Anyone know what they mean by "calibrated the maps"?But a Mercedes source told Auto Motor und Sport on Monday: "It was our fault. We had incorrectly calibrated the maps."
Senior engineer Andy Shovlin confirmed: "Even we needed a couple of laps to understand what was going on and how to resolve it."
They had a wrong deployment strategy when the car was lighter on fuel. They did not calibrate the speed gain due to less weight correctly, thus, the MGU-K deployed too long on the straight and the charging went down. As a result the power unit charged on the straight between turn 2 and 3.dans79 wrote:http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns34190.htmlAnyone know what they mean by "calibrated the maps"?But a Mercedes source told Auto Motor und Sport on Monday: "It was our fault. We had incorrectly calibrated the maps."
Senior engineer Andy Shovlin confirmed: "Even we needed a couple of laps to understand what was going on and how to resolve it."
They had the whole race weekend + a race sim on Friday, so bullshit, I smell something fishy!basti313 wrote:They had a wrong deployment strategy when the car was lighter on fuel. They did not calibrate the speed gain due to less weight correctly, thus, the MGU-K deployed too long on the straight and the charging went down. As a result the power unit charged on the straight between turn 2 and 3.dans79 wrote:http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns34190.htmlAnyone know what they mean by "calibrated the maps"?But a Mercedes source told Auto Motor und Sport on Monday: "It was our fault. We had incorrectly calibrated the maps."
Senior engineer Andy Shovlin confirmed: "Even we needed a couple of laps to understand what was going on and how to resolve it."
It generally means calibrating the VE (volumetric efficiency) table in the ecu. It's the base for all of the engine calcs. I would guess that the F1 cars are much more advanced and may require additional curves based on all the extra wizbangs with the electric turbo that can change the VE of the engine. It might be less adaptable than a road car and require updates based on altitude and ambient conditions. It could really refer to any of the tables timing DBW ect. There are 100s of tables in a modern ECU.dans79 wrote:http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns34190.htmlAnyone know what they mean by "calibrated the maps"?But a Mercedes source told Auto Motor und Sport on Monday: "It was our fault. We had incorrectly calibrated the maps."
Senior engineer Andy Shovlin confirmed: "Even we needed a couple of laps to understand what was going on and how to resolve it."
This sound very likely. Sorta crazy that they have a map based on fuel burn car weight and MGU-K.basti313 wrote: They had a wrong deployment strategy when the car was lighter on fuel. They did not calibrate the speed gain due to less weight correctly, thus, the MGU-K deployed too long on the straight and the charging went down. As a result the power unit charged on the straight between turn 2 and 3.
Sorry mods I know it's not technical but this post seem like a spot on analysis to me, so I upvoted, if I was wrong to do so, please let me know.Phil wrote:Isn't Rosbergs contract already settled? I thought the 2 year extension was a done deal and signed?
Even so, maybe I'm biased (I try not to be; I try to be as objective as possible), but I do somehow get the feeling that Rosberg has a lot of support at Mercedes. In fact, I felt this somewhat during the Barcelona incident and I've felt it in Austria as well. It's up to any driver himself to decide how to live his life. There's no doubt Hamilton does like the spotlight and attracts a lot of attention for it, jetting around, having celebrity guests over. Yes, this is perhaps all good for Mercedes, the brand. The publicity. But I feel drivers like Rosberg, Vettel, yes Schumacher, are much better accepted among the actual racing team staff. They have the 'right' ethos and mentality: Methodical, quiet, calculated and hard-working, possibly with together with the team, hand in hand.
With Hamilton, as much as I am a fan of him and admire him for his driving skill, I sense that this is one aspect where he is rather limited and I am unsure how close he is to his own team of engineers and the racing staff. Back in 2013, there were reports that pointed towards Hamilton being rather unpopular at McLaren and that dating far back to when he joined the team in 2007. Yes, he was Ron's protege, but apart from Ron, from what I read, he was rather unpopular. Then of course Ron left, Withmarsh came and Button joined and we all now how charismatic Button is. I think since then, Hamilton has learned a lot in this regard, perhaps even from Button when he often looked at the other side of the garage and noticed the "happy bubble" (as he called it) that Button surrounded himself every day. I think this has gotten a lot better since Mercedes, but I do somehow sense that as a character, Hamilton is quite different personality wise. There's no doubt that he is an extraordinary driver, but in a team-sport, that may not always be enough to make the difference.
