ISLAMATRON wrote:The fastest time is closest to the true pace of the car, Alonso, nor any great driver can not drive around the Laws of Physics, but only approach their limits... the true pace of the car is faster than even Alonso can pedal it, but probly nby not very much.
Its all physics... no ways around it.
I agree with you - it's just that the usually-referenced "speed" of the car isn't the true-absolute-best-possible, but the pace "most" drivers ("most", because it's only most
F1 drivers) can get out of the car. The great ones pushed their cars close to the true limit, and the truly-great ones managed to keep it there (and all of them slipped and spun, at some point). So when I say, Alonso drives "over" the car's pace, and Piquet "under", then obviously both drive within the maximum possible pace - but one over the "expected" pace from a car, and the other under. Hamilton, Kimi and Vettel strike me as three other contemporaries that manage that feat. Trulli and Webber too, to an extent - over a single lap, though.
Schumacher's case is similar: Barrichello, agreed by almost all to be a decent driver, got the "expected" results out of the car - he drove on the car's "pace". Schumacher can be said to have driven
over the "expected" pace, and near the limit, when he had to push (and with the cars he had, he didn't always have to).
In my previous post, I only meant to imply - you can't judge a car's pace using a bad driver, just like you can't judge a car's pace going by a top driver, unless against another top driver. So, we can compare Alonso's Renault to Hamilton's McLaren - but we can't compare Piquet's Renault to any other car, and claim that's the reason it's slow.