Just out of curiosity and because he simply could not keep out of the matter, I have noticed I have not heard a thing from 'giantfan10' or something like that. What has happened to him?
You say that, but Merc were terrible in 2015 in Singapore... and which other track did Merc not dominate at in 2015... Malaysia. A perfect car for every track isn't really possible and it's not a good target. A car that works better than other cars across as many tracks as possible is the ultimate solution. Out of 15 races Merc have 11 poles and 9 wins(could say 10 with Baku, but then maybe 9 with Singapore without the crash). Would you make a fundamental design change to the car to not be as weak in Singapore and Malaysia... if it also makes you less good at the other tracks?TAG wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 12:35Baku stood out for me as well, not necessarily the result but because both air and track temps were high, but Merc dominated. That IMO has everything to do with the long straights there allowing the tires to cool, never getting critically hot and begin to slide, leading to to a faster erosion and more degradation.GPR-A wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 12:20Azerbaijan could have been easily Mercedes.TAG wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 11:39Here's an interesting chart I ran across out on the interwebz. Goes a long way towards answering the temperature thing.
https://i.imgur.com/rvYeWyU.png
Everything points to the trick suspension that they lost so late in the game for the season.
The suspension is the reason this car has been labeled a "Diva". They clearly were relying on it. It's a German team, you know they won't show up next season with the same problem.
In my opinion, it's not about fixing the performance to suit Monaco, Hungary and Singapore for Mercedes. It's about the low speed corner performance, in every single circuit. W04 to W06, with FRIC and then some trick suspension, performed extremely well in all those places. Sing'15 was the only exception.drunkf1fan wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 13:53You say that, but Merc were terrible in 2015 in Singapore... and which other track did Merc not dominate at in 2015... Malaysia. A perfect car for every track isn't really possible and it's not a good target. A car that works better than other cars across as many tracks as possible is the ultimate solution. Out of 15 races Merc have 11 poles and 9 wins(could say 10 with Baku, but then maybe 9 with Singapore without the crash). Would you make a fundamental design change to the car to not be as weak in Singapore and Malaysia... if it also makes you less good at the other tracks?
Ferrari with their superior car in Malaysia and Singapore have 4 race wins this year and I'm not even sure 2-3 poles.
I find it crazy that people think Mercedes must fix this and make a car much stronger in Singapore, but no one is saying Ferrari/RBR must fix there car, so it's not ONLY stronger in Singapore and Malaysia. I don't think Merc should change their philosophy at all, being weak at a few tracks to dominate the season is by far the better option than making a car to dominate Singapore that isn't dominant for 2/3rds of the season.
Based on the type of tracks the last 5 races have, I think we'll be looking at, bar DNF/crashes/punctures, Merc with a minimum 13 wins and Ferrari getting at best up to 6 wins.
You know how the bitumen holding together the asphalt and aggregate tends to sort of seep to the surface when it's too hot ? You might be right that it's not just the track temperature itself but the type of materials used to build it, it's age etc.drunkf1fan wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 13:43
If it was temp alone Merc race pace would have been poor in Hungary and Baku but it wasn't at all.
If Lewis wins the final 5 races it will most definitely be cool
Ambient temperature, but the clear sun baking the track tends to make the track temperatures as high as mid 40's.Restomaniac wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 10:04Weather forecast has a peak of 26 tomorrow.FrukostScones wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 09:43Track temps will be much higher than those 26/27 C today... Ferrari will gain.
Yeh, my reaction to watching these cars at Suzuka was "HOLY --- this years cars are FAST here". The speed of change of direction through the Ses, and the fact that they visually barely seem to slow at all to enter Spoon is just crazy.Shrieker wrote: ↑07 Oct 2017, 12:44The way that car goes into spoon looks physically impossible. I'd like to see the entry speed of other cars there.
On a side note; notice the tiny lock up into the hairpin. I saw it on live feed from the outside angle. It actually cost a couple hundredths, the 2nd sector of the first Q3 run was a wee little bit faster. He made i think -0.115 in the first sector, and lost around 0.03 in the second and third sectors compared to his first run. Both immaculate laps but to be honest the car looked just glued to the ground.