Feel free to elaborate. You have piqued my curiosity.
I reckon they might opt for more adventurous alternatives to ballast options as a result of lesser weight, akin to the new rear suspension that required some strengthening with some weight penalty.
DAS allows for a great temperature differential to be generated between the front and rear, however altering the brake bias has the same effect to a lesser degree (I think).SiLo wrote: ↑19 Oct 2020, 12:14I'm sure it's been mentioned before, but I only just realised this myself.
DAS allows Mercedes to heat up the front tyres irrespective of the rears. Most other forms of heating but energy into all of them; breaking, weaving etc. Now they can heat the rears with burnouts, and the fronts with DAS to properly tune the car.
it's not just about getting MORE heat into the tyres or making it easier, its about that control they get over which tyres get the heat.
I think the difference would still be quite large. Braking puts energy into all the tyres unless you go really far forwards on the brake balance and then you risk locking and damaging the tyre.OO7 wrote: ↑21 Oct 2020, 02:50DAS allows for a great temperature differential to be generated between the front and rear, however altering the brake bias has the same effect to a lesser degree (I think).SiLo wrote: ↑19 Oct 2020, 12:14I'm sure it's been mentioned before, but I only just realised this myself.
DAS allows Mercedes to heat up the front tyres irrespective of the rears. Most other forms of heating but energy into all of them; breaking, weaving etc. Now they can heat the rears with burnouts, and the fronts with DAS to properly tune the car.
it's not just about getting MORE heat into the tyres or making it easier, its about that control they get over which tyres get the heat.
Can you still 'light up' the rears now, or is it all controlled? Not suggesting T/C of course, I mean no one would do that would they?OO7 wrote: ↑21 Oct 2020, 02:50DAS allows for a great temperature differential to be generated between the front and rear, however altering the brake bias has the same effect to a lesser degree (I think).SiLo wrote: ↑19 Oct 2020, 12:14I'm sure it's been mentioned before, but I only just realised this myself.
DAS allows Mercedes to heat up the front tyres irrespective of the rears. Most other forms of heating but energy into all of them; breaking, weaving etc. Now they can heat the rears with burnouts, and the fronts with DAS to properly tune the car.
it's not just about getting MORE heat into the tyres or making it easier, its about that control they get over which tyres get the heat.
I think the difference with donuts is that you'd be dropping the clutch so you put more strain (shock) into the drivetrain. Doing burnouts on high horse engines like these is just a matter of flooring the throttle to break traction. Because of that the torque applied to the drive train would be no more than what its max load would be at full acceleration (maybe even less).Big Tea wrote: ↑21 Oct 2020, 12:09Can you still 'light up' the rears now, or is it all controlled? Not suggesting T/C of course, I mean no one would do that would they?OO7 wrote: ↑21 Oct 2020, 02:50DAS allows for a great temperature differential to be generated between the front and rear, however altering the brake bias has the same effect to a lesser degree (I think).SiLo wrote: ↑19 Oct 2020, 12:14I'm sure it's been mentioned before, but I only just realised this myself.
DAS allows Mercedes to heat up the front tyres irrespective of the rears. Most other forms of heating but energy into all of them; breaking, weaving etc. Now they can heat the rears with burnouts, and the fronts with DAS to properly tune the car.
it's not just about getting MORE heat into the tyres or making it easier, its about that control they get over which tyres get the heat.
I just seem to recall someone saying they can not do donuts (to face the right way) these days. May have been Seb
I just love the look of the rear suspension.zibby43 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2020, 23:54Front brake assembly:
https://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... deta-1.jpg