Sieper wrote: ↑30 Aug 2020, 20:06
zibby43 wrote: ↑30 Aug 2020, 19:43
Sieper wrote: ↑30 Aug 2020, 19:32
Yes. That is true. Everybody will be hit. Monza is a quite specific track, and the qualy itself is an almost laughable matter thesevdays. Look what happened last year. But, without the additional power mercedes produces as opposed to Honda in strat 2 I think they will loose more then 1 hundrest of a second. If so Max would have qualified P2 here in Spa.
That’s a bit of a logical fallacy.
As Moore77 said, we don’t yet know who is going to lose more relative to the other.
Second, the gap between Bottas and Max in qualifying at Spa could’ve been much different if Mercedes had chosen a different setup, or opted to go with a tow in qualifying.
Why? Mercedes had been making a bigger step in every Q session then Honda. And second did not happen did it? That actually IS a fallacy.
Not trying to be hostile, so no need for the all caps.
Steps in qualifying aren’t down solely to engine modes. How much a team decides to take out of its tires is a big factor. How much fuel a team carries is another. Wasn’t the gap to Verstappen relatively similar in Q2 and Q3 in Spa? Between 5-6 tenths?
There are so many variables, which is why I don’t like to speculate on the matter, other than to acknowledge that Merc has the stronger PU, and thus the ability to add more performance on the race side. That robustness is also what may enable them to lose very little on the quali side, and gain quite a bit in race trim.
Merc don’t seem worried. And Verstappen doesn’t think it’s going to change the competitive order relative to the top 2.
Hamilton went out in clean air with no tow, Merc ran much more downforce, and Verstappen did have a tow. Those variables affect lap time.
In your hypothetical, you assume Merc would’ve chosen the same setup had they had access to less power. Second, it assumes that RB would be unaffected. Third, it assumes that was Bottas’ best possible lap, irrespective of setup/tow, etc.
Hope that makes sense.