Dude, you have no idea what you're talking about.FLuidd wrote: ↑21 Jul 2018, 11:43It doesnt make any sense what you are saying, temperature evolution during weekends might go from hot to cold and vice versa.zibby43 wrote: ↑21 Jul 2018, 10:44Absolutely valid point. I just think a wet quali would bring out the best in Hamilton.
I also think that somehow, Merc's car tends to perform a little better with the taller wet/intermediate compound tires. It seems the slightly taller tires pair well with the rake of the car.
I believe either Ant or Paul caught on to the fact that the Merc starts to get some separation from the field on those compounds on a green, cooler track.
The Ferraris tend to like rubbered in tracks and hot conditions. Which is one reason that I think the Ferrari always gets stronger over the course of a weekend (track evolution). While all cars benefit from track evolution, Ferrari always seems to eke out a bit more.
If anything the performance of the mercedes last year in monza was largely due to lewis performance rather than mercedes being tood on those tyres.
Furthermore this year we have a longer wheelbase ferrari which is behaving a much different than last years model.
I'm talking about track evolution - how much rubber and grip the track surface accumulates.
Nothing about temperature. Good grief.