I’m currently having an interesting discussion with an engineer who used to work at a senior level (not at the highest level i.e not TD or similar!) at a top team. Doesn’t work in F1 currently. I don’t want to say who because the engineer is on the usual youtube, twitter etc. and most here will know if I named, but I reached out to the engineer from an account using my own name and I’d prefer to remain anonymous here.
This engineer posts quite a lot of excellent information on the cars from different teams but I was interested what this person thought about the drivers which hasn’t been mentioned by this person so far who instead has only talked about the cars and tech. Hasn’t revealed anything too juicy so far, but some things told were interesting. Said that prior to 2022 rule change, Mercedes opted to go for long wheelbase because it maximised downforce and efficiency in medium to high speed corners and while that long wheelbase had an inherent weakness in rotation in slower corners compared to short wheelbase cars, Hamilton’s ability to maximise rotation in slow corners from his driving style compensated for the rotation weakness inherent in the longer wheelbase. So if what this person is saying is accurate, the team actually designed a car that had a particular strength in an area where their driver couldn’t be the performance differentiator i.e fast corners, so it was superior there to the other cars, but had a weakness in an area where their driver could differentiate i.e slower corners.
Same engineer made the comparison to the Red Bull, which had one of the shortest wheelbases, saying that this gave the car fantastic rotation in the slower corners but compromised aero in the faster corners however Red Bull’s aero dept is so strong that even with the shorter wheelbase they designed a car that was very good in fast corners and impressively close to, but not as good as the Mercedes. However the short wheelbase also had a flaw in that it was twitchy and Verstappen’s ability and reaction times to correct a car that was twitchy at speed compensated for this weakness, while providing a car that was very easy to rotate in slower speed corners.
I also asked the engineer about the braking part, why we’ve seen Hamilton very late on the brakes in earlier seasons, notoriously late in fact, but in the last few years not as much as the Red Bulls or even the Ferraris. Is it simply just a matter of age or anything to do with the car design? The engineer said this was also due to wheelbase. That the ability to brake late hinges on three factors. One being feel for the brakes and bleeding off braking force to compensate for the exponential loss in grip as aero load comes off with reduction in speed. Two being able to hold onto the rear under hard braking and especially during the last phase of braking as steering is fed in. Three, the ability to get the car turned. Noted that Hamilton has stood out from other drivers on the first two parts, having an excellent feel for grip as aero load is shed during braking, and coping with an instable rear end as the car starts to rotate with most of the weight over the front axle. However, the engineer thinks that the long wheel base means that even with Hamilton employing trail braking and controlling the rear pivoting around the front axle, the car simply isn’t agile in the slower corners and wants to understeer if too much speed is carried in compared to the same speed in a shorter wheelbase car. Hence Hamilton is forced to take a more traditional geometric line through the corner than his preferred V which is basically a straight hard braking line late into the corner, then a short and sharp rotation, followed by a straight exit.
Very interesting to see how a driver’s qualities certainly can influence car design but also how car designs can either choose to align with a driver’s strength in aligning to the driver or go the opposite route of using the driver’s strength to compensate for a weakness in the car derived from an intentional compromise in car design towards that car weakness in order to maximise another car strength. Sorry if I have not worded all of this well or poor grammar as English is not my first language.