Lotus invented the concept back in 2011.matt_s wrote:It's interesting how Merc are treating the innermost element of the FW (bottom right in the pic) compared to other teams. They have a pronounced turning vane directing flow to the outside of the tyre whereas most of the other teams are using that area for a winglet, (sometimes with a vortex generator) pointing to the inside of the wheel. The only other team with a detached turning vane like that is Lotus, who interestingly have the same nose as Merc.
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-m8dT ... 1L6632.jpg
Rear wing flap is getting bigger again.
When they ended the last season, they ended it in a massive way by keeping the formidable advantage of close to 2 seconds. With aero that was of top class and best of the breed PU, they had a class of field car. With very little change in regulations, they have a base that is super strong and I believe, they have the confidence that they have strengthened that base to create this car. BY now, they have their on track, wind tunnel, CFD and all other sorts of simulation numbers for this car to extrapolate and understand their ultimate pace and doesn't seem to be bothered about outright pace. The ghost that haunted them last year, was reliability. They are rightly going out there and simply pounding around, until something breaks. The good thing about last year's reliability failures was their ability to fix it once and for all, as there were no repeat problems. So that naturally makes reliability as number one factor for them to concentrate on.NewtonMeter wrote:Code: Select all
This year's testing is a bit of an enigma to me. On the one hand I've read reports from people at the track (at least at Jerez) that said the car looks like it handles well and that the long-run pace looks very good and consistent. On the other hand, their tests are very low-key, both in terms of on-track times and team comments. Also, and I'm hesitant to say, they haven't topped a single day. In fact, I only recall them topping the morning session of the first day at Jerez. There's still plenty of testing to do, but the last time they didn't top a single day was in 2011. Not the most successful season (podium less). So do I think that they'll have a 2011 season? Of course not. I sincerely think they haven't tried to do fast times at all and I also believe they've done very little soft tyre or low fuel running. Whereas many big-hitters have - Ferrari for example, just earlier today. This is making the testing a bit frustrating because if this had been any year prior to 2014, we'd all just be thinking 'oh no, here we go again'. So to a certain extent, we're all having to go on faith that all is well, due to their results last year and a belief that they didn't --- it up badly - which I don't think they have. That's my take on it anyway and for the moment I'm sticking with it.
rubbish!NoDivergence wrote:How bout that 1'24.5 on Mediums, huh.....
tranquility2k4 wrote:I'm wondering what you guys think of the comments made by the Merc drivers about the car so far. Rosberg, has generally said very little, positive or negative, and has only referred to reliability. He's normally good with the team PR speak, so this is not unusual - but if the car felt great, I'm sure he'd go on about it a little more.
Hamilton on the other hand, always says what is on his mind, and at the first test effectively said either the car felt the same or that it doesn't feel very good, but then cars never do at the first test. But then in contrast you have Kimi and Vettel saying their car feels great to driver. Normally a great car does hook up very well right from the off right?
He then came out yesterday and had a huge moan about the tyres and how they're not working. Whilst this is to be expected during testing in such cold temperatures, I haven't seen any other driver moan about this so far this year. I can remember back in (either 2013 or 2012) when Red Bull in pariticular couldn't get their tyres working and this would lead them to degrade very quickly and Vettel was moaning about it saying it's impossible to test. Then look at what those cars went on to achieve. So it isn't necessarily such a bad thing - but there 'could' be cause for alarm as well.
Merc has changed its suspension this year, with the removal of FRIC, they did so mid-way through last year but have said to optimised it this year. Could it be that they're so soft on the tyres that they cannot get heat into them, almost like the Lotus of 2012/13? If so this could hurt them at some venues. Another reason for not generating heat into tyres is simply lack of downforce. If you recall, last year, Merc would always be miles ahead on the harder compound tyres, and the others would catch up with the softer tyres. This was partly because cars such as the Ferrari lacked the downforce to work the harder tyres for a single lap. Merc have admitted the nose change was a big problem to solve and I'm wondering whether their very thin nose design is simply not working correctly. Remember McLaren's issues from last year - they had too big a gap between the front wing main plane and nose and thus couldn't get any front-downforce, Nose changes usually cause issues with front-downforce and this could possilbly lead Lewis to think the tyres are not working, when in-fact the car simply has huge under-steer.
I'm a bit confused as to why Merc has not used any Soft tyres yet - all other teams have. It could be such that, as happens at some races (Barcelona often being one), that the harder compound simply doesn't work and when the soft tyre is put on the car is 'transformed'. It could be that when Merc do eventually put the soft on at the final test, they go 2 seconds faster than everyone and the car suddenly works. Will be interesting to see.