myurr wrote:Little bit off topic, but related to an earlier post:
Everyone is jumping on Hamilton's comments at this time last year, but if memory serves they ran the first tests with the 2008 wings on the cars and the car actually looked good and was near the front of the field. It was only at the second test onwards that they ran their new 2009 wings and the problems and visible panic appeared.
You & I seem to be the only ones that remember that... I was gonna go back to the MP4/24 thread to confirm, but it was late
CHT wrote:ISLAMATRON wrote:changing weight distribution is actually quite easy(especially on these cars), and moreso this yera with the 15 extra kg of ballast and no more KERS.
I really doubt it will be easier this year because of the additional 70 to 90 variable fuel load to deal with.
Doubt whatever you want but you will still be wrong.
Raptor22 wrote:the carsmass distribution is very easy to change.
You can move ballast around or you can move the whole car around between the wheels by alterng the suspension members.
Without knowing how the car will perform on the 2010 spec tyres, its conceivable that Merc have designed different suspension geometries to allow for shifting the mass balance around the wheels. We'll onlyknow in a weeks time once they have revised the car. then we'll have some insight into their design philosophy.
it is highly likely that Ferrari has struck it lucky and achieved the ideal balance immediately, perhaps thei closer relationship to Bridgestone has helped them here...[opens can of worms]
yep
raymondu999 wrote:Didn't KERS weigh something like 29kg or so? With Williams developing their flywheel one which would've done it in 19 or 15 kgs? I can't remember exact figures though...
Merc system was 25kgs... whereas the williams was around 35kgs, they couldnt get it lower and thats what held it out... but even at 35 kgs, if it was unlimited they would have slapped it on there no doubt.