It's a fascinating season, no question about it. Who would have, could have, thought at the beginning when Ferrari clearly had a dog on their hands, that it would be Ferrari who claimed the first 'double win' of the year to date.
A huge amount of this performance is coming from Alonso himself, who is driving out of his skin this year, exacting as much as he can from what he has. They are still making mistakes, like the rest of the teams, but are learning from them all the time.
Autosport's Mark Hughes did a fascinating comparison of the various chassis this year in order to find out what is the best car to date. He cites the nopw improved Ferrari, combined with Alonso's nous, as being perhaps almost the best combination in all circumstances. A triumph of averages so to speak.
Interesting to learn that this year the struggle to regain lost aerodynamic downforce might not be the governing factor. The Mclaren is the most potent, apparently, in this regard, with Red Bull not far behind, but whilst this provides the one lap supremacy in practice for pole, does not necessarily provide the best set up for the race long runs on various compound of tyres.
Too much downforce works the rear tyres too much over a stint which causes the car to slide more, causing more degradation and eventually the performance drops off a cliff. So whilst the downforce is still critical the trick is finding where the limit is. The right balance of aerodynamics to get the tyres to 'switch on' and grip and endure, or get it wrong and condemn your car to a multi stop strategy which may, or may not be, advantageous.
So why is it that more of the midfield teams seem to be finding this 'sweet spot' more often? RB's Christian Horner has a theory that because the less funded midfielders were never able to previously fully exploit the hot and cold blown exhaust concepts and various other aerodynamic trickery, they actually have a better understanding of refining a car with less downforce and 'ultimate' performance. Therefore, the current situation may be, actually, providing them with a unique, albeit short term, advantage. The only thing currently holding them back from regular top step visits is that their single lap pace is not sufficient to get them high enough up the grid to exploit this advantage on race days.
It is, of course, all subjective F1 techno-babble, which I admit, I love. So what is the best car so far this year?
Mark Hughes was non-committal, other than to say that it would be great to see Alonso or Hamilton drive the Williams, thus indicating that a better qualifying performance with this car could see it winning regularly. So if Senna and Maldonaldo can cut out their mistakes in practice they might just be regularly breaking through to the podium...........for a short whiles anyway.......before normal service is resumed.
No Hits, No Hype.......................Classic Rock Jan 2012