Team: Toto Wolff (Executive Director - Business), Paddy Lowe (Executive Director - Technical), Andy Cowell (Executive Director of Mercedes AMG Powertrains), Niki Lauda (Chairman), Bob Bell (TD), Aldo Costa (ED), Geoffrey Willis (Technology Director), Ron Meadows (SD), Andrew Shovlin (CRE), Simon Cole (CTE), Matthew Dane (CM) Drivers: Nico Rosberg (6), Lewis Hamilton (44) Team name: Mercedes AMG F1 Petronas
A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
Automatic reaction. Lewis didn't have a choice, worrying that the car could potentially shut down at any point without any warning. Seems crazy to let a sensor make these decisions when they have a team in the back monitoring all the data in real time.
Faustino wrote:Automatic reaction. Lewis didn't have a choice, worrying that the car could potentially shut down at any point without any warning. Seems crazy to let a sensor make these decisions when they have a team in the back monitoring all the data in real time.
The sensor can make decisions like this, because if the oil pressure really does drop suddenly, then the engine will be dead much faster than the team can react.
Faustino wrote:Automatic reaction. Lewis didn't have a choice, worrying that the car could potentially shut down at any point without any warning. Seems crazy to let a sensor make these decisions when they have a team in the back monitoring all the data in real time.
The sensor can make decisions like this, because if the oil pressure really does drop suddenly, then the engine will be dead much faster than the team can react.
Yes but what good is it when there's ghosts in the system? The tech should be air tight if it has the option of shutting down a car without any possibility to override.
Faustino wrote:Automatic reaction. Lewis didn't have a choice, worrying that the car could potentially shut down at any point without any warning. Seems crazy to let a sensor make these decisions when they have a team in the back monitoring all the data in real time.
The sensor can make decisions like this, because if the oil pressure really does drop suddenly, then the engine will be dead much faster than the team can react.
Yes but what good is it when there's ghosts in the system? The tech should be air tight if it has the option of shutting down a car without any possibility to override.
I hope the Mercedes guys are reading this because you're absolutely right about it.
Yeah the auto shut down from the sensor is kinda a catch 22... with the reduced number of available power units available before you incur a penalty, you want to salvage every second of running from each power unit so a catastrophic failure really isn't an option. On the other hand, a silly shut down like that with no real apparent problem is a waste of a practice session (hopefully that kind of crap doesn't happen in the middle of a race).
"Winning is the most important. Everything is consequence of that."
-Ayrton Senna
I do not agree, an automatic shutdown is 100% the way to go in practice. I would much prefer to lose a practice session than have only 4 power units left for the season.
Pieoter wrote:I do not agree, an automatic shutdown is 100% the way to go in practice. I would much prefer to lose a practice session than have only 4 power units left for the season.
Faustino wrote:Automatic reaction. Lewis didn't have a choice, worrying that the car could potentially shut down at any point without any warning. Seems crazy to let a sensor make these decisions when they have a team in the back monitoring all the data in real time.
The sensor can make decisions like this, because if the oil pressure really does drop suddenly, then the engine will be dead much faster than the team can react.
Yes but what good is it when there's ghosts in the system? The tech should be air tight if it has the option of shutting down a car without any possibility to override.
On the contrary. The tech should be air tight if it has the option of damaging the engine. It's much more important that the engine doesn't get wrecked for future races than it is to compete in one practice session.
"...and there, very much in flames, is Jacques Laffite's Ligier. That's obviously a turbo blaze, and of course, Laffite will be able to see that conflagration in his mirrors... he is coolly parking the car somewhere safe."Murray Walker, San Marino 1985
Two nice little details about this picture from both ends of the technical spectrum:
- the bespoke tool (machined from a single piece I think) used for the rapid nose connector
- use of good old cable ties to hold the master cylinders in place, love that!
This signature is encrypted to avoid complaints, but it makes me laugh out loud:-
16S75 13E7K 41C53 7CT23 14O5O 67R32 76175 90B67 L4L42 41O63 72W56 98M10 52E87