matteosc wrote: ↑10 Apr 2024, 16:29
Goblin42 wrote: ↑08 Apr 2024, 23:51
The W15 is a really weird beast, from the comments that toto & team members are saying, the sensor package on the car is measuring alot more downforce but it can't convert that to lap time, any idea what could cause that
full quote from toto
*Mercedes boss : “We are measuring downforce with our sensors and pressure tabs, and it's saying to us that we have 70 points more downforce in a particular corner in Melbourne than we had last year.*
*“But, on the lap time, it is not one kilometre per hour faster. It doesn't make any sense. So, where's the limitation?*
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merc ... /10596354/
Most likely the downforce is not consistent enough to be fully used by the pilots. If you have 70 point more downforce (let's say on average), but it can suddenly drop of 70 points in the middle of the turn, then the added downforce is useless.
This!
As Vanja said before they didn't learn any lesson from the previous couple of years of the ground effect era!
They persist in chasing the peak downforce instead of useful downforce as Red Bull has been doing since the beginning and this year Ferrari is also doing this. And this is the proof they get on their sensors: continuous downforce level spikes throughout the entire corner!
In addition to this philosophy design flaw, they disregard that another pivotal key in this era is to have a wider setup window, something which the SF24 car does now. One possible question is having a new car philosophy they maybe didn't figure out how to set up the anti-squat/anti-dive suspensions in conjunction with the floor`s ride height and so forth ...
In conclusion, as other people who know this business are saying, all the data suggests that they are at least lacking in two areas: consistent/efficient downforce level and a wider setup window or in other words, how to preserve the tyre optimal operation window.