Apparently Mercedes had Furniture Croissants last year and they gave an extra 50hp over the Furniture bread roll used by other teams.
Good move by Ferrari.
i'm not agree.f1316 wrote:"aesthetically pleasing solution of Mercedes"
Gotcha.Rhodium wrote:i'm not agree.f1316 wrote:"aesthetically pleasing solution of Mercedes"
more efficient ? perhaps...
more aesthetical ? not.
for me, look of F1 is important for the pleasure, like a beautifull lap, a great victory...
SF15-T nose is more aesthetical than Mercedes one.
i know everybody have different taste, but, i'm not really excited by nose design since 2012...
for me, the F1 must look like F1.
it's really hard for me to see all new design (nose since 2012 or future design for 2017)
i follow F1 since 1997 (my god, i'm a old man!) and i cry for 1998/2005 F1, for me the best period or F1... sound, speed, look, philosophy...
Thanks for the info! There is time left to improve reliability, but it's still a bit worrying that they can't do 4 GPs on the dyno. You'd think that naturally track testing is going to be tougher on the PU, so that mileage goes down even further. Ferrari cannot afford an extra power unit this season if they want to challenge for the drivers championship with Vettel. Fortunately even if the first PU only holds for 2 or 3 GP's, that should give them enough time to iron out any minor issues, so the other 4 allowed units should be enough to finish the season with, if they can handle 5 GP's each.ferkan wrote:Lots of news past few days from Italy. 667 was fired up for the first time today, everything went smoothly. Test bench numbers are excellent, the PU produces more then 900hp but still has reliability issues primary from engine knocking. But Ferrari still has to recieve latest fuel from Shell, and will see how testing goes before Melbourne. For now, engine cannot last 4 GPs.
still has reliability issues primary from engine knocking. But Ferrari still has to recieve latest fuel from ShellME4ME wrote:Thanks for the info! There is time left to improve reliability, but it's still a bit worrying that they can't do 4 GPs on the dyno. You'd think that naturally track testing is going to be tougher on the PU, so that mileage goes down even further. Ferrari cannot afford an extra power unit this season if they want to challenge for the drivers championship with Vettel. Fortunately even if the first PU only holds for 2 or 3 GP's, that should give them enough time to iron out any minor issues, so the other 4 allowed units should be enough to finish the season with, if they can handle 5 GP's each.ferkan wrote:Lots of news past few days from Italy. 667 was fired up for the first time today, everything went smoothly. Test bench numbers are excellent, the PU produces more then 900hp but still has reliability issues primary from engine knocking. But Ferrari still has to recieve latest fuel from Shell, and will see how testing goes before Melbourne. For now, engine cannot last 4 GPs.
I read that, chill. I chose to write what I did because A) There is no guarantee the new fuel fixes the issue. B) Similar reliability issues were reported earlier this winter already. C) Ferrari are said to be pushing for extreme combustion pressures.giantfan10 wrote:still has reliability issues primary from engine knocking. But Ferrari still has to recieve latest fuel from Shell
i'm pretty chill actually.... to be honest just curious as to the original posters sourceME4ME wrote:I read that, chill. I chose to write what I did because A) There is no guarantee the new fuel fixes the issue. B) Similar reliability issues were reported earlier this winter already. C) Ferrari are said to be pushing for extreme combustion pressures.giantfan10 wrote:still has reliability issues primary from engine knocking. But Ferrari still has to recieve latest fuel from Shell
It's probably fine, just speculating here and looking out for the team because I want them to spice things up at the front
thanksferkan wrote:Omnicorse/Gazzetta/F1analisitecnica.
Mercedes also had knocking problems at the beginning of last year, which didn't allowed them to run the PU at the same configuration as they were using in qualifying. They brought the fix in Canada and since then they started running closer to the quali mode in races. I don't think they attributed the fix to the fuel change.giantfan10 wrote:still has reliability issues primary from engine knocking. But Ferrari still has to recieve latest fuel from ShellME4ME wrote:Thanks for the info! There is time left to improve reliability, but it's still a bit worrying that they can't do 4 GPs on the dyno. You'd think that naturally track testing is going to be tougher on the PU, so that mileage goes down even further. Ferrari cannot afford an extra power unit this season if they want to challenge for the drivers championship with Vettel. Fortunately even if the first PU only holds for 2 or 3 GP's, that should give them enough time to iron out any minor issues, so the other 4 allowed units should be enough to finish the season with, if they can handle 5 GP's each.ferkan wrote:Lots of news past few days from Italy. 667 was fired up for the first time today, everything went smoothly. Test bench numbers are excellent, the PU produces more then 900hp but still has reliability issues primary from engine knocking. But Ferrari still has to recieve latest fuel from Shell, and will see how testing goes before Melbourne. For now, engine cannot last 4 GPs.