Is this a factor of why he has had more bad luck, technical glitches this year, especially glitches that should have been solvable? I'm not suggesting that Mercedes is sabotaging anything. Far from it. But maybe a possible reason why the team on his part of the garage is not operating at its full potential (or as well as the other side of the garage).
This is just speculation of course. People claiming that it would be daft for Mercedes, who are paying ridiculous amount of money to secure Hamilton as their driver would be mad to limit him in any way. Yet, there is the team Mercedes who makes these decision, the higher ups, the bosses... and then there is the actual team who carry out the work and make or break the performance... I do wonder sometimes if this makes any difference at all.
What exactly are you implying?De Jokke wrote:They had the whole race weekend + a race sim on Friday, so bullshit, I smell something fishy!basti313 wrote:They had a wrong deployment strategy when the car was lighter on fuel. They did not calibrate the speed gain due to less weight correctly, thus, the MGU-K deployed too long on the straight and the charging went down. As a result the power unit charged on the straight between turn 2 and 3.dans79 wrote:http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns34190.html
Anyone know what they mean by "calibrated the maps"?
'Seems' means nothing. Long winded nonsense with no facts and pathological bias to excuse failures that are 100% driver's fault. I can't even bother to wade through it.Pierce89 wrote:Sorry mods I know it's not technical but this post seem like a spot on analysis to me, so I upvoted, if I was wrong to do so, please let me know.Phil wrote:Isn't Rosbergs contract already settled? I thought the 2 year extension was a done deal and signed?
Even so, maybe I'm biased (I try not to be; I try to be as objective as possible), but I do somehow get the feeling that Rosberg has a lot of support at Mercedes. In fact, I felt this somewhat during the Barcelona incident and I've felt it in Austria as well. It's up to any driver himself to decide how to live his life. There's no doubt Hamilton does like the spotlight and attracts a lot of attention for it, jetting around, having celebrity guests over. Yes, this is perhaps all good for Mercedes, the brand. The publicity. But I feel drivers like Rosberg, Vettel, yes Schumacher, are much better accepted among the actual racing team staff. They have the 'right' ethos and mentality: Methodical, quiet, calculated and hard-working, possibly with together with the team, hand in hand.
With Hamilton, as much as I am a fan of him and admire him for his driving skill, I sense that this is one aspect where he is rather limited and I am unsure how close he is to his own team of engineers and the racing staff. Back in 2013, there were reports that pointed towards Hamilton being rather unpopular at McLaren and that dating far back to when he joined the team in 2007. Yes, he was Ron's protege, but apart from Ron, from what I read, he was rather unpopular. Then of course Ron left, Withmarsh came and Button joined and we all now how charismatic Button is. I think since then, Hamilton has learned a lot in this regard, perhaps even from Button when he often looked at the other side of the garage and noticed the "happy bubble" (as he called it) that Button surrounded himself every day. I think this has gotten a lot better since Mercedes, but I do somehow sense that as a character, Hamilton is quite different personality wise. There's no doubt that he is an extraordinary driver, but in a team-sport, that may not always be enough to make the difference.
Is this a factor of why he has had more bad luck, technical glitches this year, especially glitches that should have been solvable? I'm not suggesting that Mercedes is sabotaging anything. Far from it. But maybe a possible reason why the team on his part of the garage is not operating at its full potential (or as well as the other side of the garage).
This is just speculation of course. People claiming that it would be daft for Mercedes, who are paying ridiculous amount of money to secure Hamilton as their driver would be mad to limit him in any way. Yet, there is the team Mercedes who makes these decision, the higher ups, the bosses... and then there is the actual team who carry out the work and make or break the performance... I do wonder sometimes if this makes any difference at all.
"Mercedes to decide on team orders in the coming days" http://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merce ... ys-795309/
Talking to people I know who work at the factory (or who have relatives who do) he's a nice bloke at the get togethers. For example, a friend's sister is a cleaner (I think) and apparently he chatted as happily to her as anyone. No obvious "I'm a star" attitude.Phil wrote:
With Hamilton, as much as I am a fan of him and admire him for his driving skill, I sense that this is one aspect where he is rather limited and I am unsure how close he is to his own team of engineers and the racing staff.