Uhh... I don't think Mercedes will be quite as far ahead as that. In fact I think Ferrari and McLaren will be pretty close. Also there are a few reliability problems cropping up. Mercedes have reason to be proud of what they have accomplished... but I don't doubt that they are as worried as the rest as to whether they are completely ready.Helios wrote:Don't know if it has been discussed before:
http://willthef1journo.wordpress.com/20 ... o-we-know/
Thoughts?
I don't think the reliability issues are anything to worry about. They have asserted several times that they were running parts for as long as they possibly could, just to see when they'd break. Parts breaking after running for 6 race distances is not unexpected.Maelstrom wrote:Uhh... I don't think Mercedes will be quite as far ahead as that. In fact I think Ferrari and McLaren will be pretty close. Also there are a few reliability problems cropping up. Mercedes have reason to be proud of what they have accomplished... but I don't doubt that they are as worried as the rest as to whether they are completely ready.Helios wrote:Don't know if it has been discussed before:
http://willthef1journo.wordpress.com/20 ... o-we-know/
Thoughts?
I bet a good number of cars don't finish the first few races, not many other teams have managed to put in consistent race distances like Mercedes. Look at Red Bull, even on their best testing day they would have struggled to finish a race and that's without pushing.De Jokke wrote:I wouldn't be so sure of that:
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/112770
and
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/112731
Plus, if they finish in Melbourne, they might brake down in Sepang...
it's as if Arnold Schwarzenegger is doing a narration.