iotar__ wrote:What Permane is saying doesn't make sense at all.kwanchepan wrote:Very promising news
Lotus confirms 'plenty' of new parts on way
Lotus trackside operations director Alan Permane has said the Enstone-based outfit will have 『plenty』 of 『interesting new parts』 to test at Silverstone next week.
Lotus took a 2-3 finish at the German Grand Prix last weekend, with Kimi Raikkonen challenging Sebastian Vettel in the closing stages and eventually finishing just one second back.
The squad will now be out to maintain that form after a disappointing few races in Britain, Canada and Monaco.
「We』re very happy to be back on the podium again after a short spell of somewhat bleak races,」 Permane told Lotus』 official team website. 「Both cars ran faultlessly from start to finish and for a good portion of the race it did look like we would be able to take the fight to Sebastian, but ultimately we didn't quite manage it.
「The win may have eluded us, but to have both drivers pick up silverware and also outscore our rivals in the Constructor's Championship means we can't be too disappointed.」
「We've now got the Silverstone test to prepare for – with plenty of interesting new parts on the way for assessment – so there's actually not much in the way of rest before we head to Hungary,」 he added, 「but we』ll be looking to head into the shutdown on the back of another good result to give everyone a satisfying and well-earned break.」
As for what cost Raikkonen the win at the Nürburgring, Permane felt the time lost early on was crucial.
「The damage was done when Kimi was held up by Lewis after his first pit stop [on lap 8], but he came back fighting at the end of the race to finish a very close second with a little help from the safety car. We did consider running him on a two-stop strategy, but it would have meant an incredibly long final stint and ultimately represented a sizeable risk, as we could see the tyre performance dropping.
「The path we chose guaranteed second place with the possibility of a late charge for the win, while the alternative – despite also offering the potential for victory – would have very likely resulted in the tyres falling off a cliff and dropping Kimi behind Fernando [Alonso].
「To be honest we did expect slightly more performance from his final set of soft tyres, but he was right with Sebastian at the end so I think the right call was made,」 Permane concluded.
1. “The damage was done when Kimi was held up by Lewis after his first pit stop [on lap 8], but he came back [..]" Truly remarkable statement. Damage was not done - because safety car made it completely irrelevant. His logic is broken. And what damage was that? Being slower on softs than Hamilton making mistakes on his outlap on mediums? Surely it was possible to get in front after the stint on softs, the evidence is there.
How about damage from holding faster team-mate on softs:
- let's say 2 seconds lost behind Raikkonen
- 0,6/0,7 lost on tyre change only compared to Raikkonen/Vettel
- RG would have been in front of Button after 1st stop add some tenths lost while overtaking him
= Instead of over 4 seconds 1-2 seconds with 6 laps fresher tyres. Getting in front of Vettel was even more possible with optimal strategy and pitstops. Theoretical but if we're talking about pace comparisons and "damage was done" scenarios.
2. "Little help from safety car"? Safety car ruined all the advantage Lotus had. Not only over the drivers behind (10 s gap) but also over Vettel from longer, faster first stint = 6 laps fresher tyres to play with in two further stints. 10s and 5 laps fresher (vs KR) tyres is little in F1 now?
3. “To be honest we did expect slightly more performance from his final set of soft tyres, but he was right with Sebastian at the end so I think the right call was made,” Well yes of course, about the right call. And the opposite about "right with Sebastian". Outside of DRS for all but the final lap is "right with Sebastian"? Not a millisecond fighting for the win. How can anyone serious write something like this?
Add all that together and considering Red Bull were in clear air for most of the race, E21 was easily match for them without safety car. Pace on "qualifying tyres" giving advantage, which wasn't that common this season. Very competitive even with unlucky safety car. Tyres and timing of third pitstop (wrong on purpose) made it impossible to judge the pace on softs, using first stint as an indication of pace ("expected performance from softs" part).
Funny how someone who works within the team and was on site and has seen the data etc etc etc can be wrong and you obv so right
