I have forgotten what happened in Silverstone.
In Baku they had the same issue,and Rosberg found the solution much quicker than Hamilton. That's all I wanted to say.
I think you're wrong there tbh especially when he'd been out the sport for years. The latter though probably affected him more than his age.
This could be indicative of Rosberg's "Year of the Big Push" where he immersed himself totally in the job of winning the title. It's possible that he just spent more time going through the systems with his engineers and remembered something from that during the race. The car's systems are so complicated that he couldn't sit there during the heat of a race and thing "well, that bit's connected to that bit which does this, so if I twiddle this and then that, it'll make that do this" in response to a random failure.sosic2121 wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 09:36IMO it was Canada 2014 and Baku 2016.
In Canada they both had issue with breakes. IIRC Rosbreg managed to finish 2nd without MGUK, also testament how superior Merc PU was that season.
Baku happened when it was forbidden for engineers to instruct drivers what to do. Rosberg easily changed setup of the car while Hamilton just didn't know what to do.
"So was Rosberg, who is known to be the superior engineer among the Mercedes drivers, merely a bit cleverer? Niki Lauda, Mercedes’ nonexecutive chairman, suggested so when he said that both drivers had the same problem but the German was quicker dealing with it." article from The guardian
Sadly, we can't ask him what he thinks about it.Wass85 wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 10:03I think you're wrong there tbh especially when he'd been out the sport for years. The latter though probably affected him more than his age.
The team gave Rosberg help over the radio and as a result, the stewards gave him a 10 second penalty which meant he lost 2nd place and came 3rd behind Hamilton and Max.
Oh okay, rosberg was more 'academic' tho Baku wasn't about that it was the engine changing its modes automatically every few laps, and one mode was faulty. With rosberg the change happened just as he was doing something so he noticed and manually changed to the next mode, while with Lewis it changed without him noticing so all he knew was the clippingsosic2121 wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 09:36IMO it was Canada 2014 and Baku 2016.
In Canada they both had issue with breakes. IIRC Rosbreg managed to finish 2nd without MGUK, also testament how superior Merc PU was that season.
Baku happened when it was forbidden for engineers to instruct drivers what to do. Rosberg easily changed setup of the car while Hamilton just didn't know what to do.
"So was Rosberg, who is known to be the superior engineer among the Mercedes drivers, merely a bit cleverer? Niki Lauda, Mercedes’ nonexecutive chairman, suggested so when he said that both drivers had the same problem but the German was quicker dealing with it." article from The guardian
From what I recall Hamilton would have been better off having received the penalty than trundling along left to his own devices, I'm sure he lost more than 10 secs at Baku.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 10:13The team gave Rosberg help over the radio and as a result, the stewards gave him a 10 second penalty which meant he lost 2nd place and came 3rd behind Hamilton and Max.
The rules were changed because some drivers were been extensively coached from the pitwall. Ironically, Rosberg was one of the drivers that was being coached. I remember him asking where Hamilton was quicker, corner by corner, and his engineer telling him lots of info and giving suggestions to brake here or turn in later there.
That's one of those throw away lines again. The sort of thing the media like to say but then not back up in real way.
Just look at the calls over the 3 years they were paired together. Button was much more willing to use his own instinct and make calls for himself, be that in race situations or setups.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:06That's one of those throw away lines again. The sort of thing the media like to say but then not back up in real way.
Unless you've got the complete radio transcripts for every race for both drivers, you don't know who decided what and when.Wass85 wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:14Just look at the calls over the 3 years they were paired together. Button was much more willing to use his own instinct and make calls for himself, be that in race situations or setups.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:06That's one of those throw away lines again. The sort of thing the media like to say but then not back up in real way.
Ok i don't have all the evidence but seeing them partnered you get to see the picture.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:35Unless you've got the complete radio transcripts for every race for both drivers, you don't know who decided what and when.Wass85 wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:14Just look at the calls over the 3 years they were paired together. Button was much more willing to use his own instinct and make calls for himself, be that in race situations or setups.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:06
That's one of those throw away lines again. The sort of thing the media like to say but then not back up in real way.
Lack of research again.sosic2121 wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 09:36IMO it was Canada 2014 and Baku 2016.
In Canada they both had issue with breakes. IIRC Rosbreg managed to finish 2nd without MGUK, also testament how superior Merc PU was that season.
Baku happened when it was forbidden for engineers to instruct drivers what to do. Rosberg easily changed setup of the car while Hamilton just didn't know what to do.
"So was Rosberg, who is known to be the superior engineer among the Mercedes drivers, merely a bit cleverer? Niki Lauda, Mercedes’ nonexecutive chairman, suggested so when he said that both drivers had the same problem but the German was quicker dealing with it." article from The guardian
I agree, i've always been a great fan of Button and i'm honestly happy he got a title,Wass85 wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:14Just look at the calls over the 3 years they were paired together. Button was much more willing to use his own instinct and make calls for himself, be that in race situations or setups.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑15 Apr 2020, 11:06That's one of those throw away lines again. The sort of thing the media like to say but then not back up in real way.