Juzh wrote:Williams and merc were almost always tied for the fastest car on the straight despite their huge gearing difference so far. Maybe it'll make a negligible difference in monza, but I doubt it.
Yes it is. But AERO principles how to achieve that is quite opposite. Merc use good traction out of corners, to accelerate "quicker" in the tight very grip limited corners. So they need compensate the PU, AERO and tire characteristics vs. track calendar property.
Williams on the another side had very low drag package what helps gain time in the second part of the strait or fast section (where you are not the grip limited!!!). Williams way is good for decent "fuel" economy, but that hurt Williams more than Mercedes for instance due course of ALL track configurations.
As many my previous posters point it out already, could be tire and gear ratio somewhat tight related between each other. As a whole car package it make a lot of sense, "black stuff" dictate the amount of friction and drastically influence on driver confidence in the machine (very important factor).
At this "low unstable" AERO, wide "high" PU torque range and "harsh" mechanical grip levels could be plausible to makes Mercedes factory team step forward compare other customers teams in terms of optimization. Especially, Merc is definitely game ahead it terms of software and engine, gas, brake and torque mapping. So there most be huge differentiator factor. Cudos to Merc engineers and its "programmers".
"And if you no longer go for a gap that exists, you're no longer a racing driver..." Ayrton Senna