On TV they said that Kubica issue was from the combustion chamber...
The Mercedes drivers couldn't drive with the usual Q3-mode. After two engine failures in customer teams, for which the cause wasn't established yet, Mercedes chose caution.
I do not think it was getting past that was the problem, although it still would have been a problem, but staying infront once he had passed. If Lewis could not pass with slipstream and DRS, he could not have maintained it as long as the Ferrari was in DRS, probably even when not. The higher modes take more out of the engine not only today, but for the whole life of the unit. 30 seconds used twice today would have been wasted as the Ferrari would be straight back infront, but next race it could be enough to pass and break the tow and be the difference between win and second or third. Also, did you notice Lewis tyres? they did not look good, and once Bottas passed he soon fell away (to 4sec) so would have been an easy pass late in the race anyway. Best take a long viewdigitalrurouni wrote: ↑09 Sep 2019, 02:33So Hamilton asking for more power in the race and then being denied. What's the reason behind that? PU weakness? Concerns?
If I was Mercedes with that much of a lead with some good tracks that favor my machine coming up I would have thrown caution to the wind and cranked the heck out of the PU. Or did they figure even then that wouldn't have been enough to get past the Ferrari?
Funny how Merc are crying for power and dominatibg last 5 years of this hybrid era. Gone are the days when they just saved the engine and pumped a fast lap at the end to show off their margin.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑09 Sep 2019, 02:33So Hamilton asking for more power in the race and then being denied. What's the reason behind that? PU weakness? Concerns?
If I was Mercedes with that much of a lead with some good tracks that favor my machine coming up I would have thrown caution to the wind and cranked the heck out of the PU.
In both normal and split turbo concepts, the size of the turbo is limited by how low (of high) you want to place it (just above the driveshaft) while split turbo’s doesn’t have the same kind of limitation for the compressor. So with a split setup you have more room.
On the contrary i think every team has more or less opted for the H in the V so they all are in similar position axially. The split turbo limits the compressor size and geometry over the normal layout.Jolle wrote: ↑09 Sep 2019, 17:23In both normal and split turbo concepts, the size of the turbo is limited by how low (of high) you want to place it (just above the driveshaft) while split turbo’s doesn’t have the same kind of limitation for the compressor. So with a split setup you have more room.
Why is that? there is nothing blocking the compressor in its way, Mercedes even have an almost dinner plate size compressor. No limits in size, width or trouble with cooling.McMika98 wrote: ↑09 Sep 2019, 19:28On the contrary i think every team has more or less opted for the H in the V so they all are in similar position axially. The split turbo limits the compressor size and geometry over the normal layout.