xpensive wrote:munudeges wrote:xpensive wrote:If the reason for their rear tyre problems were as simple as they were blowing xhaust gasses on them, it's simply unfathomable if it took this team 8 races to figure that out! More than that, unfathomable!
Picked up this thread a little late, but to be fair X, I think they did know. The engine (the only decent thing in the car) people probably came up with this nice method of creating hotter gas that in turn could be used to create more downforce in a brute fashion that would take the heat, so to speak, off the aerodynamacists and the inability of the mechanical people to come up with elegant solutions. They were then faced with something that would overheat their rear tyres or give them a short term performance hit that would be useful to them in qualifying. To be honest, if you're Mercedes now you'll take whatever you can get regardless of the downsides.
More after-constructions, I think you give the MGP design-team way too much credit here, if you look at that original xhaust, it's embarrasingly unsophisticated in its rudimentary xecution. Hacksaw technology and then when you look at the poor fit, doh? I think it was just a simple solution which didn't take too much engineering or manufacturing effort.
X-
I agree. The efficacy of the design team has been lacking and the execution as well.
I don't doubt a lot of thought and analysis went into the chosen direction BUT in the end- it didn't work. Further, there are degrees to this failure.
If they aimed at a "goal" and achieved their aim, it could be viewed as a success even if that goal was set too low. And I say "set too low" in relation to what it would take to compete at the front... which I concede was an unknown when they started developing W02. But by my impression is, this isn't the case.
It seem's their goals were higher and I would bet they acheived their goals in simulation. But - on the track, reality proved different and since then, they've been dealing with the disparity reactively by trial and error. I can somewhat understand that becuase if your engineering simulations let you down- relying on them for the solutions seems rather silly.
For this reason, I have to agree that credit given the design team is probably too high in some circles.
I think Brawn ET AL knows this as well.