Think it is a dry race.
Is a one stopper the expected strategy today?
Ultra soft then soft?
Ferrari will be hoping Mercedes chew through the ultrasofts very quickly in first stint. Might give them an opportunity
Quickest strategy for 70-lap #HungarianGP (in hot and dry conditions) is a one-stopper. Start on ultrasoft for 22 laps, then medium to the end. Nearly as quick: start on soft for 27 laps and then medium to the end. Alternatively, ultrasoft for 22 laps then soft to end (1/2)
A two-stopper (with higher ultrasoft degradation) could work as follows: two stints of 16 laps on ultrasoft, followed by a final stint on soft to the end. The pit stop window for ultrasoft is from laps 18-26 (assuming similar conditions to FP2 on Friday) #HungarianGP (2/2)
They couldn’t get the wets to switch on hence no grip.jz11 wrote: ↑29 Jul 2018, 09:13no comment about FIA penalty policy... everything has been saidiotar__ wrote: ↑29 Jul 2018, 08:33- FIA cheating and Verstappen getting away without penalties, what else is new? I bet Ross "1+1=1" Brawn approves.
- This qualifying showed that "only inferior engine prevents Red Bull from winning everything". In the real world wet conditions media based genius put them at solid seventh. One can only hope it prevents "we prefer rain" BS next time.
but it is quite short sighted to start bashing RB, you don't know the amount of compromises that engine makes the design team to implement in the car, I think Merc and Ferrari have much more options available in their setups, but there is only "one way" for the RBs design to work with that engine
I suspect they need to run a stiff suspension in order for their "skinny" (know this is high downforce track, just keep the trend of previous races in mind) aero to work, which in a such a wet track means little mechanical grip - which means the car is like on ice mostly, gives no confidence to the driver, extremely difficult to drive - which the result showed yesterday
and this is not so apparent in the dry, where the car does work a lot better than any other Renault powered car, so bashing the RB for coming up with poor design is the wrong thing to take away from this Q
Is it dry today? This is an interesting prediction as there surely be team orders for both Ferrari and MercedesJust_a_fan wrote:I expect Ferrari's excellent launch system to catapult Kimi in to first and Vettel in to second by turn 1. Then it'll be a fight for third between the Mercedes. Whether Vettel tries to get greedy in to Turn 1 and biffs Kimi will be interesting to see.
I think the result will be:
1. Vettel
2. Kimi
3. Bottas
4. Hamilton
Mercedes switches on the wets better than any of the other top 2 teams and subsequently "switches on" the ultrasoft and chews through them.The soft is the perfect tire for their car because it can handle the extra energy the Mercedes puts into it.
I think we may see (and hear) Toto blessing the rains in Africa (i.e. caterwauling), if a Ferrari touches a Mercedes.
If Bottas is ahead after the pit stop, I expect Mercedes to leave them in that order. We might see something like last year where one is released to chase, on the understanding that if they're unsuccessful they'll revert places - like last year. No idea what Ferrari will do but I expect Kimi won't be winning unless he is actually able to pull away from Vettel.JonoNic wrote: ↑29 Jul 2018, 12:30Is it dry today? This is an interesting prediction as there surely be team orders for both Ferrari and MercedesJust_a_fan wrote:I expect Ferrari's excellent launch system to catapult Kimi in to first and Vettel in to second by turn 1. Then it'll be a fight for third between the Mercedes. Whether Vettel tries to get greedy in to Turn 1 and biffs Kimi will be interesting to see.
I think the result will be:
1. Vettel
2. Kimi
3. Bottas
4. Hamilton