JesperA wrote:SectorOne wrote:Diesel wrote:No he's saying Lewis was possibly pushing too hard. It's possible they could have picked up fatigue on the component during one of the stops, but Lewis may have been pushing so hard that lap that it failed suddenly without warning.
Do people just type randomly on their keyboard these days or does this above actually make any sense?
I don't know, is the guy suggesting that in the races they will just cruise around and never push hard to avoid structural failures
No, what he's trying to say is that a car is not real-world tested at the factory, but at the first tests. I highly doubt that they built the car and put it on a shaker table to see if something falls off. That is what the tests are for: to prove if the calculations, assumptions and experience have been implemented correctly. Based on this, Lewis probably should not have been pushing that hard.
If this was a manufacturing problem then they'll inspect the second wing and have it on the car tomorrow, no problem. If it is a design problem, however, then they have to find the root cause and develop a new solution - which takes much longer. I hope that they have a Plan B somewhere, although these usually don't exist for such "elementary" components - they get designed and are expected to function. "Lean" is the term used to save resources for the important stuff, but if the simple things fail then it's a simplification error, such as a frequency stacking causing a resonance fall.
“Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony!” Monty Python and the Holy Grail