AnotherAlex wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:01Thanks Luscion.
I don't suppose you have one for Leclerc and Verstappen (perhaps with Norris or Piastri for good measure)?![]()

AnotherAlex wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:01Thanks Luscion.
I don't suppose you have one for Leclerc and Verstappen (perhaps with Norris or Piastri for good measure)?![]()

His power steering failed on lap 62 and by then he was 8 seconds behind Verstappen.woocasz wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:01Did you watch the race at all?Badger wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 18:45Zero indication of a mechanical issue from his team radio before the power steering failed. Let's not assert such things without evidence.AnotherAlex wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 18:41
Definitely.
With one lap older hards to the mediums Verstappen put on under the VSC, Leclerc was all over him, with only Hamilton faster than them. About 5 laps before his retirement, when Verstappen's medium might have been expected to fade, Leclerc dropped back to Piastri's pace and was losing around a second a lap, so clearly the mechanical issue was there for a number of laps before his retirement.
Leclerc never got within one second of Verstappen and then started falling back. He clearly did not have the pace of Hamilton today. With that many laps to go the hard was the right tyre.
from lap 42 after the VSC, he was in the 1-2s range behind Max (on new medium tyres) for 10 laps, when he lost the power steering he fell off like a stone
so, from lap 52 to lap 62 Charles lost 8s (0,8s per lap)Badger wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:12His power steering failed on lap 62 and by then he was 8 seconds behind Verstappen.woocasz wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:01Did you watch the race at all?Badger wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 18:45
Zero indication of a mechanical issue from his team radio before the power steering failed. Let's not assert such things without evidence.
Leclerc never got within one second of Verstappen and then started falling back. He clearly did not have the pace of Hamilton today. With that many laps to go the hard was the right tyre.
from lap 42 after the VSC, he was in the 1-2s range behind Max (on new medium tyres) for 10 laps, when he lost the power steering he fell off like a stone
Charles' pace in the final stint was really poor before his failure.
Calm down I am simply stating facts. Charles lost the tyres, he came on the radio around lap 50 complaining about the hards. No mention of any mechanical issues before the failure. His pace was nowhere compared to Lewis today.woocasz wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:21so, from lap 52 to lap 62 Charles lost 8s (0,8s per lap)
during this 10 laps what happend? he forgot how to drive ?
dont be disrespectful and stop trolling.
Just an fyi you can compare anyone you want on this website. several websites like this exist now, but this is the one I use.AnotherAlex wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:01I don't suppose you have one for Leclerc and Verstappen (perhaps with Norris or Piastri for good measure)?![]()
Maybe raceday was a little cooler than expected? Word was the hards would not be raceable due to heat, yet several teams used them successfully.Fakepivot wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:48one thing i notice, on friday, they had lot more cooling outlets, but since saturday they went back to regular engine cover with very little cooling, and so far ferrari have not had any engine related issue, and according to that article someone posted there engine runs hot? and yet we have very litter cooling? how does that work, how are they able to be reliable ?
Supposedly they designed the engine to run that way. If it turns out to be a winning design, it will be hard to duplicate as well as it an entire car philosophy!Fakepivot wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:48one thing i notice, on friday, they had lot more cooling outlets, but since saturday they went back to regular engine cover with very little cooling, and so far ferrari have not had any engine related issue, and according to that article someone posted there engine runs hot? and yet we have very litter cooling? how does that work, how are they able to be reliable ?
I think as others said, it’s quite likely he was slowly losing hydraulic pressure (he may not have realised it and was thinking it was tyres). In the first two stints, he was very strong and seemed to have the kind of pace in clear air that Lewis showed at the end.Badger wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:42Calm down I am simply stating facts. Charles lost the tyres, he came on the radio around lap 50 complaining about the hards. No mention of any mechanical issues before the failure. His pace was nowhere compared to Lewis today.
The first reports of a fault in Charles's car are beginning to appear.Badger wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 19:42Calm down I am simply stating facts. Charles lost the tyres, he came on the radio around lap 50 complaining about the hards. No mention of any mechanical issues before the failure. His pace was nowhere compared to Lewis today.
It could be just as bad in Austria, as Pirelli has designated the C3, C4, & C5 For Austria. A lot is going to depend on what the weather is like, Austria could be another high degradation high attrition race.
I wouldn't classify that as a "report" seeing as it came from an anonymous X user and not a journalist, which I suspect is why you didn't post the source in your comment.woocasz wrote: ↑14 Jun 2026, 20:15The first reports of a fault in Charles's car are beginning to appear.
"Power steering, BBW and shifting were problems reported in the final stint. Pink fluid dripping from underneath the car. Hydraulic failure"