No it is not ideal for 2022 regulations because the tunnels are extremely sensitive to ride height changes and the 2022 floor does not have the benefits of multiple bargeboards and constantly increasing roof height (with rake) to create stable pressure distributions.JordanMugen wrote: ↑30 Mar 2024, 06:49Shouldn't that be ideal for the 2022 regulations then?PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑29 Mar 2024, 18:04They had great aerodynamics but unfortunately it was for a low ride height, stiff platform philosophy.
I wonder why Mercedes lost confidence in the race-winning low and stiff W13 concept when (with pole, sprint win, race win) it was actually the best of the W13, W14 and W15 so far?
(Unless the W15 gains a lot of performance with in-season development, which is possible.)
Teams that learn to "seal" (not a good term but) the floor when it moves away from ideal ride height are the ones have more consistent behaviour. I think this is commented on by Andrea Stella .