Moose wrote: ↑29 Sep 2017, 00:31
At 80 horses up (8.4%), they'd end up having a top speed 0.05% faster (0.2km/h), not 1-10.
You seem to be misunderstanding how cubic relationships work here.
If you want a top speed of 360km/h instead of 350km/h, then you need to do one of two things:
1) Have an engine that's 30% more powerful than your opponent (completely unrealistic, unless you're talking different engine specs)
2) Have 2.8% less drag than your opponent (completely realistic, and exactly what's going on here)
People seem to constantly question Merc's car and how they will go a different direction to get more downforce. But being slightly weaker at 4-5 tracks while being stronger at 15, it's absurd to alter the car design to improve at 5 tracks at the expense of getting worse in 15 other tracks.
Merc have had this style of car since 2013, they've had plenty of chance to go for a higher downforce car but it would bring higher drag and they quite clearly don't want to.
I think it's also highly questionable that Ferrari were faster in Spa. Lap data quite clearly shows Hamilton backing into Vettel on purpose when the gap got bigger after the pitstop. He did a 109 second lap out of the pit, found the gap was around 4 seconds to Vettel after his stop, Ham then dropped into the 110's, let the gap close, maybe let the gap get a bit closer than he wanted and did a couple 108's to be a bit more comfortably ahead.
In spa Vettel himself had no problem staying with Ham up the hill after the restart, he wasn't sliding all over the track because he was close, no one else had trouble with the same thing, slipstreaming wasn't an issue. If Ferrari had more downforce and were faster everywhere but the straight, he'd be in the DRS zone repeatedly but not be able to out drag Mercedes. Instead what we had was a car supposedly faster who couldn't get into the drs zone at I believe any stage in the entire race? People see a close gap and assume the car behind is faster, but think back to any race Hamilton couldn't pass but had the faster overall car, Spain in multiple years. Despite the supposed situation(which I've never bought at all) that Merc can't follow cars he managed to stick to Vettel's rear wing for a couple of dozen laps with no issue I think last year, within DRS again and again. Then this year in Hungary he was in the DRS zone repeatedly again.
Just how well Hamilton controlled that race, just how confident he was sitting just out of DRS for literally the entire race is what convinces me just how much faster Mercedes was in Spa.