The Story of Lewis Hamilton's Most Underrated Championship (2017)
Part I - Setting the Stage
A quick note before I begin:
In this thread I will often express qualifying times expressed as a %, rather than in seconds. This is to better represent qualifying gaps between drivers, as particularly short or long tracks can often distort the true gap between drivers.
Rather than talk about Hamilton, I would actually like to begin by mentioning Sebastian Vettel, Lewis's title rival, who drove a brilliant campaign. 2017 was Vettel at his best, carrying Ferrari on his back at times and destroying the already-damaged reputation of Kimi Raikkonen.
In fact, I'd go as far as to argue that 2017 had one of the highest-quality championship battles in F1 history. Both drivers demolished their highly rated teammates, made almost zero driving errors between them and made up for their teams' errors & blunders with fantastic drives.
Ultimately, Vettel was let down by Ferrari, who failed to produce a car reliable enough to challenge Mercedes over a season.
They also lacked in the engine department, though I still believe the SF70h was underrated, demonstrating superior race pace or tyre wear at many tracks.
Analysing the SF70h in-depth, the car's biggest strength was its versatility. A wide setup range coupled with low tyre wear meant that Ferrari were competitive at most tracks, especially at the start of the season.
The high-rake concept also gave Ferrari greater total downforce.
This allowed Vettel to be highly consistent across the season, leading the championship at every round until Monza (Round 13) and scoring 10 podiums in that time, while Hamilton only managed 8.
The SF70h's biggest weakness was its reliability. Vettel's car held up for most of the season but fell short at a critical period, derailing his campaign.
The SF70h's top speed was also a problem, for reasons I'll delve into later in the thread (or in a Part II).
Onto Mercedes.
I said earlier that the SF70h was "underrated", which I'd like to take back now.
Rather than ignoring the strengths of the SF70h, I think more fans actually aren't aware (or turn a blind eye) to the weaknesses of the Mercedes W08, actually making it *overrated*.
The W08 had two major strengths; one-lap pace and top speed.
The car was dominant in qualifying, taking 15/20 pole positions, mainly thanks to Mercedes's infamous "party modes".
In time, this has led people to believe that the car was dominant on both Saturday AND Sunday.
The reality is that the W08 was rarely able to translate qualifying pace into long-run pace. This was due to a number of reasons.
The simplest is that Mercedes couldn't run their "party modes" for extended periods of time, as it would put far too much strain on the engine.
The non-availability of party modes in the Grand Prix somewhat levelled the playing field between Mercedes and Ferrari when it came to top speed, but the W08 had another trick up its sleeve: aero efficiency.
Mercedes designed the W08 with a low-rake philosophy in mind, contrary to Ferrari (and Red Bull). This minimised drag, as the rear of the car sat much lower to the ground than its counterparts.
This handed Mercedes a crucial advantage at certain tracks across the calendar.
Mercedes's top speed advantage was also aided by a a technical directive published in July.
The TD stated that while any engine introduced thus far could burn oil at 1.2l/100km, any engine introduced AFTER the Belgian Grand Prix had to have a 0.9l/100km limit.
Mercedes was able to introduce their final engine of the season in time for Spa aiding Hamilton to victory before he took the championship lead a week later at Monza.
When Vettel was forced to use old engines after the Malaysia fiasco, that was the final nail in the coffin.
Now I hear you asking, "This is all well and good Mr. Kobayashicore, but you spent a long time praising Mercedes. Didn't you call the W08 overrated just a few moments ago?"
Yes I did and I stick by it. The W08 may have had numerous strengths but there were also BIG weaknesses.
For years Mercedes pioneered the low-rake concept with great success, but the new regulations put more emphasis on the underbody, favouring Ferrari.
Mercedes tried to make up the deficit by lengthening the W08, but this made the car both heavier and more cumbersome.
Running overweight and poorly balanced, the W08 became a nightmare to engineers. A small set-up window meant that the car refused to yield consistent results when exposed to different tyre compounds, temperature changes or dynamic circuits.
A narrative exists that the W08 got better and better as the season went on, and this is partially true due to the new engine at Belgium, but in reality the issues persisted throughout the year. Mercedes were lost at Mexico and Sepang, where they finished 20 seconds off the lead.
