Matthew Somerfield wrote:It's not a new rear wing per se on the Mercedes but they have taken off a lot of wing and aren't running a Gurney on the trailing edge of the top flap
Matthew Somerfield wrote:It's not a new rear wing per se on the Mercedes but they have taken off a lot of wing and aren't running a Gurney on the trailing edge of the top flap
Yeah, he could be pretty accurate with this figure, bearing in mind what Toto said about Ferrari which in return gained some 7-8 tenths on the straights at Spa, Nurburgring & Monza and Christian Horner saying W11 gained on average some 4 tenths on the straights in the last 3 races ... therefore, W11 PU has some 30-35HP more I should say ...nico5 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2020, 17:07atanatizante wrote: ↑30 Jul 2020, 16:21
4. The last reason: with regards to the above motives and the fact that Ferrari PU is down on power (compared to 2019 unit) they are now ahead on power, although their net gains in HP for 2020 are not so big as some untrained eye could speculate ...
https://www.formulapassion.it/manifes ... 7688.html
Well, this pretty competent guy made (from telemetry) an estimate of 35-45hp more than last year in Hungary. Trained or untrained eye, it's not that little gain
The 7 to 8th Ferrari gained last year were of course due to a very strong engine but also because of their low drag low downforce concept. So to conclude the 30-35HP gains of Mercedes over the winter, based on data of another car concept, on different tracks, seems a little tricky.atanatizante wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 13:41Yeah, he could be pretty accurate with this figure, bearing in mind what Toto said about Ferrari which in return gained some 7-8 tenths on the straights at Spa, Nurburgring & Monza and Christian Horner saying W11 gained on average some 4 tenths on the straights in the last 3 races ... therefore, W11 PU has some 30-35HP more I should say ...nico5 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2020, 17:07atanatizante wrote: ↑30 Jul 2020, 16:21
4. The last reason: with regards to the above motives and the fact that Ferrari PU is down on power (compared to 2019 unit) they are now ahead on power, although their net gains in HP for 2020 are not so big as some untrained eye could speculate ...
https://www.formulapassion.it/manifes ... 7688.html
Well, this pretty competent guy made (from telemetry) an estimate of 35-45hp more than last year in Hungary. Trained or untrained eye, it's not that little gain
The analysis was focused on the very first phase of acceleration, comparing the longitudinal forces on the W10 up against the W11's, during Hungary's Q3 laps. It suggested they would gain from 0.05 to 0.19 Gs out of each corner, when 0.1G equals to an extra acceleration of 3.5kph/second, which is not insignificant by all means. Also, gear shifts would take place in a ~200rpm higher range. There's another article from today pointing at the fact Ferrari lost about 50hp through the winter, as had been suggested on Ferrari's engine thread already. They'd be now trailing by 30/40hp.hape wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 16:12The 7 to 8th Ferrari gained last year were of course due to a very strong engine but also because of their low drag low downforce concept. So to conclude the 30-35HP gains of Mercedes over the winter, based on data of another car concept, on different tracks, seems a little tricky.atanatizante wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 13:41Yeah, he could be pretty accurate with this figure, bearing in mind what Toto said about Ferrari which in return gained some 7-8 tenths on the straights at Spa, Nurburgring & Monza and Christian Horner saying W11 gained on average some 4 tenths on the straights in the last 3 races ... therefore, W11 PU has some 30-35HP more I should say ...nico5 wrote: ↑30 Jul 2020, 17:07
https://www.formulapassion.it/manifes ... 7688.html
Well, this pretty competent guy made (from telemetry) an estimate of 35-45hp more than last year in Hungary. Trained or untrained eye, it's not that little gain
I know, I’ve read the article and thanks for posting it. I found it interesting to read.nico5 wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 19:14The analysis was focused on the very first phase of acceleration, comparing the longitudinal forces on the W10 up against the W11's, during Hungary's Q3 laps. It suggested they would gain from 0.05 to 0.19 Gs out of each corner, when 0.1G equals to an extra acceleration of 3.5kph/second, which is not insignificant by all means. Also, gear shifts would take place in a ~200rpm higher range. There's another article from today pointing at the fact Ferrari lost about 50hp through the winter, as had been suggested on Ferrari's engine thread already. They'd be now trailing by 30/40hp.hape wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 16:12The 7 to 8th Ferrari gained last year were of course due to a very strong engine but also because of their low drag low downforce concept. So to conclude the 30-35HP gains of Mercedes over the winter, based on data of another car concept, on different tracks, seems a little tricky.atanatizante wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 13:41
Yeah, he could be pretty accurate with this figure, bearing in mind what Toto said about Ferrari which in return gained some 7-8 tenths on the straights at Spa, Nurburgring & Monza and Christian Horner saying W11 gained on average some 4 tenths on the straights in the last 3 races ... therefore, W11 PU has some 30-35HP more I should say ...
