It's not very likely that he would make statements without any background knowledge from the technical staff regardless of whether it's right or wrong at the end. He's not wrong about the car characteristics changing though.
It's not very likely that he would make statements without any background knowledge from the technical staff regardless of whether it's right or wrong at the end. He's not wrong about the car characteristics changing though.
Worth a caveat to that in my view......especially if there's a fundamental part of mechanical/chassis layout that prevents a desired aero concept from being brought to complete potential.
There’s the RB method and the Ferrari/AMR method. With the deep curves on top of the side pod feeding air to the diffuser. The only common thing is the undercut which teams have moved towards.Sevach wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 14:08https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merc ... /10494939/
Bad situation.
Well that's not a RB sidepod, the one we can see on the car now, and so if evaluation took place on that, it's understandable there's conflict in output data.chrisc90 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 14:14There’s the RB method and the Ferrari/AMR method. With the deep curves on top of the side pod feeding air to the diffuser. The only common thing is the undercut which teams have moved towards.Sevach wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 14:08https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merc ... /10494939/
Bad situation.
Maybe the problem is the correlation of the models and wind tunnel at Mercedes which has been tweaked to ‘agree’ with the zeropod concept so having a more natural sodepod method is throwing it off.
But Mercedes said sidepods don't matter.Sevach wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 14:08https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merc ... /10494939/
Bad situation.
“The interesting thing and unusual thing about the McLaren upgrade is its lap time effect is really quite strong. It’s pretty unusual to have a step of that size, of relative competitiveness in the middle of the season.
Chapeau to them, they’ve done a really good piece of work there, but that also makes it interesting for us because we have the before and after shots and we know the lap time effect was big.
So, well worth us paying more attention than we normally might to a team or another competitor team’s upgrades because in this case, we know that whatever changed has made a really meaningful difference in their lap time.
So, quite useful for us to know what that was and see whether it can play into our own thoughts about developing our own car.”
Not really, you could level this to all long suffering fans of Ferrari, Red Bull, Williams and McLaren.
Mercedes don't have the luxury of blaming suppliers, which let's face it one or two teams have superb form of doing. They own their position, which would be second in the championship presently, but "Is Toto out of his depth"...chrisc90 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 12:14Is Toto and the team out of their depth with the new regulations? Do people still have the faith in them to deliver?
We seen 2 years on concepts that haven’t worked, despite acknowledging it was a dud last year. There’s been promises of upgrades that haven’t materialised. (Where was the big silverstone upgrade?) The PR just seems like it’s giving the fans the things they want to hear but it never turns up
At this point no one has won a race besides RB. 2nd in the WCC is certainly an accomplishment and testament to Mercs consistency, but Merc will get bored of consistently finishing 2nd. That arguably happened last year already. Teams like AMR and Mclaren have made big jumps, and to me that is more impressive.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:05
Or what if Merc did a McLaren and waited 9 races before showing up, would they have been even more out of their depth?
RB pretty much secured the 2022 - 2025 regs for themselves with the RB18 as the baseline model, which was built with their allotted CFD/WT time from 2021. It's more about prize money than development time, which is why Mercedes was still going for P2 last year (and for competition's sake).AR3-GP wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:16At this point no one has won a race besides RB. 2nd in the WCC is certainly an accomplishment and testament to Mercs consistency, but Merc will get bored of consistently finishing 2nd. That arguably happened last year already. Teams like AMR and Mclaren have made big jumps, and to me that is more impressive.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:05
Or what if Merc did a McLaren and waited 9 races before showing up, would they have been even more out of their depth?
As an example, one would not pat Ferrari on the back even though they've been 2nd/3rd in the WCC for a number of years. I think it's more promising to show that you can make significant improvement because it shows an understanding of development direction when you can do that. Mclaren have now done that. That Mercedes seem to be stalled (like Ferrari had been for the last decade), doesn't really make for promise. Hamilton certainly would not be happy to have the 2nd fastest car for the next 5 years, with the same deficit to RB all along the way.
