Hmm.. I don't think that was said. Strawman..?zibby43 wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 23:56
I think what’s a bit loaded is your assumption that Merc’s development success in the past was fueled only by resources.
zibby43 wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 23:56Not loaded in my mind. They know more than anyone what they’re capable of. And they have a track record of success. They developed last year’s dog into a race-winning car. What they accomplished last year in bringing relatively untested in simulation hardware to the car was amazing. What they did in 2021 to maximize their package against RB was special. They out-developed Ferrari in 2017 and 2018 in years where Ferrari held the championship leads around/after the summer break. And in those years, Ferrari spent more money.
I think what’s a bit loaded is your assumption that Merc’s development success in the past was fueled only by resources.
Did the poster say that Merc suddenly develop RB’s level of competence?AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:05zibby43 wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 23:56Not loaded in my mind. They know more than anyone what they’re capable of. And they have a track record of success. They developed last year’s dog into a race-winning car. What they accomplished last year in bringing relatively untested in simulation hardware to the car was amazing. What they did in 2021 to maximize their package against RB was special. They out-developed Ferrari in 2017 and 2018 in years where Ferrari held the championship leads around/after the summer break. And in those years, Ferrari spent more money.
I think what’s a bit loaded is your assumption that Merc’s development success in the past was fueled only by resources.
I just think it's dodgy to suddenly think everything is rosy given how much Mercedes have struggled and lacked understanding. They are making a better fight of it right now, but that doesn't mean they have suddently developed RB's level of competence with these regs. That's just hubris talking.
and for those 40 laps, RB was on a 1 step slower tire compound. Why is this not deemed important context?mkay wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:17AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:05zibby43 wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 23:56
Not loaded in my mind. They know more than anyone what they’re capable of. And they have a track record of success. They developed last year’s dog into a race-winning car. What they accomplished last year in bringing relatively untested in simulation hardware to the car was amazing. What they did in 2021 to maximize their package against RB was special. They out-developed Ferrari in 2017 and 2018 in years where Ferrari held the championship leads around/after the summer break. And in those years, Ferrari spent more money.
I think what’s a bit loaded is your assumption that Merc’s development success in the past was fueled only by resources.
I just think it's dodgy to suddenly think everything is rosy given how much Mercedes have struggled and lacked understanding. They are making a better fight of it right now, but that doesn't mean they have suddently developed RB's level of competence with these regs. That's just hubris talking.
Ultimately, Lewis lost roughly ~15 seconds to Max over a 40-odd lap distance meaning that Merc was probably in 0.4-0.6s/lap slower.
We will know more about the true extent of the gap over the next few race weekends.
It's implied when you say that now that Merc know what they are doing, they are going to outdevelop all other teams. That is what was said/implied by Zibby.
Read the rest of my post.AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:18and for those 40 laps, RB was on a 1 step slower tire compound. Why is this not deemed important context?mkay wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:17AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:05
I just think it's dodgy to suddenly think everything is rosy given how much Mercedes have struggled and lacked understanding. They are making a better fight of it right now, but that doesn't mean they have suddently developed RB's level of competence with these regs. That's just hubris talking.
Ultimately, Lewis lost roughly ~15 seconds to Max over a 40-odd lap distance meaning that Merc was probably in 0.4-0.6s/lap slower.
The race was 66 laps long. I said 40 laps. There couldn't have been more than 5 laps total of overlap, it doesn't change the gist of my argument which was that RB was lapping on a fundamentally slower tire for majority of those first 40 laps because they went conservative with the tire choice while Merc went aggressive.mkay wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:21Read the rest of my post.
Besides, that is incorrect. They both pitted within 15 laps of the end to put softs on. Also, they overlapped on mediums for a few laps as well.
Actually I think the gap in Spain was something like 7-8 tenths in race pace, and that the upgrade package brought a fundamental handling improvement. This is consistent with the projected qualifying gaps, and the DRS corrected fastest lap.
I don’t think it’s a question that is what was implied. Why else frame it that way? It’s discounting their talent and efficiency.organic wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 00:03Hmm.. I don't think that was said. Strawman..?
Their reputation as the team with huge in-season development was cultivated when they were routinely spending the most $ per year on the grid, up there with Ferrari over $400m. We haven't really what they can do under the budget cap
It stands to reason that at least some part of their development advantage pre-2021 was due to their larger spend, otherwise they would not have spent as much.. no?
There was no cap on engine personnel costs at the time so losing engine staff to Red Bull Powertrains was probably not due to the cap. (These loss of experienced personnel likely partly responsible for the 2022 power unit's relatively lower advantage or slight deficit than previously. Of course, that is partly on Petronas for doing a poor job compared to ExxonMobil, BP or Shell on E10 fuel too which is nothing directly to do with those two operations - Mercedes HPP or Ford RBPT.)
How do you chose between Lewis and Newey? I know some are excluded from the cap, but it is still cost to the team.DGP123 wrote: ↑05 Jun 2023, 09:35Tier 1 is Max & Lewis. That’s it. Throwing £40m at Lewis is evidence of that. Can already see that given a better car, Lewis looks rejuvenated, and motivated again. Russell is good, and it’s the best driver pairing out there, but he doesn’t have the race pace/management of Lewis, and the team know it.
The track is a mix of corners and demands that reflect well at most the other tracks on the calendar(non street tracks).AR3-GP wrote: ↑04 Jun 2023, 23:02As for the performance. I expect ebbs and flows. Anyone thinking that Merc are going to bury Aston to the tune of 35 seconds every weekend from here on out is getting way ahead of themselves. AMR clearly underperformed at the same time that Merc had one of it's strongest outings on a track that suits them, and not Aston.