continuum16 wrote: ↑30 Mar 2023, 20:06
Surely that's a big part of it. With the exception of maybe 2020 (and debatably 2019) Merc have never been great at making a car with a strong or stable rear end. At the end of the V8 era, the early V6 era, the wider 2017/18 cars (the famous "divas"), and 2021 the car always looked on a knifedge compared to others. Like McLaren's weak front end, it's something they've not been able to overcome despite numerous reg cycles.
interview to Benson of BBC, April 2013.
Q: What is the favourite F1 car you have driven?
A: "The one I'm driving right now. I have always needed a car with good rear grip. I don't mind if I have to struggle with the front because you can catch that up. But I've always wanted to make sure I have plenty of rear grip and I've rarely had that before. Now, I've finally got a 'rear-ended' car and it's driving into understeer, and you have to work around it with mechanical balance.
"I know people have this impression of me as a driver who likes to dance the rear end out, but that's just the way my cars have been. I'm quite comfortable being on the edge and having to balance it when it looks 'oversteery'.
"That's what I had to do with my aggressive style to get the car as far up as possible. Driving in that way enables me to make that kind of car shine more than it would do if I drove it normally. But I prefer the car like the Mercedes is now."