Depends on whether the hole in question helps with rear wheel/tyre temps. It probably does help with rear rim cooling and so might affect rear tyre life/performance.
Im pretty sure Mercedes would've anticipated this when the part was in development and they have an alternative ready to bolt on, these big teams have so much resource nowadays which is why many want the budget caps brought in to stop this.El Scorchio wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 13:14From what I saw (correct me if I'm wrong) Red Bull queried this, which led to the TD being issued. So perhaps they picked strategically the best time to lodge their query to cause the most inconvenience. Excellent gamesmanship if so!RZS10 wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 13:10Isn't this a similar solution to what they had last season where the FIA said the solution was legal?
Wonder when exactly they published that TD but as it looks they left Merc in the belief that the solution was fine only to ban it just in time for the first race ....
i like your numbers And yes, perhaps there's a pink alternative version around somewhere they can bolt on insteadMattchu wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 15:01The rule states no ducts >160mm from the wheel centreline then I would think the small opening on the cake tin of the RP and Merc should be alright. The top of the duct on the arm, looks like it just goes over.
Rear disc brakes @278mm so lets add on 10mm for the tin [288], half of that is only 144mm so still 16mm to play with. Looks like the brake tin duct is probably right at the limit and the suspension arm duct goes maybe 5-10mm over, not sure how Mercedes thought they could get away with this [if it`s over 160mm] but then again they probably have something else in the pipeline to cover it if needed!
https://www.planetf1.com/f1-races/austr ... cedes-das/“For us, the system does not comply with the rules,” Marko told F1-insider.com.
“So we will protest when Mercedes uses the system in Melbourne.”
This protest would come in the same week that Red Bull also raised a legality issue relating to Mercedes rear brake ducts. That has resulted in the FIA issuing a Technical Directive and forced Mercedes into making some last-minute changes to their W11.
You mean the Silver B spec. They just have to sand off a layer of paint.izzy wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 15:22i like your numbers And yes, perhaps there's a pink alternative version around somewhere they can bolt on insteadMattchu wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 15:01The rule states no ducts >160mm from the wheel centreline then I would think the small opening on the cake tin of the RP and Merc should be alright. The top of the duct on the arm, looks like it just goes over.
Rear disc brakes @278mm so lets add on 10mm for the tin [288], half of that is only 144mm so still 16mm to play with. Looks like the brake tin duct is probably right at the limit and the suspension arm duct goes maybe 5-10mm over, not sure how Mercedes thought they could get away with this [if it`s over 160mm] but then again they probably have something else in the pipeline to cover it if needed!
RedBull obviously reckon they are close enough to Mercedes, that the things they are querying might make the difference between RBR or Merc winning.gandharva wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 17:17And the next one.
Red Bull set to protest if Mercedes use DAS
https://www.planetf1.com/f1-races/austr ... cedes-das/“For us, the system does not comply with the rules,” Marko told F1-insider.com.
“So we will protest when Mercedes uses the system in Melbourne.”
This protest would come in the same week that Red Bull also raised a legality issue relating to Mercedes rear brake ducts. That has resulted in the FIA issuing a Technical Directive and forced Mercedes into making some last-minute changes to their W11.
yes it's at times like this you need your mates . And yes they'll be compliant won't they, and at least it's at the back of the car so the aero cost shouldn't be too big hopefully
Honestly I hope Merc crushes them just so we can see Marko have to eat his words.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 17:47RedBull obviously reckon they are close enough to Mercedes, that the things they are querying might make the difference between RBR or Merc winning.gandharva wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 17:17And the next one.
Red Bull set to protest if Mercedes use DAS
https://www.planetf1.com/f1-races/austr ... cedes-das/“For us, the system does not comply with the rules,” Marko told F1-insider.com.
“So we will protest when Mercedes uses the system in Melbourne.”
This protest would come in the same week that Red Bull also raised a legality issue relating to Mercedes rear brake ducts. That has resulted in the FIA issuing a Technical Directive and forced Mercedes into making some last-minute changes to their W11.
I like to call it the dance floor.izzy wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 12:21Nice. It's a flying floor reallyzibby43 wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 08:55Another nice top-down shot of the Merc, highlighting the packaging efforts, floor area, and slim nose:
https://www.formula1.com/content/dam/fo ... /image.jpg
via F1
I'm not surprised F1 wanted to shorten them for next year, they could make them a bit narrower again too, they'd look a bit more rational. But this is just packed with cleverness isn't it, from the DAS to the aero rear suspension and imo a bit of rear steering, via the hot coolant and mini radiators and everything else
Yes, the other alternative is, RB is desperately protesting/querying so the gap isn't 1s in AUS like it was last year.dans79 wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 19:17Honestly I hope Merc crushes them just so we can see Marko have to eat his words.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 17:47RedBull obviously reckon they are close enough to Mercedes, that the things they are querying might make the difference between RBR or Merc winning.gandharva wrote: ↑10 Mar 2020, 17:17And the next one.
Red Bull set to protest if Mercedes use DAS
https://www.planetf1.com/f1-races/austr ... cedes-das/
I don't think the TD will be anything more than a minor annoyance. It will be just like when the TD came down that banned FRIC. People where saying that would make Merc ordinary and beatable, and in reality it made zero difference in the grand scheme of things.