I don't think it's as black and white as that.De Jokke wrote:What suprises me the most is that it rectified itself with 10 laps to go on Lewis' car. Either you are in a faulty mode or not... very suspicious...erikejw wrote:Software problem for the Mercs in the race? Both Nico and Lewis had problem with derating, Lewis a few laps earlier.
My theory is new software that kicked in during the pitstops and there was a bug in it. Max speed like quali mode on the in and outlap but the engine continued to derate.
So either of them did anything wrong with settings. It could be helped by some weird sequence of settings by luck or wait for a time delay when the software resets itselfs away from those special parameters used. Maybe a safety action if battery is too loo for long.
This is just a theory. Can anyone confirm or deny the possibility?
I'd imagine that the software is constantly reacting to the circuit they're on, fuel levels, temperature, pace, laps remaining, pit stops, tyre age etc. So when an engine mode is selected I don't think it creates a fixed set of rules for how lean the fuel mixture should be, or which corners the engine is going to de-rate at.
Instead, it might set maximum and minimum parameters for each variable, but will apply the most effective combination for that point in the race. This, according to Mercedes, is where they got it wrong by not configuring the software properly for the Baku circuit.
Once Hamilton had pitted, the software therefore started doing something unexpected based on all of the combined conditions at that time in the race. My guess is that Rosberg had been using a different engine mode to Hamilton (probably Merc's equivalent to a cruise mode) but switched to the same mode in reaction to Vettel upping the pace at that point of the race. When he also encountered the issue he switched back to cruise mode, which ironically was quicker than the other buggy mode at that point.
Back to Hamilton... towards the end of the race when temperatures had dropped and fuel levels and tyre life etc all became a bit more certain, the buggy software no longer held everything back and thus 'fixed itself', or started behaving properly.