vettel couldn’t overtake Ricciardo in his routinely excellent race report: https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/repo ... rix-report
It was on lap 28, 12 laps into the second stint, 50 laps still to go when Ricciardo, just as he was thinking it was all under control, felt the sickening sudden loss of power. Not just a small reduction – but a full 160bhp. The ERS-k had failed. “Yes, we see the problem,” the team radioed. They could see the temperature of the unit had gone sky high.
The loss of power was alarming – but not immediately debilitating. Ricciardo was amazed that Vettel had not just immediately devoured him, but the Ferrari had problems of its own. Its front left was graining badly and in fact he locked up into the chicane as he tried to take advantage of the Red Bull’s problem.
If Ocon admits to doing this he should have a race ban as he is supposed to drive the car unassisted.Wynters wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 15:00The original article appears to claim that all team orders are illegal (which shows a slightly worrying grasp of F1) but, assuming it's accurate, this is pretty sad for the sport. Is it just Ocon? Or is it everyone who drives for Force India? I know there's always been suspicion but to have it confirmed and in such an offhand manner...santos wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 14:47https://www.gpfans.com/en/articles/1548 ... in-monaco/
If this was made between Seb and Charles Leclerc… it would be talked for years.As far as I'm aware, there's no regulations about asking other teams to do stuff so equating the two would be a mistake.
Maybe he decided to wait for a safety car, not realizing his tyres would not warm on the restart?atanatizante wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 20:26I can`t figure out how Vettel had lost this race, coz Ricci was 30km/h down at the end of the tunnel and Vettel couldn`t get near him not to mention pass him. The only reason I could see is that he was massively fuel managing bearing in mind we had no safety car ... I don`t think that crap excuse at the press conference when he said his front tyres were graining and he couldn`t get a good exit in Portier heading for the tunnel in order to have a good getaway ...
You must feel horrible that Ferrari designs Haas' car over the winter for them.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 19:41The media is so hypocritical it makes me want to vomit. What happened with the Mercedes and Force India is just lousy. The same media pundits accuse Ferrari of team orders without any proof and diss it like it's a sin. Here we have two teams colluding in a competitive environment and it's just fine. Shame!
As well as Sauber now being under the ‘Fiat Chrysler’ umbrella alongside Ferrari.TAG wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 02:13You must feel horrible that Ferrari designs Haas' car over the winter for them.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 19:41The media is so hypocritical it makes me want to vomit. What happened with the Mercedes and Force India is just lousy. The same media pundits accuse Ferrari of team orders without any proof and diss it like it's a sin. Here we have two teams colluding in a competitive environment and it's just fine. Shame!
Also don't forget how Ferrari have theirTAG wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 02:13You must feel horrible that Ferrari designs Haas' car over the winter for them.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 19:41The media is so hypocritical it makes me want to vomit. What happened with the Mercedes and Force India is just lousy. The same media pundits accuse Ferrari of team orders without any proof and diss it like it's a sin. Here we have two teams colluding in a competitive environment and it's just fine. Shame!
Sorry Turbo, but you can´t take the fastest car starting from the bottom of the grid as a reference for overtaking posibilities.
People like Hamilton and Alonso tend to complain a lot about Monaco but they remained silent when they were leading this race back in time. Monaco has been boring since…….I don´t know.Andres125sx wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 09:30Sorry Turbo, but you can´t take the fastest car starting from the bottom of the grid as a reference for overtaking posibilities.
He finished 9th, behind Renault wich is more than a second slower, but couldn´t pass.
To me Monaco is boring to the point I fast forwarded most part of the race. Looking a sucession of cars lapping around 2-3 seconds slower than the could do because none can overtake so they don´t need to assume any risk is a gimmick
That is Monaco today, a gimmick
Vettel reported that the car had managed the tyres very badly. What is happening with Ferrari and they tyres?. When the season started they could manage the tyres decently, but now they are one of the worst.zeph wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 21:49Mark Hughes explains why Vettel couldn’t overtake Ricciardo in his routinely excellent race report: https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/repo ... rix-report
It was on lap 28, 12 laps into the second stint, 50 laps still to go when Ricciardo, just as he was thinking it was all under control, felt the sickening sudden loss of power. Not just a small reduction – but a full 160bhp. The ERS-k had failed. “Yes, we see the problem,” the team radioed. They could see the temperature of the unit had gone sky high.
The loss of power was alarming – but not immediately debilitating. Ricciardo was amazed that Vettel had not just immediately devoured him, but the Ferrari had problems of its own. Its front left was graining badly and in fact he locked up into the chicane as he tried to take advantage of the Red Bull’s problem.