Do you have any evidence for that?alexx_88 wrote:Please just stop thinking about the engine as a big lump of metal and electronics. It's so much more than that, the control strategies are incredibly complex and I think there are big differences in performance between the PU that Merc uses and what Williams use.
I think it is, and I think the ability (or lack of) of the Mercedes customer teams have somewhat muddled the picture. As I mentioned in a previous post, Mercedes has evolved as a team to the point that it is very good at chassis and aero. Perhaps not as good as RedBull used to be under the old set of regulations, but with all the bans related to EBD, the sport moved away from where RedBull excelled and closer to Mercedes. In 2013, Mercedes finished 2nd. If it wasn't for their tyre issues, I think they could have given RedBull a run for their money. The point being that Mercedes had a very good car. Force India (6th), Williams (9th), even McLaren (5th) were all in the midfield. The 4 top teams of 2013 were clearly RedBull, Ferrari, Mercedes and Lotus - as the points show - as after those 4 teams, there is a huge drop-off to the best of the rest. 4 Teams, with 3 different engines. They were also the only 4 teams to win races. This is, mind you, from what was still a very much dictated aero formula with frozen engines.FoxHound wrote:Right now, I couldn't hazard a guess as to what the balance is. But I would propose the engine is not as prevalent in this equation as you would think, if it was...Williams and McLaren and Force India would have beaten Red Bull last year.
Code: Select all
2010 (+/- equal PUs, aero factor huge):
1.) RedBull (Renault)
2.) McLaren (Mercedes)
3.) Ferrari (Ferrari)
4.) Mercedes (Mercedes)
5.) Renault (Renault)
6.) Williams (Cosworth)
7.) Force India (Mercedes)
8.) Sauber (Ferrari)
9.) Torro Rosso (Ferrari)
2011 (+/- equal PUs, aero factor huge):
1.) RedBull (Renault) --
2.) McLaren (Mercedes) --
3.) Ferrari (Ferrari) --
4.) Mercedes (Mercedes) --
5.) Renault (Renault) --
6.) Force India (Mercedes) +1
7.) Sauber (Ferrari) +1
8.) Toro Rosso (Ferrari) +1
9.) Williams (Cosworth) -3
2012 (+/- equal PUs, aero factor huge):
1.) RedBull (Renault) --
2.) Ferrari (Ferrari) +1
3.) McLaren (Mercedes) -1
4.) Lotus (Renault) +1
5.) Mercedes (Mercedes) -1
6.) Sauber (Ferrari) +1
7.) Force India (Mercedes) -1
8.) Williams (Renault) +1
2013 (+/- equal PUs, aero factor huge)
1.) RedBull (Renault) --
2.) Mercedes (Mercedes) +3
3.) Ferrari (Ferrari) -1
4.) Lotus (Renault) --
5.) McLaren (Mercedes) -2
6.) Sauber (Ferrari) --
7.) Toro Rosso (Renault) +2
8.) Williams (Renault) --
2014 (different PU, aero factor less)
1.) Mercedes (Mercedes) +1
2.) RedBull (Renault) -1
3.) Williams (Mercedes) +5
4.) Ferrari (Ferrari) -1
5.) McLaren (Mercedes) --
6.) Force India (Mercedes) +3
7.) Toro Rosso (Renault) --
8.) Lotus (Renault) -4
...
10.) Sauber (Ferrari) -4
I agree. I admit I'm playing a bit of devils advocat here. I'm not even close to being a RedBull fan (I think it's clear I'm in the Mercedes camp and am happy as the next guy that RedBulls endless domination has ended) - but these arguments extend beyond the point on who deserves to win, or if it is time for change. I do agree that it's a shame that aero has been the prevailing factor for quite a few seasons now - and for that, I am quite happy. I like the variables the new engines have introduced. The only problem I see is that the engine plant is outside the expertise of the actual race teams. This may not be a problem for the 'works-teams', but we have customer teams to think and worry about too. And as an engine manufacturer, I think I'd be very unpleased about joining this rich mans game of building expensive engines, falling short, but then being limited through tokens to actually be able to fairly compete.Foxhound wrote:And just as a side not, before the engine freeze in the V8 era...there was alot of discussion surrounding the oily bits on these very threads.
Some people actually worked in high end motorsport, like 747heavy and a few others.
The freeze left aero dominant and engines a mere anomaly. What interest do these guys now have in coming here to discuss things that are largely redundant and archaic?
It's a shame.
