Eventually they'll lose their advantage as others catch up again.
Eventually they'll lose their advantage as others catch up again.
The old 90/10 rule applies here. The other teams don't need to reach parity, they don't even need to reach 90% of what Ferrari has 50-60% would go a long way towards nullifying Ferrari's advantage on the straits.
It means (IMO) the teams are still in the dark and haven’t clarified the right area yet. Either that, or they haven’t filed the right protest.
Ferrari obviously won't stop developing either. When we look at how significant their spec 3 PU performance jump relative to the prior spec was, it seems that there still is much room for improvement.
I think that all depends on what Ferrari is doing. They might be doing more than one thing, I mean after all two different teams are questioning 2 unrelated areas of the PU.LM10 wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 17:09I'm curious, if Mercedes actually knows what Ferrari is doing and if yes, if they can implement it on their PU easily. Maybe they would need to change the whole PU concept. When I heard that they were changing the PU concept before the current season started, I thought that they might have implemented it already. But wasn't the case.
quote this!.. and rumors talk about ERS related.LM10 wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 16:28They have been using and developing whatever they’re doing for 2 years now. And every time they bring an upgraded PU it’s a big step forward. Not sure others will catch up that easily.
If this rumour is true, maybe they know what Ferrari is doing nowLM10 wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 17:09Ferrari obviously won't stop developing either. When we look at how significant their spec 3 PU performance jump relative to the prior spec was, it seems that there still is much room for improvement.
I'm curious, if Mercedes actually knows what Ferrari is doing and if yes, if they can implement it on their PU easily. Maybe they would need to change the whole PU concept. When I heard that they were changing the PU concept before the current season started, I thought that they might have implemented it already. But wasn't the case.
Yes and yes. Don't have the transcript from the FP3 broadcast (it involved Ted Kravitz recounting his conversation with Toto Wolff), but here's the full quote from the RaceFans piece:nzjrs wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 10:11In the interests of decoding the worthlessness of twitter 'news', this is a re-stating of what was said on the Sky broadcast on Saturday (during FP3 or Quali, IIRC), and arguably a re-posting of the racefans.net discussion of the matter in several pieces they wrote over the weekend.zibby43 wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 00:12https://twitter.com/SmilexTech/status/1 ... 58182?s=20
Translation: "Mercedes have clear ideas about where the advantage of the Ferrari SF90 PU comes from and are trying to implement it on their PU 2020. Meanwhile, the FIA has examined the cooling system of the SF90 as a preliminary point; no anomalies found."
regarding the 3 different liquids for cooling, I think that each engine manufacturer uses distinct liquids for the seperate components.zibby43 wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 21:18Yes and yes. Don't have the transcript from the FP3 broadcast (it involved Ted Kravitz recounting his conversation with Toto Wolff), but here's the full quote from the RaceFans piece:nzjrs wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 10:11In the interests of decoding the worthlessness of twitter 'news', this is a re-stating of what was said on the Sky broadcast on Saturday (during FP3 or Quali, IIRC), and arguably a re-posting of the racefans.net discussion of the matter in several pieces they wrote over the weekend.zibby43 wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 00:12https://twitter.com/SmilexTech/status/1 ... 58182?s=20
Translation: "Mercedes have clear ideas about where the advantage of the Ferrari SF90 PU comes from and are trying to implement it on their PU 2020. Meanwhile, the FIA has examined the cooling system of the SF90 as a preliminary point; no anomalies found."
"I speak to an official who has knowledge of the engine’s workings.
They tell me that after the FIA inspected the system with the full co-operation of Ferrari, there were no discernible high pressure points within the system from which fluids could leak. Three distinctly different liquids are used for cooling."
https://www.racefans.net/2019/10/28/pad ... ay-four-2/
On a side note, this guy has to report news to his Italian audience, who probably weren't reading the RaceFans pieces or the Sky FP3 Interview, and nowhere did he claim the information as exclusive.
I posted it because I could corroborate what he was saying with the English sources you listed.
But, carry on.
It is obvious that the other teams are in the dark, but what stillmakes you think they are doing something illegal? The PU is deemed legal by the FIA so I believe the other PU manufacturers are just using FIA to extract as many info as they can.Phil wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 16:58It means (IMO) the teams are still in the dark and haven’t clarified the right area yet. Either that, or they haven’t filed the right protest.
You either copy them, assuming you know what they are doing, and run the risk to later be protested by the teams that don’t follow - or you make a specific inquiry into the legality of what you intend to do. If the FIA say no, it’s not allowed, you protest the team in question (like Racingpoint did with Renault).