Pamphlet wrote:TheBigJ wrote:That car is quite simply a race-winning car
The Lotus may not be a Mercedes, but it's still not a race-winning car anymore. They need that double DRS badly.
I have to agree that, on current form, Lotus's best chances for a race win came and went before the summer break - in the past few races, Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren seem to have pulled away from Lotus, whilst Sauber, Force India and Williams are pressurising them depending on the circuit characteristics. Kimi could consider himself somewhat lucky to finish in 6th - Hulkenberg was barely 0.7s behind him at the finish, whilst Maldonado was within two seconds and also catching him quickly in the closing laps.
As for upcoming developments, that DDRS would only solve some of Lotus's problems due to the limits on when it can be used. The problems that Lotus are struggling with seem to be much more deeply rooted than just their DDRS - the comments from Allison and Boullier, where they admitted that they simply had no more pace up their sleeve, indicates that there may be issues with developments not working as effectively as hoped (the struggles with their DDRS seem to suggest that may be the case).
If anything, their DDRS might be more of a disadvantage than an advantage at the moment - I have to wonder whether their technical problems have hindered their development work elsewhere due to resources being diverted into that development instead.
Now, Red Bull have apparently bolted on a DDRS system aimed at stalling the rear beam wing (they appear to have had it since Singapore, and it is part of the reason why Red Bull are now noticeably quicker through the speed traps than once they were), but that was because they needed to find a way to boost their qualifying performance and put themselves ahead of McLaren on the grid.
It is true that Lotus's qualifying performance has generally been a weak link - whilst Grosjean set the 5th fastest time in Q3, he was a second slower than Vettel and six tenths slower than Button - but normally that would be offset in the race through superior tyre management in the latter stages of the race.
Here, though, whilst Kimi's lap times were quite consistent for much of his stints, you could see that his times started to worsen slightly earlier than Button's times, for example. His tyre wear wasn't bad, but it looks like Lotus no longer have the advantage in that department they once had (even Mercedes, normally one of the harder outfits on their tyres, had reasonable tyre wear in this race), so their race pace isn't quite as strong as once it was.
Even if they get their DDRS working, I doubt it'll be the silver bullet that the team are hoping for if overall development has slipped behind their rivals.