ringo wrote:You are ignoring the fact Lewis was faster than Kubica and his tyres were in better shape than Kubica's. So why did Kubica's tyres last the race distance, and even have enough performance to hold off the superior ferraris?
I'm afraid you're clutching at straws there in a way that makes any real discussion fruitless. There is no evidence whatsoever that his tyres were in better condition than Kubica's, and saying it won't make it true. Looking at his pace relative to Kubica's is meaningless because Kubica was clearly managing his pace and tyres. Just because you're able to do a certain lap time halfway through a race it does not mean that you're going to keep that up and it doesn't mean that you're not going to be driving on ice at the end.
These new rules have completely changed the nature of the racing. You can't just sprint your way to victory and change tyres for free.
Not only that you also ignore that the pit stop decision was based on the assumption that redbull, renault and ferrari were going to pit.
I haven't ignored that. What you've ignored is that the decision was primarily take in concert with the condition of his tyres. Martin Whitmarsh was absolutely clear on that. I don't know what you're basing your assertion on that it wasn't other than Hamilton's frustrated rants.
It was not based on the condition of the tyres relative to the other drivers. His tyres were in good condition relative to the 1 stoppers.
It was, and no they weren't. You have no idea what condition his tyres were in, and as I've said, looking at his pace and thinking that it looks good 34 laps into the race means nothing. There is zero evidence that he would have kept that up on the same set of tyres to the end. McLaren have a lot of complex tyre analysis for this sort of thing.
Martin Whitmarsh was absolutely steadfastly clear on that, and you're just plainly trying to ignore everything that he's said.
Button's decicion was the only choice he had. Imagine how he felt when his team mate passed him? He knew there was no way to win from there.
That's a very, very poor excuse and I'm disappointed in you ringo.
Mclaren were wrong on the strategy...
You can't say that because Hamilton has ended up beached in a gravel trap with shot tyres before. There is zero evidence that that wouldn't have happened here, other than Hamilton's oh-so confident statement that the tyres would have lasted. As you say below, Hamilton is not a tyre engineer and McLaren are steadfast that those tyres would not have lasted until the end.
Given a hypothetical scenario of coulda, shoulda, woulda, McLaren's prediction looks rather more of a better guess than Hamilton's.
...and there was no way hamilton could do such a calculation with 20 odd laps to go, no driver could, he is not a tyre engineer.
As Martin whitmarsh has very publicly said, only a driver knows how the tyres feel and only a driver knows how long he will be able to make those tyres last because only he can measure his speed and lap time. The team can't. They can only react to it.
Either Hamilton takes a long hard look at how he drives or he will get little joy this season.