If Merc had done what Mclaren did, it would show they are on the right path and you could almost overlook the beginning of the season because they clearly understood where they went wrong. With Merc waffling about with the performance of sidepods, floors, and whether or not they should be copying someone else, it's a bit disconcerting.
Caveat of course is that they have the 2nd place windtunnel hours. So it's no surprise they are more limited. I suggested they should strategically tank the WCC previously.
At this point, I'm looking more to Mclaren since they carry the P6 WindTunnel hours for the rest of the season. A sizeable advantage over RB and Mercedes. Mclaren look like they will be the ones to trouble RB in 2024 and their driver lineup is just as impressive as Mercs and more balanced than RBs (unless they bring Ricciardo).
the payoff and marketing benefit of a WDC, is worth more than the WCC prize money.r85 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 19:17RB pretty much secured the 2022 - 2025 regs for themselves with the RB18 as the baseline model, which was built with their allotted CFD/WT time from 2021. It's more about prize money than development time, which is why Mercedes was still going for P2 last year (and for competition's sake).AR3-GP wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:16At this point no one has won a race besides RB. 2nd in the WCC is certainly an accomplishment and testament to Mercs consistency, but Merc will get bored of consistently finishing 2nd. That arguably happened last year already. Teams like AMR and Mclaren have made big jumps, and to me that is more impressive.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:05
Or what if Merc did a McLaren and waited 9 races before showing up, would they have been even more out of their depth?
As an example, one would not pat Ferrari on the back even though they've been 2nd/3rd in the WCC for a number of years. I think it's more promising to show that you can make significant improvement because it shows an understanding of development direction when you can do that. Mclaren have now done that. That Mercedes seem to be stalled (like Ferrari had been for the last decade), doesn't really make for promise. Hamilton certainly would not be happy to have the 2nd fastest car for the next 5 years, with the same deficit to RB all along the way.
If Merc had done what Mclaren did, it would show they are on the right path and you could almost overlook the beginning of the season because they clearly understood where they went wrong. With Merc waffling about with the performance of sidepods, floors, and whether or not they should be copying someone else, it's a bit disconcerting.
Caveat of course is that they have the 2nd place windtunnel hours. So it's no surprise they are more limited. I suggested they should strategically tank the WCC previously.
At this point, I'm looking more to Mclaren since they carry the P6 WindTunnel hours for the rest of the season. A sizeable advantage over RB and Mercedes. Mclaren look like they will be the ones to trouble RB in 2024 and their driver lineup is just as impressive as Mercs and more balanced than RBs (unless they bring Ricciardo).
Be that as it may, Mercedes have repeatedly said they 2nd isn't what they are racing for. No team should be racing for that. But repeatedly these words get twisted. And Yes AMR made a big jump relative to throwing away and entire season last year. McLaren? Finished 5th last year and are 5th this year 100 points behind 4th with an outside chance of top 2.AR3-GP wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:16
At this point no one has won a race besides RB. 2nd in the WCC is certainly an accomplishment and testament to Mercs consistency, but Merc will get bored of consistently finishing 2nd. That arguably happened last year already. Teams like AMR and Mclaren have made big jumps, and to me that is more impressive.
We have yet to see how the 2nd half plays out. Mercedes might finish ahead of McLaren this year without adding another update, while going balls deep into the W15. As Allision said, they are looking at rival ideas, including the McLaren updates and making choices as to what they can assimilate and learn from. It's still no guarantee of progress, as rival teams are faced with the same options in a confined ruleset.AR3-GP wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:16As an example, one would not pat Ferrari on the back even though they've been 2nd/3rd in the WCC for a number of years. I think it's more promising to show that you can make significant improvement because it shows an understanding of development direction when you can do that. Mclaren have now done that. That Mercedes seem to be stalled (like Ferrari had been for the last decade), doesn't really make for promise. Hamilton certainly would not be happy to have the 2nd fastest car for the next 5 years, with the same deficit to RB all along the way.
