Toto claimed 7 tenths power advantage for Ferrari at one point, Germany I think.
Toto claimed 7 tenths power advantage for Ferrari at one point, Germany I think.
Merc ran more downforce in Spa, so taking the S1 and S3 times from Spa as a predictor is crazy.
I’m curious about the RW Mercedes will bring to Monza. They will surely go with less downforce this time.NathanOlder wrote: ↑28 Aug 2018, 11:03Merc ran more downforce in Spa, so taking the S1 and S3 times from Spa as a predictor is crazy.
I wish people would stop using the S1 at Spa to predict a Monza result. Merc wont be running any extra wing at all for this one.
ps Toto just playing his usual mind games
Could also have to do with tyre managment and traction (still didn't work out for them). I got the feeling that they had high hopes in the spec 3 engine but were disappointed but thats just my opinion.LM10 wrote: ↑28 Aug 2018, 11:25I’m curious about the RW Mercedes will bring to Monza. They will surely go with less downforce this time.
Having said that, I’ve asked myself why they even ran more downforce at Spa. Did they think that they would have gotten pole by that setup? But then again, they must have known that this would have made them vulnerable against the Ferrari on the long straight. Or did they think they could have managed to build a gap in S2 to keep Ferrari at the back? Another explanation would be that they were confident enough about their Spec 3 gains.
For me, it didn’t make sense at all, though.
This, I don't understand. It was rather cold at Spa, so I thought it would favor the Merc, but even then with the added downforce, Lewis was still blistering the rear tires at the end of his first stint on those SS.Phil wrote: ↑28 Aug 2018, 12:01If one looks at how the Force Indias pulled alongside Hamilton on the same straight on lap1 realises how powerful the tow is/was. I honestly think Mercedes did a good jump forward this weekend with the Spec3. With equal downforce, they might have been rather identical on the straights, but probably to the detriment of tire wear.
I think Monza will be closer if not in Mercedes favor. And it will be important, because Singapore definitely wont be.
Maybe they will discuss it for 2019
"What followed were a series of highly competitive laps, with differences very tiny until on lap 26, Hamilton suddenly lost a full second, followed by another 0.7s loss in the next lap. This increased the gap up to 3.8s, back to where they were before the stops. Radio messages revealed that blistering was causing Hamilton to lose some performance, an issue that seemed not to affect the Ferrari driver."
I think Lewis could snatch it if they put Bottas in front for tow. Will see if Ferrari will do similar tacticsNathanOlder wrote: ↑28 Aug 2018, 11:03Merc ran more downforce in Spa, so taking the S1 and S3 times from Spa as a predictor is crazy.
I wish people would stop using the S1 at Spa to predict a Monza result. Merc wont be running any extra wing at all for this one.
ps Toto just playing his usual mind games
That is how I see it too. Monza is a slam dunk Ferrari track. It's all about traction and straight line speed there. Everyone will be running low downforce. Only rain or reliability can stop them there imo.pantherxxx wrote: ↑28 Aug 2018, 15:50The factor that most surprised Mercedes and that is literally making the Germans "crazy" is the traction that Ferrari manages, to generate out of corners and in the first part of the straights. Mercedes continue to think that Ferrari using something very borderline. The SF71H of Vettel between the exit of curve 1, and the one from the last chicane that introduces on the short straight starting line could gain an average of 3 tenths on the W09 of Hamilton. If that is the case, in Monza there will be no chance for Hamilton and Bottas.