zibby43 wrote: ↑14 Aug 2020, 21:01
The FIA can make Merc use a pedal-by-foot Fred Flinstone car in qualifying at Spa, and I still think Merc would have a 1s gap to Verstappen in qualifying trim.
In terms of race pace, Verstappen is driving the wheels off his Red Bull. He is over-delivering compared to that car’s inherent pace in the hands of someone like Albon.
TL; DR - Merc performance light-years ahead of the RB over a single lap, irrespective of engine modes.
Verstappen is impressing the hell out of me. If Merc have to shift more of their maximum PU usage from quali to the race, that might make Merc better off in the long run (pun intended).
If the performance advantage was ONLY in qualifying, one could have argued this ruling might make the playing field a bit even. Mercedes also has the advantage on race pace. Ultimately, every PU manufacturer have to find a compromise between their quali modes and race modes. It's not like, when Mercedes makes a compromise, they will fall back compared to Honda and Renault. Ferrari are safe. Both their quali and races modes are almost same now.
I have a hunch, based on FP2 long run numbers for this race, Mercedes are setting up the car for one stop (M-H), whereas RB seems like they are aiming for 2 stops (M-M-S). Mercedes did not spend more laps on Softs and were quick to jump to Medium (Lewis) and Hard (Bottas) and did longer stints, wheres Verstappen spent longer and equal laps both Softs and Medium, but neither Red Bull tried the Hard. Both teams were practicing different lap times delta. Depending upon when the safety car situation would arise, if arises, Mercedes might then switch to M-H-M (early SC) or M-H-S (late SC).
Yesterday's FP2 track temp was around 50 degrees and in Silverstone, it was 44 degrees on race day. The same C2 (white marked hard tyre in Silverstone) that blistered in a handful of laps in Silverstone, seems to have been working fine for Mercedes (yellow marked medium tyre here).