But lets not forget, during that time they had more freedom with oil trickery compared to today.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑04 Aug 2020, 09:31If they had 1000hp on the bench two years ago, they could well have it in the car today. Perhaps only in Q3, but there's no reason why two years of effort won't have made it possible.
I always wonder why people put the oil trickery in such a negative light. It is still legal to do even today and Merc were not found to be outside the rules in that regard. But anyway, the performance of these cars has improved year over year, some or most of that improvement has came from the PU, even with the Various regulatory changes and TDS put in place. It’s been the same for all teams not just Merc (with Ferrari this year an outlier).F1Krof wrote: ↑04 Aug 2020, 21:34But lets not forget, during that time they had more freedom with oil trickery compared to today.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑04 Aug 2020, 09:31If they had 1000hp on the bench two years ago, they could well have it in the car today. Perhaps only in Q3, but there's no reason why two years of effort won't have made it possible.
I doubt they would 'save' them once they were ready as further development would depend on the performance of this pac, and if they were mistaken with some thing the next issue would be wrong too . Unless of course it is something they want to keep hidden, and then we probably not see it until someone was chasing them hard or late in the season or when it would not be classed as an upgrade later.
Can you imagine the fall out if they turn up and add 0.5 second to the gap back to the rest?
My logic was based on the fact that in the hybrid era, especially in the past few years, Barcelona has been where Mercedes has introduced their most extensive upgrade packages.Big Tea wrote: ↑05 Aug 2020, 23:16I doubt they would 'save' them once they were ready as further development would depend on the performance of this pac, and if they were mistaken with some thing the next issue would be wrong too . Unless of course it is something they want to keep hidden, and then we probably not see it until someone was chasing them hard or late in the season or when it would not be classed as an upgrade later.
After last weeks show, if there were new packages for other tracks and they were ready I think Merc would run them as they have a very sorted car and could revert if not 100% happy with them even if the package was not specifically for Silverstone. At least give it a thrashing in FP1 and see what happens.
It would be apocalyptic. Which would be on brand for '20 so far.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑06 Aug 2020, 00:02Can you imagine the fall out if they turn up and add 0.5 second to the gap back to the rest?
I see what you are saying, but what if they get to Barca and they do not work as expected? Not only are they one step behind where they thought, but other mods have been planned using the Barca baseline, which will then also be wrong.zibby43 wrote: ↑06 Aug 2020, 00:25My logic was based on the fact that in the hybrid era, especially in the past few years, Barcelona has been where Mercedes has introduced their most extensive upgrade packages.Big Tea wrote: ↑05 Aug 2020, 23:16I doubt they would 'save' them once they were ready as further development would depend on the performance of this pac, and if they were mistaken with some thing the next issue would be wrong too . Unless of course it is something they want to keep hidden, and then we probably not see it until someone was chasing them hard or late in the season or when it would not be classed as an upgrade later.
After last weeks show, if there were new packages for other tracks and they were ready I think Merc would run them as they have a very sorted car and could revert if not 100% happy with them even if the package was not specifically for Silverstone. At least give it a thrashing in FP1 and see what happens.
There are a few reasons for this. First, since Barcelona is the pre-season testing track, Merc have tons and tons of data for that track for correlation purposes. Which is critical when evaluating updates.
Second, Barcelona also has a variety of different types of corners (unlike Silverstone, which only has a few low-speed corners), which is extremely useful in evaluating the performance of updates.
So yeah, in a situation where Merc is not in desperate need of rushing updates on the car, I think it would make a lot more sense to save them for Barcelona.
The upper photo has a very skinny rear wing. The main plane is noticeably higher on the endplate.