lamo wrote:
ashley313 wrote:
I think Felipe could have won in Brazil if the primary focus of his strategy was to win.
Possibly, but its still 1/10 and still only in the wet.
Note Alonso won Malaysia (wet) and took his only 2 poles in the wet, one leading to him winning in Germany and another 2nd place in Silversone.
It was a great car in the wet. http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 02380.htmlPat Fry: "The car was not fantastic, but OK"
"The F2012 started the winter tests with problems. How big were they really?
Fry: Some things didn't work as planned. We also made a number of fundamental errors. Initially the task was to localize and fix those. The first test gave us a bad awakening, the second answered our questions, but we didn't have the time until Melbourne to react. That happened with the Barcelona update"
"Why was your car so good in the rain?
Fry: I don't think that the cause was our car. Rather, it was Alonso. Especially in Malaysia, when our car still was difficult to drive. He did an unbelievable job there. And when he was half a second faster than the rest in Hockenheim, that was the driver and not the car."
"Why did the F2012 work better on high-speed tracks?
Fry: Did it? Okay, in Monza we could easily have been on pole without the problems at the rear suspension. I'm not so sure we were especially strong in Spa. But one could see our problems become bigger the more downforce the track required."
"Why did the car not react well to most of the modifications during the second part of the season?
Fry: We were a long way back at the start of the season. That always makes it simple to make big steps. For us, those came in Barcelona and Montreal. Usually, you can improve half a tenth or a tenth between two races, but the observer does not notice this, also because the effects of the improvements can vary from track type to track type. We also improved during the second part of the season, but not as much as the others did. There are two philosophies about how to develop your car. There's the Mercedes or Honda philosophy of waiting three or four races and then bringing a big step. And there's the way that is used by RBR, McLaren, and also Ferrari. To bring a little bit to every race. Every team has phases during which its improvements are bigger or smaller. McLaren had the best car at the start, then stagnated, and was strong at the end again."
(Translation by KnucklesAgain from the Autosport forum - he posted the full translation there, I am not sure if it is against the rules to copy the whole of it here? In any case, it is an interesting interview, worth the read)