True, but it is hard to overtake on this track and Merc have excellent party modes, so I expect Bottas to put it in front of Max with that in quali or from the starting line (bad starts RBR) and then be able to defend on the straights with the additional power over the Honda like he did in the early stages of Hockenheim (which has a way longer straight and even with DRS and a massive tow the Honda couldnt get the Mercedes)
Max got ahead of Bottas in Monaco only because he crashed into him in the pits during the unsafe release lol. He outqualified Verstappen by nearly 4 tenths.
Hamilton has over 2 DNF’s in his pocket over Verstappen.
Are you a new fan of the sport? Teams split the strategies for race sim between their drivers in FP2 so as to gather as much data as possible. For example, since Hamilton has one set of hards more than Bottas, he will do a S-H race sim in FP2 while Bottas who has one set mediums more than Hamilton will do a S-M race sim. They share the data in the team.flexcon wrote: ↑30 Jul 2019, 12:22Regarding the tyre choices.
Can anyone explain why Bottas would have just 1 set of hards? So this means in the race when they throw off their softs or mediums from the first stint, it will be Bottas's first time on the hard - period. Like is that not strange? The tyre you will spend the most time on during the race, you don't bother to run once prior.
Talking about leclerc and verstappen and co also.
We don’t know Max’ real pace in Silverstone. He was caught behind Leclerc who made very sure Max wasn’t getting passed. RBR seem optimistic. I am very curious. Also what Ferrari can do. They might outqualify them all. Passing on track in Hungary is so very very hard.Pyrone89 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2019, 19:21Unless Merc decided to gift RB the plans to their W10 there is no reason to think the RB15 can beat the W10 under normal conditions at this time. People somehow think Austria and Germany were a reflection of a change in structural pace, but it is not. It were two races were team operations, specific car trouble (cooling) and especially driver errors (Bottas crash Germany, Ham crash Germany, Ham breaking his front wing over yellow curbs in Austria) made a big enough impact to overrule the normal running order. Just look at the Merc pace in Silverstone race and Germany FP long runs.
That makes sense actually.dans79 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2019, 17:07Personally, I think they set the car up for a wet race, and thus compromised their dry & mixed running pace.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑30 Jul 2019, 16:49So Toto seemed to indicate the upgrade had done its job at the German GP but it didn't seem that way. Ya think there's a chance they are gonna revert the upgrades for the Hungary GP? I am thinking not. But during qualifying it didn't seem like the car was that bolted to the ground. I mean last year's lap record still stands.
yeah, I agree that Spielberg and Hockenheim didn't reflect a change, but in Silverstone (especially in the Qualifying) Red Bull and Ferrari were way closer than what I expected. A couple of races ago, Mercedes would have taken pole by half a second.Sieper wrote: ↑30 Jul 2019, 19:42We don’t know Max’ real pace in Silverstone. He was caught behind Leclerc who made very sure Max wasn’t getting passed. RBR seem optimistic. I am very curious. Also what Ferrari can do. They might outqualify them all. Passing on track in Hungary is so very very hard.Pyrone89 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2019, 19:21Unless Merc decided to gift RB the plans to their W10 there is no reason to think the RB15 can beat the W10 under normal conditions at this time. People somehow think Austria and Germany were a reflection of a change in structural pace, but it is not. It were two races were team operations, specific car trouble (cooling) and especially driver errors (Bottas crash Germany, Ham crash Germany, Ham breaking his front wing over yellow curbs in Austria) made a big enough impact to overrule the normal running order. Just look at the Merc pace in Silverstone race and Germany FP long runs.