Latest infos say he will stick with it for the rest of the weekend.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑30 Sep 2017, 08:09I just read on sky sports that Hamilton reverted back to the previous aero package. That is quite surprising news!
probably long wheel design hurting the balance of the car, tyre-wise.
Reaching chassis and/or PU peak performance?JasonF1 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 09:45Surprisingly, Mercedes seems to have difficulty developing the car while they were at the forefront of the development race in previous years. I wonder what the reason could be:
- Were they so focused on fixing the initial gremlins of the car so that they sacrificed the development of new parts?
- Diminishing return due to the constant iteration and refinement of the Mercedes' design over the past years?(The W08 seems to be an evolution of the W07, which itself was an evolution of the W06 and W05 ones).
Or was it just two tracks which played to the weakness of the Mercedes car?
We will get more clarification by the end of the week I guess.
Aero wise, their philosophy is an evolution of what they had last year and it may be showing its development limit. This aero pathway may not be the one with the most potential of progression. On the other hand, Ferrari who has not only come up with an innovative design, has progressed noticeably throughout the year. They brought significant evolution every 2-3 races while Mercedes barely brought any between Spain and Malaysia.cramr wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 12:00Reaching chassis and/or PU peak performance?JasonF1 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 09:45Surprisingly, Mercedes seems to have difficulty developing the car while they were at the forefront of the development race in previous years. I wonder what the reason could be:
- Were they so focused on fixing the initial gremlins of the car so that they sacrificed the development of new parts?
- Diminishing return due to the constant iteration and refinement of the Mercedes' design over the past years?(The W08 seems to be an evolution of the W07, which itself was an evolution of the W06 and W05 ones).
Or was it just two tracks which played to the weakness of the Mercedes car?
We will get more clarification by the end of the week I guess.
I don't think aero peak performance is close for any team after reg changes
imo Mercedes has relied heavily on machine learning this year to come up with what they are doing this year. The incredibly complex design of their package wasn't gradually introduced, as normally would be the case. This, considering limits in windtunnel/cfd testing, would imply something beyond human capabilities.JasonF1 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2017, 12:39Aero wise, their philosophy is an evolution of what they had last year and it may be showing its development limit. This aero pathway may not be the one with the most potential of progression. On the other hand, Ferrari who has not only come up with an innovative design, has progressed noticeably throughout the year. They brought significant evolution every 2-3 races while Mercedes barely brought any between Spain and Malaysia.
The fundamental design of the cars suspension was built around the trick ride height control that was banned pre-season. That left Merc with a low rear ride height that could not be ‘self-levelled’ and so had to be stiffened to maintain diffuser efficiency and remove the threat of ‘choking it’ over undulations in the track. This has handicapped the setup of the car all season as the engineers hands are figuratively tied behind their backs with certain aspects of the setup.