LM10 wrote: ↑10 Jun 2018, 11:46
GPA-R, of course it's not, but people here tell that 6 races is equal to a time loss of easily 0.5 seconds
That's not what I've said at all. Perhaps I'm making it too complicated.
- New engine should be better than older engine in Merc (that's the point you've grasped but also...).
- New version of the engine should be better than the engine it's replacing.
Combine the two and you should get a bigger gap than what we've seen at previous power sensitive circuits (e.g. Baku). But...we haven't. I'm happy to change my view should new/better data surface. What gap would you expect to see?
For instance, maybe 0.5 is too much. How about 0.4? Nope, haven't seen that. 0.3? Nope. 0.2...Well, maybe (if we give Vettel the mythical extra tenth), but that's (almost?) entirely explained by the new version. So...what is the drop off between Australia and here? You seem to be arguing that there is either no drop off or that the Mercedes engine has been getting faster (why is it even competitive with a better version of the engine that blew it away earlier in the year)?
Oh, and nicely worded. "Easily"... heh

2007 - Beats 2005 & 2006 WDC Alonso. 1-0
2008-09 - Beats Kovalainen. 2-0
2010-12 - Beats 2009 WDC Button. 2-1
2013-16 - Beats 2016 WDC Rosberg. 3-1
2017-21 - Beats Bottas. 5-0
2022-24 - Loses to Russell. 1-2 (but outscores him)
2025-?? - Leclerc. TBC
Just the car???