Ferrari is ahead the competition by quite a margin on the straights. And it's a mystery how Ferrari mobilizes so much power in the short term.
Only the factory team benefits from the alleged performance boost. Haas and Sauber drive in the normal range.
We got a GPS comparison of the ten fastest training laps at Hockenheim. This proves what Ferrari's opponents only tell behind their hands. The wondrous speed increase is by
no means visible on all straights. And where this is the case, not over the entire straight, but
only in a certain area.
The phenomenon also occurs
mainly in qualifying, after the start or re-starts and in other crucial phases of the race.
For the first 200 meters, everything is unsuspicious.
The lines only start to separate at 225 km/h. Ferrari, Mercedes and Force India still on a par, the rest already something behind it.
At 250 km/h or 1.4 km the gap suddenly rises dramatically. Ferrari is moving away from the rest of the world. Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen stay on the same level for a while, then
Raikkonen also falls back slightly. [probably different DF configurations]
The strange thing is that over the last 50 meters the lines of Vettel, Räikkönen, Bottas and Perez are in the same corridor again.
If the speed gain was solely due to the engine, then Ferrari would have
28 kilowatts (38 hp) more than Mercedes "That's a leap that takes you two years with normal development," compares Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff.
At the introduction of the Spec2 engine from Ferrari in Canada, only a moderate jump in horsepower was measured. The fact that the performance only exploded two races later allows two conclusions. Either Ferrari initially drove the engine development on the conservative side and first turned the PS screw with more certainty or a software development was postponed or the gasoline system was subsequently modified.
One argument against thesis 1 is that only Ferrari, but not the customer teams of
HaasF1 and Sauber benefit from it. They
must be provided with the same hardware and the same motor programs. Since Raikkonen is still driving the first stage of the 2018 engine after his engine change at the Spanish GP, the
internal combustion engine cannot really be the key. MGU-K, battery and power electronics were not replaced until Hockenheim in all six cars with Ferrari power. So here, too, no luck.
If the secret lies in the drive, it must be a part that the factory team does not have to homologate and pass on to the customer. For example,
the fuel lines. As long as the pressure in the lines is
below 10 bar, they
belong to the chassis. All others are part of the drive unit.
The fact is that Ferrari meets the permitted flow rate of 100 kilograms per hour better than the customers, who notice fluctuations time and again.
This may have to do with the pipes, but it is nevertheless no explanation: "If you can control the performance gain as decisively as Ferrari obviously does, there must be other reasons than a clever invention to always keep the pressure in the gasoline system constant. That would also give an advantage for every area on the track," argues Mercedes engine boss Andy Cowell.
The FIA has checked Ferrari again and again after the battery affair and has always come to the conclusion that everything is legal. They obviously know the trick and enjoy the fact that the opponents now shoot in all directions in the hope of hitting something.