RB's flexi wings kick in on 4th gear and obviously visible on straight line.
It's not the case.
Engine mapping can be swithched via on wheel bottons ... and is also legal...
Slower means they could not change the engine mapping where they were (illegal) ...
marcush. wrote:again:
I put in more fuel to cool the engine -not to gain power .-But that would be clearly obvious for my fuel startegy for sunday tankage.
If I realise I cannot fill her up more due to tank size(?) i have no option but run her leaner.
But this will not cost any power yet,as the surplus fuel was there for cooling ,right ? So Speedwise there is no difference between running a overrich felmap to a rich fuelmap .
So in that respect why would you need to short shift or lift ? To keep the engine cooler ,removing load BUT not to save fuel...
So you guys isn´t this a bit suspicious ? They could have leaned out the engine to make it to the finish -at the risk of an engine failure .but they played the most conservative game ...
Back in 2009 Brawn gotr a bit of fame for running their cars persistantly out of the recommended window of temperqatures at all the hot races...Mercedes seems to be very afraid of blowups these days...but to win on a day like this you need to take a gamble...I would have taken that risk ...better go down in flames fighting for the win instead of coming home with a fifth place which is really not much to write home about...it would have become a 7th for Schumacher if it had not worked out so the damage would have been minimal...
ESPImperium wrote:That wing is not flexing, look at the wing on Alguersauris Toro Tosso behind who is just entering the corner.
Valid point, didn't think of it from that point of view. They do this at Silverstone, through most of sector 1.volarchico wrote:Because "coasting" in F1 has been described as similar to running into a brick wall in a regular car. With the large amounts of drag, you can scrub off a considerable amount of speed before even having to touch the brakes, thus putting less energy and heat into them.
dude you cant be serious? if they had continued the way they were going then they quite clearly wouldnt of finished the race.marcush. wrote:ah..come on ...you cannot drop a half chance to win a race.They will not win the championship this year that should be clear to everybody so all that matters is a win.
I'm curious what is the nature of this Mercedes wheel with no separate nut. A brief search didn't find any previous mention on F1T. They are currently the fastest pit crew by a small amount, but as the seson goes on I wonder if the integral nut (?) will prevent the occasional cross-thread problem and therefore give them a larger advantage.Mercedes has the fastest pit crew in Formula One at present, Germany's Auto Motor und Sport has found.
The analysis showed that the Brackley-based team, having developed a rim without a separate wheel nut for 2011, was marginally quicker than McLaren and Red Bull at performing competitive tire pit stops so far.
Not sure it completely prevents cross threading, you still have two separate metal threads being brutally mated at high speed. Maybe there is some alignment features built into the mechanism, but I kinda thought the Merc nut was more a performance feature.bill shoe wrote: ... will prevent the occasional cross-thread problem and therefore give them a larger advantage.
The thing is, nut problems are more often than not "---, I dropped it". I don't think I can remember the last time where a team stripped the thread on the nut. Not forgetting that they're equally likely to strip the thread on the car, and I've certainly *never* seen that happen.feynman wrote:Not sure it completely prevents cross threading, you still have two separate metal threads being brutally mated at high speed. Maybe there is some alignment features built into the mechanism, but I kinda thought the Merc nut was more a performance feature.bill shoe wrote: ... will prevent the occasional cross-thread problem and therefore give them a larger advantage.
Which will be fine as far as it goes, but if they do ever have a nut problem they are up the creek. Instead of grabbing a spare nut from the spare gun and losing a second or two, they now have to unbolt all the wheels, and send a committee back into the garage to rummage about and find whatever spare set of (used) extra tyres they have available.
If the nut is now integrated with the rim, and the rim is fixed to the tyre, and the tyre allocations have to run in sets ... first time it sticks, it could get messy in a hurry.