Some posts specifically related to Pirelli's tyres were split into a seperate topic
Influence of Pirelli tyre pressure on 2017 contenders
The W08 was also hindered in Monaco because of its long wheelbaseME4ME wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:26It certainly isnt. Monaco is all about grip. Chassis (mechanically, not meaning aero here) and tyre interaction is a large part of that. Downforce is definitely important, but given the snow cornering speeds Monaco is by no means a 'best example' of aerodynamic performance. Silverstone, Spa, Barcelona and Suzuka (specifically some sectors) are much better indicators.
I don't think the W08 was hindered in Monaco because of it's long wheelbase. If anything, their tyre management philosophy was probably rocked because of changing the suspension system due to FIA clarification. They most likely had built the complete aero philosophy based on the NOW BARRED suspension layout. As the whole car and the low rake philosophy is new, they are probably struggling to get together their overall architecture to work as they expected it on their older suspension system. Result? Struggle on tyres where rear and front are not in harmony with respect to temperatures.Holm86 wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:31The W08 was also hindered in Monaco because of its long wheelbaseME4ME wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:26It certainly isnt. Monaco is all about grip. Chassis (mechanically, not meaning aero here) and tyre interaction is a large part of that. Downforce is definitely important, but given the snow cornering speeds Monaco is by no means a 'best example' of aerodynamic performance. Silverstone, Spa, Barcelona and Suzuka (specifically some sectors) are much better indicators.
I tried with google translator with some minimum corrections and adjustments by myself. Hope it's understandable. Tbh, I think it is one of the most intelligent and instructive things I've been reading for a long time on this Formula One season. Link is reported above.AtOmIc wrote: ↑05 Jun 2017, 10:36can someone translate ?zioture wrote: ↑05 Jun 2017, 09:39Interesting Scalabroni interview about pirelli and Mercedes W08
http://www.newsf1.it/newsf1-speciale-in ... roni13193/
Mercedes have been using the low rake philosophy for a few years now.GPR-A wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 16:50I don't think the W08 was hindered in Monaco because of it's long wheelbase. If anything, their tyre management philosophy was probably rocked because of changing the suspension system due to FIA clarification. They most likely had built the complete aero philosophy based on the NOW BARRED suspension layout. As the whole car and the low rake philosophy is new, they are probably struggling to get together their overall architecture to work as they expected it on their older suspension system. Result? Struggle on tyres where rear and front are not in harmony with respect to temperatures.
I think W02 had the biggest rake and very short wheelbase, which turned out to be a mediocre car, not being able to challenge the top 3 (Red Bull, McLaren & Ferrari). It was best of the rest and it excelled in high speed tracks (China, Turkey, Monza & Spa).wuzak wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 04:32Mercedes have been using the low rake philosophy for a few years now.GPR-A wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 16:50I don't think the W08 was hindered in Monaco because of it's long wheelbase. If anything, their tyre management philosophy was probably rocked because of changing the suspension system due to FIA clarification. They most likely had built the complete aero philosophy based on the NOW BARRED suspension layout. As the whole car and the low rake philosophy is new, they are probably struggling to get together their overall architecture to work as they expected it on their older suspension system. Result? Struggle on tyres where rear and front are not in harmony with respect to temperatures.
Actually, did they ever evolve a high rake setup?
I don't think so. In fact Mercedes never really had a high rake philosophy. It was modest compared to Red Bull philosophy. Here is the evolution of Mercedes rake, upto W05.F1Krof wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 12:32I think W02 had the biggest rake and very short wheelbase, which turned out to be a mediocre car, not being able to challenge the top 3 (Red Bull, McLaren & Ferrari). It was best of the rest and it excelled in high speed tracks (China, Turkey, Monza & Spa).wuzak wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 04:32Mercedes have been using the low rake philosophy for a few years now.GPR-A wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 16:50I don't think the W08 was hindered in Monaco because of it's long wheelbase. If anything, their tyre management philosophy was probably rocked because of changing the suspension system due to FIA clarification. They most likely had built the complete aero philosophy based on the NOW BARRED suspension layout. As the whole car and the low rake philosophy is new, they are probably struggling to get together their overall architecture to work as they expected it on their older suspension system. Result? Struggle on tyres where rear and front are not in harmony with respect to temperatures.
Actually, did they ever evolve a high rake setup?
GPR-A wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 16:07Hmm true. I guess it was just an assumption from memory. I always thought the W02 was akin to these high rake designs. It turns out, they never seem to adopt this philosophy. Do you think they will abandon the long wheel-base concept? What happened to the last generation (14-16), their wheel base was as far as I remember pretty much in the middle relative to other teams? Why did they change it?
I think that is speculative and sensationalist by the journalist.Holm86 wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:31The W08 was also hindered in Monaco because of its long wheelbaseME4ME wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:26It certainly isnt. Monaco is all about grip. Chassis (mechanically, not meaning aero here) and tyre interaction is a large part of that. Downforce is definitely important, but given the snow cornering speeds Monaco is by no means a 'best example' of aerodynamic performance. Silverstone, Spa, Barcelona and Suzuka (specifically some sectors) are much better indicators.
Sorry to interrupt here. Actually Mercedes unveiled their longer wheelbase at Spanish GP in 2010. And more interestingly they decided to use the shorter wheelbase for Monaco which was the race after that. Here's the linkPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 22:33I think that is speculative and sensationalist by the journalist.Holm86 wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:31The W08 was also hindered in Monaco because of its long wheelbaseME4ME wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:26
It certainly isnt. Monaco is all about grip. Chassis (mechanically, not meaning aero here) and tyre interaction is a large part of that. Downforce is definitely important, but given the snow cornering speeds Monaco is by no means a 'best example' of aerodynamic performance. Silverstone, Spa, Barcelona and Suzuka (specifically some sectors) are much better indicators.
In relation to the size of the track 50 to 90 mm difference is not much at all. Mercedes had the shortest wheelbase in 2010 and they had to increase it at Monaco of all places. So think about that. It is not as simple as the journalist like to put it.
There is a link here in the thread from AMuS which says that Mercedes had tried the high rake philosophy before designing W08, but they lost a lot of performance. That's why they went with the long wheelbase as a result.F1Krof wrote:
Hmm true. I guess it was just an assumption from memory. I always thought the W02 was akin to these high rake designs. It turns out, they never seem to adopt this philosophy. Do you think they will abandon the long wheel-base concept? What happened to the last generation (14-16), their wheel base was as far as I remember pretty much in the middle relative to other teams? Why did they change it?
Its closer 17cm.. not 9. To the SF70H, not to say anything about the RB13PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Jun 2017, 22:33I think that is speculative and sensationalist by the journalist.Holm86 wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:31The W08 was also hindered in Monaco because of its long wheelbaseME4ME wrote: ↑06 Jun 2017, 11:26
It certainly isnt. Monaco is all about grip. Chassis (mechanically, not meaning aero here) and tyre interaction is a large part of that. Downforce is definitely important, but given the snow cornering speeds Monaco is by no means a 'best example' of aerodynamic performance. Silverstone, Spa, Barcelona and Suzuka (specifically some sectors) are much better indicators.
In relation to the size of the track 50 to 90 mm difference is not much at all. Mercedes had the shortest wheelbase in 2010 and they had to increase it at Monaco of all places. So think about that. It is not as simple as the journalist like to put it.