And the double diffuser, blown exhausts, the FRIC, Traction Control and everything else under the sun.
And the double diffuser, blown exhausts, the FRIC, Traction Control and everything else under the sun.
You both missed the point, which is the hype about current "fastest ever" cars, which are also so "incredibly efficient" while also being totally road relevant.
Please provide any article where the currrent "road relevant" F1 tech has been applied in the consumer sphere.sosic2121 wrote: ↑16 May 2019, 22:35You both missed the point, which is the hype about current "fastest ever" cars, which are also so "incredibly efficient" while also being totally road relevant.
Today's cars have active aerodynamics. Neither car had FRIC, DD, EBD...
Good question. 2021 is a complete toss-up at this point, with so much uncertainty regarding the regulations at this point.LM10 wrote: ↑16 May 2019, 23:05So, after having seen how Mercedes humiliated the rest of the field in Barcelona, is there anyone who thinks that Ferrari and/or Red Bull will be able to catch up anytime soon? I highly doubt that this will happen even next season. The simple reason is that the concept Mercedes has gone for is basically the one they've been using for many years now. No team has more experience on how to operate it perfectly and I don't see the other top teams changing their concepts to a Mercedes-esque one and suddenly be on Mercdedes-level.
Mercedes has constantly improved their car over the course of this season. There has not been any race without them putting upgrades on their car and they already have other goodies in the pipeline which certainly aren't good news for the others. There is massive potential in the car due to the regulation changes.
Interesting how the arrows point to the obvious stuff- top speed and apex speed - while missing the important marginal stuff. Bottas is later on tbe brakes and is ahead in the early acceleration zones.LM10 wrote: ↑16 May 2019, 22:24Telemetry Vettel vs. Bottas - Q3 Barcelona
https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-iTcvyARjIJ0/ ... Q32019.png
Not sure that's true. Mercedes previously massively relied on the outer section of the front wing and the cascades to get their performance. They lost all of that with the winter rule changes. James Allison discussed this in a video. They lost several seconds of lap time because of the changes. They then had to regain that. The two different cars in testing is testament to this.
And why is vettel blue and bottas red? quite a fundamental thing to get wrong.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 01:00Interesting how the arrows point to the obvious stuff- top speed and apex speed - while missing the important marginal stuff. Bottas is later on tbe brakes and is ahead in the early acceleration zones.LM10 wrote: ↑16 May 2019, 22:24Telemetry Vettel vs. Bottas - Q3 Barcelona
https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-iTcvyARjIJ0/ ... Q32019.png
Look at the areas between the two traces - that's where the difference in lap time lies. The big stuff pointed out by the arrows likely cancels out, more or less, but the other areas where the cars are accelerating or braking is where the Mercedes is eating tenths here, there and everywhere.
I was being sarcastic.Zynerji wrote: ↑16 May 2019, 23:40Please provide any article where the currrent "road relevant" F1 tech has been applied in the consumer sphere.
Secrecy of design/operation is NOT road-relevance.
All four circuits mentioned by you have hairpins/chicanes or are really start/stop in nature. Ferrari's straight line speed offset to Mercedes is very little (unless you believe the blasphemy that Toto and lately his drivers have been dishing out) but the time is won and lost in those twisty bits. I expect a monumental struggle even on these tracks, specially if they can't reel in the tyres.zibby43 wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 00:20Good question. 2021 is a complete toss-up at this point, with so much uncertainty regarding the regulations at this point.LM10 wrote: ↑16 May 2019, 23:05So, after having seen how Mercedes humiliated the rest of the field in Barcelona, is there anyone who thinks that Ferrari and/or Red Bull will be able to catch up anytime soon? I highly doubt that this will happen even next season. The simple reason is that the concept Mercedes has gone for is basically the one they've been using for many years now. No team has more experience on how to operate it perfectly and I don't see the other top teams changing their concepts to a Mercedes-esque one and suddenly be on Mercdedes-level.
Mercedes has constantly improved their car over the course of this season. There has not been any race without them putting upgrades on their car and they already have other goodies in the pipeline which certainly aren't good news for the others. There is massive potential in the car due to the regulation changes.
In terms of this season and 2020, I think Ferrari and Red Bull have to continue to push. As you hinted at, it's going to depend on Mercedes' rate of development going forward. From what Toto and other team personnel have said, it seems like Mercedes still has quite a few bits in the pipeline on both the chassis and PU side. It's rare for them to be this "bullish" on future upgrades.
They're going to continue to push hard, considering they know that any benefits from this year's development race will be carried forward into 2020 (thanks to no regulation changes next year).
As AMuS has indicated, I think Ferrari has the potential to be very competitive at places like Canada, Austria, Spa, and Monza, just by virtue of their efficient design and the lack of slow corners at these venues. I think Russia will be a tough one to predict because the track surface is so smooth there, it is very hard to get energy into the tires (similar to Melbourne and Baku).
A lot will depend on the step that Mercedes makes with their Spec 2 PU, and what their future, low-downforce specification packages will look like.
Their competitiveness on just a few tracks will not be of any big interest as their only goal is to be world champions.zibby43 wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 00:20As AMuS has indicated, I think Ferrari has the potential to be very competitive at places like Canada, Austria, Spa, and Monza, just by virtue of their efficient design and the lack of slow corners at these venues. I think Russia will be a tough one to predict because the track surface is so smooth there, it is very hard to get energy into the tires (similar to Melbourne and Baku).
Got you, though, I rather meant their low-rake and long wheelbase philosophy. That's a key combination for this year's regulations.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 01:08Not sure that's true. Mercedes previously massively relied on the outer section of the front wing and the cascades to get their performance. They lost all of that with the winter rule changes. James Allison discussed this in a video. They lost several seconds of lap time because of the changes. They then had to regain that. The two different cars in testing is testament to this.
What Mercedes have done is develop the solution better and quicker than anyone else. That's what is so impressive about their performance. They really were behind at the start of testing. They came back from that to have a winning car.
Yep, take a look at Canada.Schuttelberg wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 09:49All four circuits mentioned by you have hairpins/chicanes or are really start/stop in nature.