This wasn’t aimed at you Andi76, I have no view on the quality of your information so apologies if it looked that way, quoting your post wasn’t aimed at you specifically, more a comment generally on team dynamics etc. As for keeping secrets, yes, I can believe that having gone through numerous product crises and due diligence where random people engage with you about something they should know nothing aboutAndi76 wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 00:58I'm not commenting on this now. I just want to tell you - I talk and write to people in Formula 1 personally almost every day...so I get a lot of my information first hand, like this. And so I can also tell you - don't overestimate what a team in Formula 1 can keep secret. The F1 world is small, incestuous and everyone knows everyone....But as already said - I am herewith out of this topic again, because in the end always the same comes out anyway if one addresses this topic.Tiny73 wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 00:24One more thing, if you think a team would have a crisis meeting such as that in front of the worlds media then you have no clue how a successful team operates. Whatever that meeting was it was not a crisis debrief played out in front of the cameras. (If you want an example of how this is poor management check out Phil Brown keeping Hull City on the pitch and berating them at half time when they were being beaten by Man City.). Management 101 is keep it in house and berate your team behind closed doors if that’s what’s required, not out front of the team hospitality. Whatever that was it was most certainly not a crisis meeting or b*llocking.Andi76 wrote: ↑25 Feb 2023, 23:06
Sorry, but crisis meetings are not why teams test and what is the order of the day in testing. The balance changes constantly and nobody knows why, the rear end breaks out uncontrollably, aero load is not consistent and changes extremely with vehicle height, to the point that the car becomes uncontrollable as soon as it gets below a certain ground clearance. At the front axle there is a sudden loss of downforce when cornering. The car should behave largely according to the simulations and calculations. But this is not the case at all with the W14. The problems are so far-reaching that a crisis meeting has been called to discuss how to proceed and what to do. And unplanned crisis meetings are not part of the test program and why one tests. Likewise, you don't test to clear up unexplained reactions of the car. I don't even want to talk about the other rumors, because on the one hand these are actually rumors so far for which I haven't received any direct confirmation, and on the other hand it is a very sensitive topic to which a few people here react sensitively. At least in the past. But in fact, many of these statements are reminiscent of what was said about cars that had a fundamental aerodynamic problem.
Well...Kyle says he doesn't believe in it. Definitely he has not proved anything. In any case, there are the following facts :
- Aerodynamicists from other teams say this side box concept is too complex to make it work.
- Mercedes has again problems to make the car work
- the car again behaves differently than in the simulations
- suddenly dropping uneven downforce, logically has an aerodynamic origin, as well as cars that showed this in the past usually had a fundamental aerodynamic problem
If you put one and one together and put this in relation to what the aerodynamicists of other teams have said about the complexity of this concept, then there is at least a lot to suggest that Vanja is not wrong here.
And quite honestly front wheel wake management is extremely important for the aerodynamics of a car. Without bargeboards, however, this is extremely difficult and the sidepods are a component of what Kyle also clearly stated. So now you can believe that the sidepods are not the reason at Mercedes. Certainly nobody says or knows that. But in any case it would explain the problems Mercedes has been struggling with since they introduced this concept. And in my eyes it would be a great coincidence that everything fits together so well.