Whilst delighted with Lewis Hamilton's Singapore sweep, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff admits he is disturbed by the F1 W05 Hybrid's reliability.
Though Nico Rosberg's retirement brought the championship fight screaming back to life, the steering column wiring loom failure not only allowed Hamilton to leapfrog the German in the standings it allowed Daniel Ricciardo to close in just a little more. Furthermore, it signalled the fact that the 2014 title might not necessarily go to the better driver but to the driver with the more reliable car.
"If we could do anything more to prevent further retirements we would be doing it," said Wolff, twenty-four hours after the race and still clearly ruing Rosberg's bad luck.
"I would break my arm again to make it happen!" he continued. "It's something we need to get on top of - we have a missile of a car but, in terms of reliability, we are having issues.
"We have a great group of people in our reliability team who are dedicated to quality. We're very proud of the structures they are putting into place - and that's what makes it even more astonishing that we keep having these issues. These things take time to get a grip on - but we will not stop until we stop suffering these DNFs. We have had four of them now and it would not be satisfying at all to have the Championship decided because one car let the driver down. We need to refocus, get our heads down and keep concentrating on preventing these reliability problems reoccurring."
The Austrian was full of praise for his German driver who, rather than storming off and moaning to the media, stayed on to watch the rest of the race and even joined in the post-race celebrations.
"Nico was very professional, very calm, and that's something I'm very proud of," said Wolff. "In the heat of the moment he kept a cool head and tried to reset the system as best he could. Then, when he got out of the car, of course he was very disappointed. But one of his strengths is the ability to switch that off and even when disaster strikes, he is able to hold his head up high and support the team during the race."
Asked to give further insight into the issue which turned the championship tide, Wolff said: "It was a hardware problem, which looks to be a loom within the steering
column that broke. We don't know how that happened yet. It's a part that we exchange regularly and it was well within its duty cycle - so we need to understand what happened. The whole thing came out of the car and flew back to the UK with the team overnight. As soon as possible we will be trying to analyse it in a forensic way to understand where the problem started and why it appeared when he got into the car and was about to leave the garage.
"The whole system broke down and the only things functioning were his gear changes - he didn't have any engine modes anymore. We tried to survive with it but he didn't really have Hybrid energy to deploy and you could see that in the lap times. When he couldn't get moving again in the pits we decided to call it a day because it was just too dangerous. The main danger was in actually trying to get the car moving, as it would have required putting first gear in, getting lots of revs, dropping the car and just going. We didn't want to risk having the jack flying out at the rear and hurting somebody so we stopped it there."
That aside, the day wasn't all bad news, the team's other driver took pole, the win and fastest lap, and a three-point lead in the championship.
"Fantastic stuff from Lewis who drove an incredible race," said Wolff. "The way he regularly pulled away at two or three seconds per lap - it was a great performance. These are the days where you really recognise how great he is. That's what makes the difference between the good ones and the very best ones.
"When the safety car came out we didn't have any concerns as, although we were following our own strategy, we could mirror what the others were doing. In terms of degradation and tyre overheating, we had seen from the long runs on Friday that we were looking ok on the tyres. There wasn't any particular worry that they would let us down. It was more the concern that reliability could affect the other car.
"When it came to the stop itself, you cannot be complacent and you cannot afford to lose even a fraction of a second in that moment. The crew did a superb job when it really mattered. We knew that finishing the race with tyres more than 30 laps old would have created a huge pace deficit - and this is exactly what we saw with our competitors. In the end, for Lewis, you could see the pace difference was about three to four seconds per lap - and he was taking it easy. So it was the right call - but when you have one car
remaining as your only weapon out there you have constant doubts about everything. When Lewis came out and was two seconds behind Sebastian, we thought that he would probably clear him - but there is always a doubt."
The big talking point going in to, and throughout the weekend, was the hurriedly introduced (and revised) ban on certain radio communications.
"We had several moments where we discussed whether what we were saying was still within what is allowed," admitted the Austrian, "so I think there are some messages that will require more calibration. But it didn't particularly harm us.
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