Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg will put Mercedes' early season dominance to its first true test on Sunday at the floodlit Bahrain Grand Prix on a track where both drivers have always struggled.
Hamilton, the 2008 world champion, swept to victory from pole in Malaysia last week ahead of Rosberg who clinched the championship opener in Australia.
But despite their lofty positions in the 2014 title race, the dust and heat of the troubled Middle East state have often choked the pair's ambitions.
Hamilton's best finish at the Sakhir track was second in 2007 while Rosberg has never made the podium with his storming drive to pole position in 2013 yielding a poor ninth place finish.
His best result remains a humble fifth.
"I've finished on the podium there a couple of times but, for one reason or another, I've never managed to get the win," said Hamilton, whose victory at Sepang followed a retirement in Australia.
"Until last week it was the same story for me with Malaysia, so fingers crossed this can be the year of breaking those cycles.”
Rosberg is the championship leader after two events and enjoys an 18-point cushion over Hamilton.
But he too is aware that Bahrain, which rarely features standout duels, has not been a happy hunting ground.
"The first two races have been a great start to my season and I'm already looking forward to being back in the car and carrying on that momentum in Bahrain," said the German.
"We may be leading both championships at the moment but our rivals are breathing down our necks, so we need to stay focused and keep doing our job calmly and professionally."
While Mercedes have excelled in the early weeks of the season, it's been a tale of relative woe for world champions Red Bull.
Four-time champion Sebastian Vettel failed to finish the season-opener in Australia before grabbing third place in Malaysia.
He sits seventh in the title race while teammate Daniel Ricciardo has yet to get on the scoreboard as Red Bull wilt in the shadow of Mercedes.
MANAMA-NAMPA/AFP