Mr.G wrote: ↑12 Jul 2020, 02:32
ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑11 Jul 2020, 13:55
hape wrote: ↑11 Jul 2020, 12:09
While this of course is very true, the thing coming to my mind is: Running the engine faster, having more power to go faster down the straight thus much more air resistance to overcome...it would mean you burn more fuel.
But if they really burned about 15% more fuel in a race then FIA should have looked into it much earlier in my opinion.
Fuel limited formula, the engine burns the same amount of fuel at 10.5k rpm, 12k rpm or 15 k rpm(so obviously it makes sense to keep it running closer to 10.5k rpm)
Most of their advantage was in acceleration, not top speed so much.
Yes, it was perplexing why the FIA didn't notice that they were burning so much more fuel than the Mercs. I'm surprised Mercedes didn't point it out.
I just wondering:
IF their "trick" needed to deliberately put more fuel than reported and now IF it is turned off and all teams with Ferrari engines are 1s slower, does it mean that they have been doing so too? Do we really believe that? Ferrari just came to customer team and tell him to "cheat" and they have been OK with that?
And one more think, during the wet qualifying, where the times are several seconds slower and it's not engine dependent, how it comes that Ferrari isn't higher or Ferrari powdered teams? There must be a different issue with the car, probably with some part that is delivered to the customers too. What if all the issues came from the gearbox?
Excellent questions. Ferrari were only caught putting in more fuel than stated once, so it could have very well been an honest mistake that one time. But it was clear that Ferrari were using more fuel over the race distance than Merc(but still within the legal total race distance amount allowed). I remember some races where Merc were winning with 85 to 90kg, and Ferrari were coming in second using 100 to 105. Carrying that much extra fuel is a handling and braking penalty, so they have to be doing it for a reason.
Ferrari customers didn't have to be asked to cheat. They would have just been told how much fuel and cooling the PU requires and not given much more information. Ferrari customers could have easily been taking advantage of the extra fuel usage advantage without knowing if or how it worked. The people running the PUs in the customer teams actually work for the manufacturers.
The Ferrari customers may not have had access to the full oil burning or intercooler coolant burning tricks.
Remember, we are talking about tenths of seconds, not full seconds worth of time here. This is currently the closest field in F1 history. From fastest driver to slowest, and fastest car to slowest, it is unmatched in closeness, small margins matter more than ever now.
Ferrari drivers were complaining about not getting the tires up to temp today. The PU probably wasn't their biggest problem today, but remember, with less power they probably have to take off some of their dirtier downforce or they'd be dead slow end of straight.