But that's not true though. Merc have gone their way and are in 2nd position are still invoking the ire of non-Mercedes fans. That would have been 10 times worse had they started the season like McLaren, and you know this..AR3-GP wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:16If Merc had done what Mclaren did, it would show they are on the right path and you could almost overlook the beginning of the season because they clearly understood where they went wrong. With Merc waffling about with the performance of sidepods, floors, and whether or not they should be copying someone else, it's a bit disconcerting.
It's an option for sure. I agree Mercedes should stop development on this car now, with only minimal development on the carryover parts for next year. Any excess savings on the budget cap from not introducing updates such as the floor would of course then be invested into the W15. The cockpit positioning, tub space/floor compromise of the vanilla W14 is a big hinderance anyway, and what can be garnered will not be easily 1:1 correlated into a differing concept.AR3-GP wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 18:16.
Caveat of course is that they have the 2nd place windtunnel hours. So it's no surprise they are more limited. I suggested they should strategically tank the WCC previously.
At this point, I'm looking more to Mclaren since they carry the P6 WindTunnel hours for the rest of the season. A sizeable advantage over RB and Mercedes. Mclaren look like they will be the ones to trouble RB in 2024 and their driver lineup is just as impressive as Mercs and more balanced than RBs (unless they bring Ricciardo).
Nobody remembers 2nd-10th place. I couldn't tell you where AMR or Mclaren finished last year with 100% accuracy. I just know it was somewhere at the back and they got a load of WT hours as a reward. Likewise, in 1-2 years time, I will not remember that Mercedes finished 2nd in 2023. Do you remember all of the 2nd and 3rds Ferrari racked up in the last decade? Could you recite the last decade of WCC positions for Ferrari? I could not. However, I could give you the WCC winner for at least 2 decades back from memory.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 20:53Be that as it may, Mercedes have repeatedly said they 2nd isn't what they are racing for. No team should be racing for that. But repeatedly these words get twisted. And Yes AMR made a big jump relative to throwing away and entire season last year. McLaren? Finished 5th last year and are 5th this year 100 points behind 4th with an outside chance of top 2.
I agree it's been an impressive turnaround, but at the cost of 30 races or a season and a half to get there.
Mercedes likely will finish 2nd in the WCC, but as I said above, no one remembers that. If Mclaren's plan to piss away 30 races and some change leads to an actual title, the title will be remembered more than some consistent second places.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 20:53We have yet to see how the 2nd half plays out. Mercedes might finish ahead of McLaren this year without adding another update, while going balls deep into the W15. As Allision said, they are looking at rival ideas, including the McLaren updates and making choices as to what they can assimilate and learn from. It's still no guarantee of progress, as rival teams are faced with the same options in a confined ruleset.
I have seen even more criticism from fans of Mercedes and it's drivers in other places. Suggestions that Hamilton should quit this team. Constant jokes about the W13, etc etc. Anyway, Mercedes don't need to pander to random people on the internet or suits and ties in Stuttgart. They need to pander to a championship and strategize accordingly.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 20:53But that's not true though. Merc have gone their way and are in 2nd position are still invoking the ire of non-Mercedes fans. That would have been 10 times worse had they started the season like McLaren, and you know this..
The comments regarding sidepods are an outlier as they were the only ones with zeropods. They have the Data and we don't, but I assume that perhaps others may have the data and could share to this forum how they might know better than Mercedes waffling.
"Concertina development pattern". I like this terminology.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2023, 20:53It's an option for sure. I agree Mercedes should stop development on this car now, with only minimal development on the carryover parts for next year. Any excess savings on the budget cap from not introducing updates such as the floor would of course then be invested into the W15. The cockpit positioning, tub space/floor compromise of the vanilla W14 is a big hinderance anyway, and what can be garnered will not be easily 1:1 correlated into a differing concept.
So as it appears to be the concertina development pattern, I would only hazard a guess that this is the right way forwards given what Williams, Aston Martin and McLaren have done thus far.
Yes and maybe not: How do you all feel about tyre blanket ban?