Motorsport.com obtained the phonometric surveys carried out in qualifying at Silverstone: the power measurements showed surprising data. The full boost Mercedes power unit was the only one to increase horsepower compared to last year. Honda pays a gap of 28 hp, Renault pays a 37 hp, while Ferrari is last with a gap of 42 hp.
The power unit of Lewis Hamilton squeezed in Q3 showed 1,022 horses, while that of Valtteri Bottas stopped at 1,020 horses. A nothing that does not justify the gap of three tenths that the ex-champion has inflicted on the good Finnish, but which explains the impressive difference with all the others who, at least in the dry lap, just don't exist.
How do they even calculate HP from videos??dans79 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2020, 21:21I think this is more conjecture than anything else, but still interesting.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-te ... a/4848120/Motorsport.com obtained the phonometric surveys carried out in qualifying at Silverstone: the power measurements showed surprising data. The full boost Mercedes power unit was the only one to increase horsepower compared to last year. Honda pays a gap of 28 hp, Renault pays a 37 hp, while Ferrari is last with a gap of 42 hp.The power unit of Lewis Hamilton squeezed in Q3 showed 1,022 horses, while that of Valtteri Bottas stopped at 1,020 horses. A nothing that does not justify the gap of three tenths that the ex-champion has inflicted on the good Finnish, but which explains the impressive difference with all the others who, at least in the dry lap, just don't exist.
If we think of the complexity of today’s PUs, it seems nothing more than adventurous to give exact numbers like for example 1022 hp for Lewis and 1020 hp for Bottas by phonometric analysis.Holm86 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2020, 22:01How do they even calculate HP from videos??dans79 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2020, 21:21I think this is more conjecture than anything else, but still interesting.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-te ... a/4848120/Motorsport.com obtained the phonometric surveys carried out in qualifying at Silverstone: the power measurements showed surprising data. The full boost Mercedes power unit was the only one to increase horsepower compared to last year. Honda pays a gap of 28 hp, Renault pays a 37 hp, while Ferrari is last with a gap of 42 hp.The power unit of Lewis Hamilton squeezed in Q3 showed 1,022 horses, while that of Valtteri Bottas stopped at 1,020 horses. A nothing that does not justify the gap of three tenths that the ex-champion has inflicted on the good Finnish, but which explains the impressive difference with all the others who, at least in the dry lap, just don't exist.
Doesn't it take a lot of different factors like drag etc to even get a somewhat precise estimate??
Lewis has 2 extra horsepower available to him than Bottas does? Looks like all those conspiracy theories are correct after all...dans79 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2020, 21:21I think this is more conjecture than anything else, but still interesting.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-te ... a/4848120/Motorsport.com obtained the phonometric surveys carried out in qualifying at Silverstone: the power measurements showed surprising data. The full boost Mercedes power unit was the only one to increase horsepower compared to last year. Honda pays a gap of 28 hp, Renault pays a 37 hp, while Ferrari is last with a gap of 42 hp.The power unit of Lewis Hamilton squeezed in Q3 showed 1,022 horses, while that of Valtteri Bottas stopped at 1,020 horses. A nothing that does not justify the gap of three tenths that the ex-champion has inflicted on the good Finnish, but which explains the impressive difference with all the others who, at least in the dry lap, just don't exist.
I believe what they are referring to is the use of audio analisis and gps data to estimate power. it's probably about as accurate as spitballing....
i thought that over 1000 horses were reached a few years ago. i mean there were some news about it like every year.dans79 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2020, 21:21I think this is more conjecture than anything else, but still interesting.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-te ... a/4848120/Motorsport.com obtained the phonometric surveys carried out in qualifying at Silverstone: the power measurements showed surprising data. The full boost Mercedes power unit was the only one to increase horsepower compared to last year. Honda pays a gap of 28 hp, Renault pays a 37 hp, while Ferrari is last with a gap of 42 hp.The power unit of Lewis Hamilton squeezed in Q3 showed 1,022 horses, while that of Valtteri Bottas stopped at 1,020 horses. A nothing that does not justify the gap of three tenths that the ex-champion has inflicted on the good Finnish, but which explains the impressive difference with all the others who, at least in the dry lap, just don't exist.