Link - How Mercedes is recapturing the FRIC effect
Could you please summarize it here for us, mere mortals, that don't have a subscription? [-o<
That's been a characteristic of Mercedes' cars for the past 3 years - the softer tyres give them less of an advantage than for other teams. My guess would be that a good chunk of their advantage is in getting heat into the tyres, and then maintaining them at the right temperature well. That's less useful when you're using the softer, easier het-up tyres.Wynters wrote:Mercedes didn't seem to find much between tyres from Q2 to Q3.
- I believe they will have had their engine turned up for both sessions.
- The track got faster for Q3 (based on the Q2/Q3 times of the SS/SS runners)
- Given the Soft is the race tyre, I don't think they will have flogged them as much as they would the disposable Super Softs in Q3.
In short, why didn't Mercedes find more pace on the SS?
Great picture. It never seizes to amaze me how design and manufacturing complexity evolve year over year.GreeTz wrote:Here is a shot of Lewis' floor as used in the Belgian race
https://i.imgsafe.org/457a0b4865.jpg