They wrote another one today, this time saying 50 hp between Merc and Ferrari.
The figures were given by Mark Hughes, as follows:Mudflap wrote: β16 Jul 2020, 12:26It was one of the many "why are ferrari so slow" articles on The Race.
I am fairly sure the hp figures he had were posted in the comments section somehwere, can't find them again.
It gave a maximum difference of 45hp between best and worst PUs so very much in line with what you have
Cheers mate, I gave up trying to find it after I'd gone through 20 odd similar articlesb2bL44 wrote: β17 Jul 2020, 08:57The figures were given by Mark Hughes, as follows:Mudflap wrote: β16 Jul 2020, 12:26It was one of the many "why are ferrari so slow" articles on The Race.
I am fairly sure the hp figures he had were posted in the comments section somehwere, can't find them again.
It gave a maximum difference of 45hp between best and worst PUs so very much in line with what you have
"Appears Merc is around 15bhp clear of the pack in qually mode. With Honda and Renault very closely matched. Then Ferrari about 20bhp off the back of them."
https://the-race.com/formula-1/how-ferr ... 4986469209
However these figures were after the first race in Austria in which Merc and others would have been cautious about giving it full beans. Because after the second race the gap seems to have increased, as follows:
"Analysis of the GPS data provided to the teams by the FIA suggested that in Q3 there, the Ferrari was the least powerful of the four engine makes and as much as 50bhp behind the Mercedes. In race trim, the deficit was smaller but still present."
https://the-race.com/formula-1/ferrari- ... irectives/
Andy Cowell must be pretty chuffed.
I'm betting more like a nice comfy job in the road car division.
Eh, don't worry about it. You've been giving us excellent information for a while now, so the least I could do was to somewhat return the favourMudflap wrote: β17 Jul 2020, 13:00Cheers mate, I gave up trying to find it after I'd gone through 20 odd similar articlesb2bL44 wrote: β17 Jul 2020, 08:57The figures were given by Mark Hughes, as follows:Mudflap wrote: β16 Jul 2020, 12:26
It was one of the many "why are ferrari so slow" articles on The Race.
I am fairly sure the hp figures he had were posted in the comments section somehwere, can't find them again.
It gave a maximum difference of 45hp between best and worst PUs so very much in line with what you have
"Appears Merc is around 15bhp clear of the pack in qually mode. With Honda and Renault very closely matched. Then Ferrari about 20bhp off the back of them."
https://the-race.com/formula-1/how-ferr ... 4986469209
However these figures were after the first race in Austria in which Merc and others would have been cautious about giving it full beans. Because after the second race the gap seems to have increased, as follows:
"Analysis of the GPS data provided to the teams by the FIA suggested that in Q3 there, the Ferrari was the least powerful of the four engine makes and as much as 50bhp behind the Mercedes. In race trim, the deficit was smaller but still present."
https://the-race.com/formula-1/ferrari- ... irectives/
Andy Cowell must be pretty chuffed.
+1jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 07:16Why does engine power data remain private? What will change if before the start of the season the FIA measures everything and says: Mercedes engine has 1000 hp, Renault has 1009, etc.? Okay, let it be revealed after the season ends. Why is this data kept secret?
Because with this data, rivals can calculate exactly the drag of their competitors.jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 07:16Why does engine power data remain private? What will change if before the start of the season the FIA measures everything and says: Mercedes engine has 1000 hp, Renault has 1009, etc.? Okay, let it be revealed after the season ends. Why is this data kept secret?
But what will they do with that information if for example SF1000 has more drag than W11 and Mercedes has more powerful engine?rgava wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 09:07Because with this data, rivals can calculate exactly the drag of their competitors.jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 07:16Why does engine power data remain private? What will change if before the start of the season the FIA measures everything and says: Mercedes engine has 1000 hp, Renault has 1009, etc.? Okay, let it be revealed after the season ends. Why is this data kept secret?
Today, the calculations based on gps speed traces have the uncertainty of the drag vs power balance.
Engineering targets are very important.jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 09:19But what will they do with that information if for example SF1000 has more drag than W11 and Mercedes has more powerful engine?rgava wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 09:07Because with this data, rivals can calculate exactly the drag of their competitors.jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 07:16Why does engine power data remain private? What will change if before the start of the season the FIA measures everything and says: Mercedes engine has 1000 hp, Renault has 1009, etc.? Okay, let it be revealed after the season ends. Why is this data kept secret?
Today, the calculations based on gps speed traces have the uncertainty of the drag vs power balance.
I was about to make the same point. This may be one reason Mercedes appear to have taken a step. If they aimed at last years Ferrari they may have set a target higher than necessary.rgava wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 09:53Engineering targets are very important.jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 09:19But what will they do with that information if for example SF1000 has more drag than W11 and Mercedes has more powerful engine?
If you know exactly were your rivals are, you have clear development targets for your team.
It's to do with the fact that the engine doesn't just have "a power level." It has several different power profiles and downstream properties of energy recovery. These things are incredibly complex in the sense that there is a large number of parameters that are dynamic and intertwined.jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 09:19But what will they do with that information if for example SF1000 has more drag than W11 and Mercedes has more powerful engine?rgava wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 09:07Because with this data, rivals can calculate exactly the drag of their competitors.jumpingfish wrote: β18 Jul 2020, 07:16Why does engine power data remain private? What will change if before the start of the season the FIA measures everything and says: Mercedes engine has 1000 hp, Renault has 1009, etc.? Okay, let it be revealed after the season ends. Why is this data kept secret?
Today, the calculations based on gps speed traces have the uncertainty of the drag vs power balance.