In my opinion, he would probably experience immense change in traction, more than downforce, along with other usual things related to cornering stability.
In my opinion, he would probably experience immense change in traction, more than downforce, along with other usual things related to cornering stability.
Interesting, although how can the car be 35kmh slower in turn 2, but 5kmh faster in turn 10 which seems very odd to me.zibby43 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2020, 10:07Merc simulations re: cornering speed differences between Bahrain and Sakhir (via @SmilexTech).
Cars will go from medium to low downforce specifications.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EoYISGsWMAA ... me=900x900
How much of traction is unrelated to downforce levels? I thought downforce was a significant contributor to traction. Given that Russell is going from the lowest downforce car to the highest might he not experience similar traction and be cornering at similar speeds to last weekend on at least corners 1, 2 and 3.
I was more specifically pointing out for exiting out of slower corners (not many here and I agree he would feel the downforce difference quite heavily) where more than downforce, the mechanical grip that allows going on throttle earlier than most other cars on the grid. One hardly hears wheel spins in W11 when the drivers nail the throttle, whereas I have observed even RB16 isn't that great on traction (relative to W11). So, George moving from worst on the grid to best, he would be surprised on most aspect, but my personal feeling was more that, he would shocked to see the traction.henry wrote: ↑04 Dec 2020, 12:06How much of traction is unrelated to downforce levels? I thought downforce was a significant contributor to traction. Given that Russell is going from the lowest downforce car to the highest might he not experience similar traction and be cornering at similar speeds to last weekend on at least corners 1, 2 and 3.
That has always been the case. You could see it when he was testing for Mercedes in the previous years
and who has a nice tow from the car ahead nobody will want to cross the line first come Q3Mattyw wrote: ↑04 Dec 2020, 15:49This isnt going to be straight forward at all for merc
Doing 56's already - most the field will be within a second I bet come quali
I assume they can adapt the energy usage to burn it all up in the 56 secs instead of spreading it out - might come down to who has best energy deployment?
Considering you're limiting it to the EXACT car, rather than just the team, that is hyper specific.Restomaniac wrote: ↑04 Dec 2020, 09:28Interesting. So that’s as close as we get to this (Just the WCC title in that car).Fulcrum wrote: ↑04 Dec 2020, 09:20Probably Ricardo Patrese in 1987, replacing Mansell for the final round of the season. Williams had already won the WCC, Piquet the WDC.Restomaniac wrote: ↑03 Dec 2020, 10:26The W11 that Russell is driving has already secured the WCC & WDC. When was the last time a driver drove a car that had mathematically already secured them.
Mansell helped to secure the WCC title in 1994, but both titles were still on the line when he drove as a replacement for Coulthard, and Hill didn't win the WDC.
I’m not being a pedant I’m just trying to highlight how utterly unusual this kind of situation is.