I'm not great with the tech stuff but to me whilst Merc's spoon wing is larger in the central section, their wing looks thinner than Ferrari's at the edges, so if Merc ran a traditional wing with the same amount of downforce/drag as their spoon wing, I doubt it would look significantly different from Ferrari's wing? After all, the spoon wing is meant to be more efficient in terms of a downforce vs drag ratio isn't it?Vanja #66 wrote: ↑02 Sep 2018, 11:43All you need to look at is this excellent comparison (pay attention to front wing as well):wunderkind wrote: ↑02 Sep 2018, 07:52There are talks that the Ferrari's floor is working so well that it allows the car to run less wing than the Mercedes. Of course, the Ferrari PU is now on the same level as Mercedes, if not better.
And even with this much wing level, Hamilton was faster in speed trap than Ferrari and top speed in Monza is all about more power. If Spa wasn't enough, Monza confirms that SF71-H has better downforce to drag ratio than W09, something that was discussed here since cars were presented in February. In Lesmos, Ferrari wasn't lagging behind Mercedes in corner speed and these still aren't speeds were drag is starting to hinder acceleration trough corner, so more downforce for slightly more drag is acceptable there.zioture wrote: ↑01 Sep 2018, 11:45http://www.newsf1.it/wp-content/uploads ... ricopg.jpg
Comparison Setup Mercedes Ferrari Monza
Ferrari PU seems to be better on acceleration, since they look like using electric power for longer in early acceleration from corner. However, there are strong arguments pointing towards Mercedes peak power supremacy, which is constant since 2014. And this fact is an astonishing achievement for Mercedes' amazing PU department.