Bill wrote: ↑22 Aug 2019, 13:28
that why the always wins in Monaco and Mexico.
It's design philosophy difference. Mercedes used to categorize the full calendar into three buckets, where one is high speed, low drag circuits like Spa and Monza, the second one is medium downforce, high speed circuits like China, Bahrain, Malaysia, USA, Japan and others, the third one is the street circuits like Monaco and Singapore. Mercedes design philosophy looked at the first two buckets and created a car that goes well on those circuits, whereas Red Bull always created car for Monaco and Singapore. Essentially, Mercedes were not choosing to bolt on every bit of downforce, instead managed to balance drag vs downforce. It's all design philosophy, where a compromise need to be made, not because Red Bull chassis was any superior than Mercedes.
The reason why Red Bull worked in Mexico was because of high altitude with thin air that used to reduce the efficiency of Mercedes and Renault engine used to come on par. Red Bull had much better low speed performance (more to do with mechanical grip and traction) until last year Singapore, where Mercedes brought some upgrades and enhanced it for this year that has allowed them to make a march in Singapore last year and Spain (S3) and Monaco this year. Mexico's S3 is where Red Bull used to win when the PU power used to get balanced. With Honda as a partner and Mercedes having found fix for their low speed performance, will Mexico remain a Red Bull territory? We will see.
Bill wrote: ↑22 Aug 2019, 13:28
Redbull always comes good in the second half of a season and their development has been better than others.
It's relative. Mercedes has established to be potentially the best developers mid season and Red Bull has a history of going deep into the season, developing the car and compromising the next year's car, which makes them slow at the beginning of season. Again, a compromise that teams choose. Ferrari has the trend of coming out with a great car at the beginning of the season, but wane off with inefficiency of developing the car through the season.
Bill wrote: ↑22 Aug 2019, 13:28
You don't expect them to make ass clown errors behind the pit. Mercedes for the first time would have a credible competitor since the hybrid era Max has scored more points than any driver during the last four races it could be more if Vettel didn't happen and I expect the trend to continue
6 years is a life time for competitors to catch up. What's special about it. Max has more points because of Austria's unusual temperatures where Mercedes got their cooling calculations wrong and Lewis bottled it in Germany, not because the Red Bull car is somehow better than Mercedes. Max did better a better job in those situations.