Some shots I took today...
I'm not even talking about the pecking order. I was arguing from a perspective of looking the differences in design philosophy. Given that the difuser is now much bigger thus more important than ever, in my mind I was excpecting to see more radical rake on their car. What we got is a typical Merc we used to see during the last three years. Even more typical is the fact that their frony wing is the same as last year's!DiogoBrand wrote:Apart from Ferrari's new sidepod intakes, Mercedes still has one of the most complex and innovative cars on the grid, and even so, since when does complexity equal performance? They never needed extreme rake like Red Bull and still managed to beat them quite easily. They still hold the track record as far as I remember, with some even saying they haven't even used their conservative race engine modes yet.
But now, because their front wing is similar to last season's, because they don't copy Red Bull's rake and because their car isn't complex enough (where?!) the car isn't the best on the grid anymore? Please give me a break. Come back when you have something solid to argue with.
Edit: Oh, and for the last three seasons, they always loved to play down their advantage and praise their rivals' progress. Does that mean anyone catched up during that time?
And that same typical Merc dominated every single one of more or less "developed" cars on grid last 3 years.F1Krof wrote:I'm not even talking about the pecking order. I was arguing from a perspective of looking the differences in design philosophy. Given that the difuser is now much bigger thus more important than ever, in my mind I was excpecting to see more radical rake on their car. What we got is a typical Merc we used to see during the last three years. Even more typical is the fact that their frony wing is the same as last year's!DiogoBrand wrote:Apart from Ferrari's new sidepod intakes, Mercedes still has one of the most complex and innovative cars on the grid, and even so, since when does complexity equal performance? They never needed extreme rake like Red Bull and still managed to beat them quite easily. They still hold the track record as far as I remember, with some even saying they haven't even used their conservative race engine modes yet.
But now, because their front wing is similar to last season's, because they don't copy Red Bull's rake and because their car isn't complex enough (where?!) the car isn't the best on the grid anymore? Please give me a break. Come back when you have something solid to argue with.
Edit: Oh, and for the last three seasons, they always loved to play down their advantage and praise their rivals' progress. Does that mean anyone catched up during that time?
So my argument about the inherent understeer everybody's talking about was that their Front Wing is lacking in complexity/development, thus the understeer LH mentioned.
And yes, typically more complexity means more developed, this is a clear pattern. However I'm not saying more complex/ developed = more performance. I'm just arguing based on this pattern.
Source?PlatinumZealot wrote: Mercedes have all those test grids behind the front wheels because they have a huge front wing upgrade in the pipeline.
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
no, it's where the opening is located for the airduct in the nose.AnthonyG wrote:I think Mercedes uses a step just like a seaplane to detach the air from the nose. (?)
https://s21.postimg.org/jz6yhudx3/mercedes_keel.jpg
http://avstop.com/ac/sea_plane/images/fig%202-2.jpg
The step allows a seaplane to break contact with the water.
It's just the right nose pillar and the wing's flat main plane isnt't it? From the perspective this should be right. You can also see the cascades there.Manoah2u wrote:no, it's where the opening is located for the airduct in the nose.AnthonyG wrote:I think Mercedes uses a step just like a seaplane to detach the air from the nose. (?)
https://s21.postimg.org/jz6yhudx3/mercedes_keel.jpg
http://avstop.com/ac/sea_plane/images/fig%202-2.jpg
The step allows a seaplane to break contact with the water.