I'm a Ferrari fan waiting for Mercedes to eventually start to dominate after Austrian Grand Prix-ish. It's inevitable.
Hamilton is that good.
I hope to be proven wrong.
I'm a Ferrari fan waiting for Mercedes to eventually start to dominate after Austrian Grand Prix-ish. It's inevitable.
Well, over-reaction IS a common game on the internet.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑19 Feb 2019, 02:45Pre-season testing in a nutshell:
*Car finishes the day 2 seconds off pace*
"Oh god, we are doomed! This team has built a dog of a car and will struggle not to finish last every race."
*Car finishes 4 tenths off the best time of the day*
"What a joke, they're just doing glory runs! I bet that in Australia they'll struggle to reach Q2."
The simple lesson is:
Don't judge based on winter testing.
I don't think you can judge their real pace through their lap times even then. There's no telling what suspension/aero setup they have going at any single time.godlameroso wrote: ↑19 Feb 2019, 04:31We need to wait for long runs, a race sim, or something along those lines. The pace of the cars can vary as much as 6 seconds from slowest race pace to fastest quali run. In the race sims they will gain 3 seconds as the car burns fuel. So if you know the cars are filled to the brim, you take the lap time and subtract 6 seconds and you get roughly what the car is capable of at full tilt. Alternately you can find a short run, maybe 5 laps with low fuel, and you'll know that the ultimate pace is more or less around 3 seconds faster. The tricky thing is that they can fuel anywhere in between, and no team shows their real hand in testing, even in the qualifying sims, they'll use a harder tire to qualify on, or lift somewhere in the lap to mask their pace.
Right now most teams are checking that the real aero is matching their virtual numbers, systems checks, trying things out. We won't see any work on performance until tomorrow.
And not only in internet, just read some newspapers/magazines and their headlines.yelistener wrote: ↑19 Feb 2019, 03:18Well, over-reaction IS a common game on the internet.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑19 Feb 2019, 02:45Pre-season testing in a nutshell:
*Car finishes the day 2 seconds off pace*
"Oh god, we are doomed! This team has built a dog of a car and will struggle not to finish last every race."
*Car finishes 4 tenths off the best time of the day*
"What a joke, they're just doing glory runs! I bet that in Australia they'll struggle to reach Q2."
The simple lesson is:
Don't judge based on winter testing.
To add to this-zibby43 wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 23:03I think Schuttelberg is dead-on, but I don't agree with the term "sand-bagging."F1Krof wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 22:53I personally don't believe so. They're somehow too 'conventional' if I may say. The front wing looks rudimentary compared to most of them.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑18 Feb 2019, 20:56Followed the test extensively. The sandbags on the Mercedes are humongous.
Ferrari looking very strong though.
Merc are just running their own program, and couldn't care less about turning out the occasional quick lap. I can't argue with their approach, considering what it has helped them achieve the past 5 years.
What are you basing your contradictory opinion on? It can't be just the front wing, which I think is actually fascinating (partially because of the end plate design) and beautifully constructed. The FW appears to be fine, especially considering Mercedes previously had the most complicated front wing in the entirety of F1 with their beautifully sculpted outwash tunnels.
Mercedes and Ferrari both had a reasonable start from a reliability perspective. It's been 1 day. In terms of pace? We have no serious long run times to analyze yet.
James Allison after testing today:
"We managed to squeeze quite a lot in to this first day of running, finding out both how the 2019 tyres are working and also learning about the way the car responds to set-up changes. Today was not about absolute pace and we’re reasonably pleased with the handling of the car and the way it is behaving."
And as a reminder, last year, after 2 weeks of testing, Hamilton was 8th fastest in terms of single lap pace.
I don't think it work that way. Why do you think Vettel doesn't need to obey team orders? He is doing during the test what he is told. When Hamilton driving to a delta it's normal, when Vettel drives faster he is doing glory runs by his own?