Yeah, that too! Forgot about that.Big Tea wrote:Also remember they have to set the cooling requirements before Park ferme nowJordanFiveOh wrote: ↑25 May 2022, 20:18They only underestimated for this race, since it was hotter than anticipated.
Yeah, that too! Forgot about that.Big Tea wrote:Also remember they have to set the cooling requirements before Park ferme nowJordanFiveOh wrote: ↑25 May 2022, 20:18They only underestimated for this race, since it was hotter than anticipated.
It was more of an inaccurate prediction of the conditions on sunday than a conscious decision to lift and coast for 2/3 of the raceJuzh wrote: ↑25 May 2022, 21:45It was on lap 24 and if you check out verstappen's onboard he was doing L&C at around 150m. My point is everyone was tight on cooling apart from maybe ferrari (i havent checked but we've not heard anything from them on that front). It was a conscious decision by mercedes to take cooling off the car and do some lift and coast, it wasn't something that just suddenly appeared out of thin air.Mchamilton wrote: ↑25 May 2022, 20:29if you class like lap 10 as late in the race then yeah.
it was before george and verstappen were battling
To be clear Sainz had a broken diffuser after he spun.SuperCNJ wrote: ↑25 May 2022, 22:08And Hamilton seems to have the highest minimum speeds in nearly all the corners or at least on par with Perez but faster than Sainz. Not sure if he was using more of the tyres in the corners to compensate for the deficit from lift and coasting but still very encouraging.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑25 May 2022, 19:53Check the telemetry charts and you will see the huge drop off at end of straight. I pointed this out, when people were wrongly saying it was drag.
https://i.imgur.com/V6G5zsH.png
Using some rough calculations after copying the graph I estimate that HAM was losing about 7 hundredths of second during lift and coast before braking into turn 1. He lost maybe about the same or less into turn 10. And you can see two other lifts over the lap.
So It safe to say about 2 tenths were lost to lift and coast AT LEAST.
Yeah it's weird, but it's in the data...PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑26 May 2022, 03:10The 2nd plot is very strange... It is showing that the throttle graph is slightly out of sync OR the Mercedes ERS was harvesting early. You can see where the throttle is 100% and the velocity of the Mercedes is decreasing! This is definitley not normal.
I asked myself the same question and I just can't figure out how they can possibly have gotten to that conclusion. In that video they even specifically referenced the "leading Ferrari" which was ~76 seconds ahead at that point.
I would like to think it's just a PR stunt to keep the press and Mercedes fans engaged in amnesia. Deep down, nobody knows the reality better than Mercedes team themselves. Monaco is going to hide the reality for some more time and the drums would keep beating. Baku would reveal the reality of the progress, more so if the leaders have an incident free race. If they have made genuine progress, great and I hope they have and would like to keep myself in check until then, otherwise, it would be a sham that they would be contributing to currently.dialtone wrote: ↑26 May 2022, 06:19I asked myself the same question and I just can't figure out how they can possibly have gotten to that conclusion. In that video they even specifically referenced the "leading Ferrari" which was ~76 seconds ahead at that point.
The only thing I can think of is that the start of the medium tyre stint against Leclerc was on a similar pace:
LEC
LAP 23 M/2 Stint 2: 1:27.210
LAP 24 M/3 Stint 2: 1:27.196
LAP 25 M/4 Stint 2: 1:27.030
LAP 26 M/5 Stint 2: 1:27.279
HAM
LAP 24 M/2 Stint 3: 1:27.980
LAP 25 M/3 Stint 3: 1:27.415
LAP 26 M/4 Stint 3: 1:27.156
LAP 27 M/5 Stint 3: 1:27.244
However Leclerc was in cruise mode here... Average of 3 laps where both have the same tyres:
https://i.imgur.com/g6rcCUH.png
Leclerc is basically losing 0.4s in S3 to not overheat the tires. Ham's lift and coasting is losing him just 0.1s in S1, here's an example lap from the 3 above:
https://i.imgur.com/zWC5IWV.png
Of course this is ignoring the soft tire stint where LEC gained 17 seconds on HAM. HAM was 53s behind after 1st lap, when LEC retired HAM was 76 secs behind. I'm not sure how it can be said 0.1s behind.
Rather than cracking up a joke, could you help instead understand how they got to being 0.1s behind a car that gave them 20 seconds in 20 laps?zibby43 wrote: ↑26 May 2022, 07:10Yes, Mercedes, the team that has for years underplayed their pace/performance at all costs, is suddenly shifting course and overstating their performance.
All while explicitly mentioning that the positive pace was limited to one race thus far, so they have to be guarded.
Some of y'all crack me up.
Past performances are not a yardstick of present or future. When Mercedes showed up in second winter testing, everybody thought they have created some sort of world beater again, but with time it proved that they had created a dud. But in the time back then, no one was really ready to write them off as 2019 had a similar situation. Any similarities to 2019 ended right at the Bahrain test itself. So instead of laughing off based on Mercedes' past performance, a more measured approach until they climb back up would be more apt. It's important to be real and critical of the data available, account for qualitative attributes from Spain where neither of the best cars of the top had a clean race. Until the 3 teams have a clean race, it's hard to establish the real gains Mercedes has made. Until then, hold off posting useless stuff please.zibby43 wrote: ↑26 May 2022, 07:10Yes, Mercedes, the team that has for years underplayed their pace/performance at all costs, is suddenly shifting course and overstating their performance.
All while explicitly mentioning that the positive pace was limited to one race thus far, so they have to be guarded.
Some of y'all crack me up.
I'd say Monaco is the least reflective of the mean track average. It's the slowest and has the least similar track surface. Azerbaijan is the following race and is pretty much the the opposite with high speed being the go to. Similar track surface though. Canada will be a very good indicator as it's got a good blend of high speed straights, tight corners, fast corners and an abrasive track surface.Sevach wrote: ↑26 May 2022, 08:52One thing that needs to be considered, Spain was the most tire limited teams have been all season, this was a race about keeping the tires alive rather than outright pace, tire offsets that in previous races meant very little (things like 4 laps) were making a huge difference last weekend.
So this was a very particular weekend and we need to see more before yelling "THEY'RE BACK".