Phil wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 16:51
Arguably, low-rake worked for them so brilliantly because they developed extensively around the problem (i.e. FRIC and later iterations, that then were banned) and found solutions for it, not because low-rake was per se better. Mercedes knows their concept because that's what they've used for many years. Going high-rake would introduce lots of unknowns, new territory so to speak. They'd be way out of their comfort zone by going radically different from that.
The fancy suspensions have been banned and this year introduces more new changes with the front-wing, so perhaps we are moving into territory that marks the end of a successful era without high-rake. Maybe. Of course, PU performance is one of the big factors too that has allowed them to go so far using an alternate philosophy, but as I already said, that PU advantage is now over, at least vs. Ferrari.
Mercedes lost the PU advantage in 2017 itself, but yet, they have followed the low rake philosophy with elongated wheel base. It's hard to believe that, everyone is being made to accept that high rake is the best philosophy and there are no alternatives. Oversimplification at it's best. It's like the season of Superheroes and Animation in Hollywood and that is the best formula to rake in the moolah. It definitely is, but that's the ONLY thing.
FRIC was banned in 2015! That was a long time ago, but yet there are avenues that helps garner back the advantage, even with the traditional suspensions.
There was a time when high noses were the flavor of the season and not anymore, but you see how designers adapt their thought process to bring back the performance. The day an engineer/designer accepts that there are no alternatives, he would be lying in his grave. Until Mercedes came to the fore, Newey's design ideas were the bible for engineers. Everybody copied RB as it was the easiest way to get performance.
Mercedes were the early adopters of out wash front wings and in came a point when even Red Bull copied that by ditching their own, established design. Same goes with the side pod inlets that Ferrari introduced in 2017. In my opinion, there can always be different ideas that can be equally successful, it's all about right people.