SectorOne wrote:1. Nullified by another Mercedes powered team namely Williams, Pat Symonds.
Mclaren was switching engine as well, what do they expect? They announced their Honda plans in 2013.
nobody in their right mind would cater to mclaren in that situation.
CorrectSectorOne wrote:2. Packaging and cooling is up to each competitor to solve.
See the first quote.SectorOne wrote:3. Base mapping is provided. Teams like Williams said they do some minor tweaks to the software and are gnerally very happy with the cooperation, again source, pat Symonds, Williams.
Does Toto own Force India as well? Maybe he has rigged their HQ with portable nukes?CBeck113 wrote:And Williams, the B-Team from Mercedes and partially owned by Toto Wolff, is an unbaised source for informaiton here, right?
See this quote instead,CBeck113 wrote:See the first quote.
And yet no proof of the software coming with the engine is vastly different to what Mercedes run their cars with.CBeck113 wrote:The software is the key to getting any usable power from these engines, and the manufacturers can design the engines to fit their needs
Probably right, but i doubt it will be because "the software is too complex even though our engines are obviously running splendid together with excellent fuel consumption right on par (sometimes better) then Mercedes"CBeck113 wrote: - therefore there will be no customer team that wins a title (mark my words!) with this engine formula,
According to whom? It´s probably a complex system but according to whom will the most intelligent engineers in motorsport never understand the engine they are running? Especially considering they collaborate with Mercedes in pre-season testing.CBeck113 wrote:because they will never have the understanding necessary to optimize them, especially with the lack of testing.
1. Williams are punching above their category thanks to the Mercedes engine and getting tenths of millions of euros. Do you really think they'd say anything against? Those few percent that separate their PU from Merc's is irrelevant to them, but it's very relevant if you're a team that wants to fight Merc for victories.SectorOne wrote:1. Nullified by another Mercedes powered team namely Williams, Pat Symonds.
Mclaren was switching engine as well, what do they expect? They announced their Honda plans in 2013.
nobody in their right mind would cater to mclaren in that situation.
2. Packaging and cooling is up to each competitor to solve.
3. Base mapping is provided. Teams like Williams said they do some minor tweaks to the software and are gnerally very happy with the cooperation, again source, pat Symonds, Williams.
Basically all you've said, is "Theoretically" (and that's the important part), customer teams are at a slight disadvantage to a works team. Just a few years ago Mclaren proved this isn't necessarily true, when they wiped the floor with the Mercedes works team.alexx_88 wrote:
1. Williams are punching above their category thanks to the Mercedes engine and getting tenths of millions of euros. Do you really think they'd say anything against? Those few percent that separate their PU from Merc's is irrelevant to them, but it's very relevant if you're a team that wants to fight Merc for victories.
2. Indeed, but that doesn't change the fact that the PU will be more optimized for the aero of the works team.
3. Even at amateur level base mapping is something that only helps you get the car started, so you can properly tune it on a rolling road. We are not talking about simply getting the engine to run, but the fact that 20HP only represents ~2% out of the total power of the PU. Does it seem so far-fetched to think that a separate entity, that doesn't direct access to the people who built and tuned the PU, could only get 98% of the performance that a much bigger entity, with more people and direct access to all that information, gets?
How are they punching above their weight? The "getting tenths of millions of euros" i don´t understand one bit.alexx_88 wrote:1. Williams are punching above their category thanks to the Mercedes engine and getting tenths of millions of euros.
Which is exactly what Williams intends to do. But what are they missing? Just downforce really.alexx_88 wrote:Those few percent that separate their PU from Merc's is irrelevant to them, but it's very relevant if you're a team that wants to fight Merc for victories.
Are you just making stuff up by now? Please expand a bit on this please.alexx_88 wrote:2. Indeed, but that doesn't change the fact that the PU will be more optimized for the aero of the works team.
I´m not interested in how something seems in this case.alexx_88 wrote:Does it seem so far-fetched to think that a separate entity, that doesn't direct access to the people who built and tuned the PU, could only get 98% of the performance that a much bigger entity, with more people and direct access to all that information, gets?
Why would that be surprising at all? Only 2 years ago, again, in a very aero limited formula, Mercedes had 4 seconds worth of aero advantage over Williams, and RedBull had multiple seconds advantage over every other renault runner.alexx_88 wrote:Ok, take it the other way around. Do you think that, in a very aero-limited formula, Mercedes has 1 second worth of aero advantage over Williams?