ME4ME wrote:pciarro wrote:
And new specs of fuel and rear suspension.
Should make them fastest on the grid. If true. If tyre issues are fixed. Probably not.
Well it also depends on what other teams do.
Still, power unit development trends do seem to be echoed in this formula, with Ferrari and Renault just one and two years behind Mercedes respectively: Ferrari are now at the point of making a token free reliability upgrade in Canada to fix a problem that has not allowed them to extract the maximum from their PU (just like Mercedes last year ); Renault have increased resource having not initially invested sufficiently and are now making big strides via fixes to initial fundamental flaws (just like Ferrari last year).
Whether or not one manufacturer can bridge the year's worth of 'gap', I am not sure (until next year when everyone can essentially start again if they want), but learnings from others seem to mean the relative differences on package performance is decreasing each year.
Subjectively, I still think the Ferrari package shows plenty of potential but has a tyre usage issue which has contrived with other things to limit positive results (with wins in Australia and Spain we might think differently); but a slightly deeper dive into practice and race pace shows the pace is reasonably strong even without the turbo fix. With it, and having actually closed to the leader in recent races, I'd suggest there is still reason to believe the season could be worthwhile.