siskue2005 wrote: ↑15 May 2017, 08:34
Only last year Lewis had problem in qualifying which allowed Riccardo to take pole.
He ran on Q3, he just didn't have speed for pole as he never had at Monaco(his sole pole came in a session where Rosberg was again faster but had problems after his first Q2 run which was much faster than Hamilton's, as you seem to account for that). Red Bull pole was totally genuine as was Ferrari's 2015 Singapore one. Mercedes was never really dominant on these tighter tracks and even on Singapore 2014, the Ferraris and Red Bulls were incredibly close
Btw, regardless of which car will be better at Monaco, both tittle contenders aren't excelent drivers there. They often were slower than their team mates and if Kimi and Bottas have good a weekend(at this point it's hard to count on that specially on Kimi's case), they can steal the show.
siskue2005 wrote: ↑15 May 2017, 16:56
Up until q2 Lewis was clearly faster
Until his car gave up. And that gave Riccardo the pole.
a) Lewis car gave before q3 and he could only manage 1 attempt at pole with furl for 7 laps in the car
Are you on a mission to hype Hamilton? Q2 means nothing for the top cars, just a formality. Hamilton was just pushing more than the others and, on Q3, when everybody is 100%, he didn't have the speed for it.
Rosberg had Alonso's traffic on his first lap, everybody can face little problems but the fact remains that both Mercedes cars had Q3 laps and couldn't be faster than Ricciardo. Hamilton's car did not "give up" and it was not what you implied on your previous post(as if he had car problems and couldn't run at all). He had his shot(7 laps of fuel? another one of those typical made up excuses, even if not made up by you. Even if true, it would mean everybody had that on their first Q3 laps as Hamilton had on Barcelona, couple of days ago, and that was his fastest lap ) but couldn't take pole on the fastest car of the field, this I agree with you, even if Red Bull was very close.
Wass85 wrote: ↑15 May 2017, 11:40
I'm a little confused here, watching the onboard footage of Hamilton and Vettel shows that the footage of their telemetry and their onboard footage doesn't tally up, looking at their onboard laps Vettel doesn't have anywhere near the gap that he has on their telemetry footage.
http://youtu.be/6gX_aqx-P3s
Yes, I noticed that too. That's why I took note of their speeds through Campsa to calculate the average and see how it compares to the measurement in the video that I posted before. Curiously, as I posted before, they add up and are in perfect agreement. However, I do think that virtual lap thing is not 100% accurate and even the lines are not exactly the ones that were driven. Steven's points about it are very good too.
Btw, that video was already taken down by FOM
(luckily I saved a copy)
PS: Have I broke the record for the most posts in a row?
Sorry if I was eventually rude, but I have very little patience with fanboyism and f1technical used to be an oasis among F1 discussions.