There are specific case studies (China, Bahrain, Silverstone, Hungary) where we saw the strengths and weaknesses of the SF70h and W08 play out in real time, but I'll go in-depth when I examine the races themselves more deeply in the next thread.
Finally, I'll touch Mercedes's hydraulic heave damper, an R&D project aimed at eliminating the weaknesses of the low-rake concept while preserving all the advantages.
It looked to be a stroke of genius, but Charlie Whiting chose to ban the system before the start of the season.
Twitter's word count prevents me from illustrating how fab this bit of tech was, because Mercedes used it in the first week of pre-season & blew everyone away.
Without the damper the W08 looked rather ordinary, and Mercedes did well to arrive at Melbourne with a competitive car.
As per Paddy Lowe on the Ferrari inquiry, which led CH to ban the system: "Ferrari has been sending missiles for a while but they hit the aircraft carrier with that one.”
It's unlikely to me that Merc would've designed such an extreme car if they knew their tech would be banned.
If you want a more in-depth summary of Mercedes's and Ferrari's 2017 challengers, I would highly recommend this article by Mark Hughes, written in December after the season finale. The article may be behind a paywall for some of you (sorry). google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j…
If you got this far, thank you for reading! I'll do my best to post Part II as soon as possible, where I'll delve into the championship battle race-by-race.
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48 hours later he was back in an F2 car, took pole, took fastest lap and won the feature race, and then came from 8th to 2nd (with FL again) in the sprint race
He scored 45/48 points in one weekend, a record that hasn’t been broken since.
The classic “I watched F1 in 2022 so I must be an expert” is plaguing this app again
Anyone with a pair and eyes knew he was him at Bahrain, his second race in a Ferrari and the first where he was actually competitive and he took pole, overtook his teammate 30 seconds after his team told him to hold position, and would have won until his engine blew
The story of Hamilton's most underrated season (Part 1) - 2011
The story opens at pre-season in Jerez, where Hamilton and co. immediately have their work cut out for them.
Mclaren's MP4-26 challenger is both slow and woefully unreliable, with commentator Martin Brundle even going so far to describe it as "a mess". news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/moto…
Thankfully, the team ditched their radical exhaust design for a more conventional approach, rescuing the team from a potential catastrophe.
At Melbourne, Hamilton was the only man able to come close to Vettel and his all-dominant RB-7.
The story of how Kimi Raikkonen almost won 12 races in a row (LONG THREAD)
Before I begin I would just like to say that this isn't a "who was better" or "who deserved it more" thread.
Both Kimi and Fernando drove fantastic and very different seasons, with both men equally deserving of a championship that ultimately fell into Alonso's hands.
Our story begins in March 2005. After Ferrari domination in 2004, a host of regulation changes come in mean Mclaren and Renault are up top as title favourites.
After heartbreak in 03 and MSC out of the picture, can anyone stop Kimi from taking his maiden title in 2005?
Comparing Hamilton and Russell in 2022 so far, removing as much bad luck & outliers as possible
Bahrain
Russell is misadvised in his last run in Q3, qualifying P9. However, he recovers to P4 with Hamilton just ahead in P3. Solid start to the season!
HAM = 15pts
RUS = 12pts
Jeddah (1/2)
Merc make setup errors on Hamilton's car resulting in a shock Q1 exit.
Lewis is unlucky in the race as Latifi's crash allows all the medium runners make a free pitstop. Later, Alonso retires at the pitlane entry, so Lewis can't pit during the VSC period.
Unpopular opinion: Red Bull were just as quick as Mercedes at Jeddah 2021
While Mercedes had a noticeable straight-line speed advantage over the field, Red Bull's focus on downforce allowed them to blitz Sector 1 before Merc made back the time in S2 and S3.
In Qualifying, Max was ~0.2s ahead of Lewis but unfortunately lost his lap after crashing at the final corner, forcing him to start 3rd.
While Max built up the majority of that gap in Sector 1, what was most impressive was how he matched Lewis' S2 time.
In the race, Max was able to keep up with the leading pair of Hamilton & Bottas before Schumacher's crash brought out the Red Flag.
RB took a gamble by originally keeping Max out on track which paid off when Race Control neutralised the race in order to repair the barriers.