WaikeCU wrote:IMO Merc had the fastest car last season, but I don't think it's because it has a chassis that is on par with Red Bull. I think last season Red Bull and Honda had a better chassis than Merc, but Merc IMO had the upper hand thanks to a more and better developed aero package, a stronger PU and this trick suspension which is banned right now. I wonder what the effects are without this trick suspension. Will we revert back to early 2013 where the Merc were quick over 1 lap, but eating away its tires on race trim? It's exciting none the least these rumours. If it bunches up the pack even better, but I still want the Merc the car to beat next season.
First statement highlighted, is quite contradictory in my opinion. I am not sure if you think the definition of "Chassis" is without "Aero" in it.
Someone need to clearly put out what is the definition of a "Chassis" means to have a specific conversation around it. But, I don't think it is possible and I also don't think we have good enough tools to specifically measure the chassis performance.
A Super Perfect "Chassis"
could be defined as:
1. A Car that has a low coefficient of drag vs downforce. Which means, the car is less troubled on the straight and still faster on corners.
2. A car that has a great balance in corner entry and exit, ensuring a faster time through a corner. You cannot have a car that
is ultimate fast on fast corner, also being supremely fast on slow corners. The setups for slow corner is quite different to a setup for a fast corner. Most of the time, it is a balance between the two. So, cars could be setup differently, targeting different performance parameters.
3. A Car that is extremely kind on tires. There are various compounds of tires available and each has a different "optimum performance" window. Each compound behaves differently on different tracks.
4. A Car that switches on the tires. Like mentioned above, different compounds gets switched on at different temperatures and a great chassis, also keeps the optimum performance windows, longer.
I have seen some footage/image, where RB and Merc were compared from corner entry to corner exit, to prove there is almost nothing between the two. But that's a very primitive comparison, which doesn't really talk about all parameters of the Chassis. For the first part of 2016, RB12 struggled to get the tires working right for them, while the W07 was simply in it's own territory. For the full season, it was W07 that was ahead of everyone else in tire life (look at the first stint of Austria for example) and not just that, that car used to switch on every type of compound, faster than anyone else, in all climatic conditions (cold, hot, wet). There were many races where qualifying was on ultrasoft, a compound that never lasted a full fast lap, but W07 stood a class apart.
So, you see, to say chassis A was better than B, without really listing the detailed behavior of each parameter of the car, is just a futile exercise.
Regarding Merc reverting back to 2013 type of tire eating situation, we need to realize the team that created W01-W04, was different than the team that has been designing W05 lineage. The concepts and the approaches have changed. For Example, when the FRIC was banned in 2015, everyone thought that was the Secret sauce for their dominance and it's removal, hardly mattered to the overall performance. Then they came up with the new technique of last year and now that is being outlawed. As Paddy had said, engineers will never unlearn what they have learnt and they will find out different ways of getting that advantage back.
Mercedes has people like Paddy Lowe, who was the architect of the Active Suspension in early 90s, Aldo Costa whose primary specialization is suspension and to remind people here, the Interconnected Suspension came from Renault to Mercedes, when Bob Bell came and he brought along Mike Elliott from Renault. The concept went through a lot of iterations and with Paddy and Aldo joining in, it became a strong characteristic of W05 and the subsequent cars. Hence, I don't think the W08 suffers the danger of falling back into 2013 type of tire destruction as the team and their car creation philosophies have gone through a drastic evolution.