Come on - let's be talking about the AMG Merc team - not Hamilton, or even Max in this thread...
Thanks
Weren't several of the floors old ones with make shift modifications, such as cut outs, though?
Quite a bit. Design, send to the shop to make patterns for all the pieces, pull molds off them, then manufacture the parts, including jigs for bonding, trimming, etc; sounds easy for a garage fiberglass operation, but it's not a speedy or cheap process for carbon. I'm an ex-aircraft composites tooling guy who was involved in tooling for composite parts, including the B-2 bomber and the C-17; I was offered a job with Swift Engineering back in the day, as their major problem was producing under-bodies for their CART cars and they needed hands on deck. Turned it down because of living in California. The process is neither 'swift' nor simple.adrianjordan wrote: β30 Jun 2022, 17:57Weren't several of the floors old ones with make shift modifications, such as cut outs, though?
How much does a new floor cost just to manufacture?
I don't recall that at all. That was Toto Wolff saying that and he has his wish, with strong Ferrari and Red Bull competition for the Mercedes GP team to race against. The chased team has become the chaser, now taking on the Ferrari/Red Bull role of maximum attack and chasing the odd victory with caution to the wind!
https://sport360.com/article/formula-on ... es-in-2019We very much welcome the challenge, we enjoy the fight, itβs why we are here. ... They (Ferrari) are a formidable competitor and definitely with new goals for next season there might be another team (Red Bull) joining the party.
http://www.silverarrows.net/news/wolff- ... ampionship.On the other side, dominance from a single team, whether it is us, whether it is Red Bull in the 2010 years, or whether it was Ferrari in the early 2000s is something that is always a bit odd for the championship. But it is not up to the team that has made steps to be seen as responsible for the predictability of the championship. ... I would wish for nothing more than a strong competition.
yes you want competitive seasons and yes red bull have won 6 on the trot but look at the circumstances. Only Imola could it be said that the Red Bull was really superior and if it wasn't for Ferrari being Ferrari then maybe the championship would be a lot closer.Quantum wrote: β30 Jun 2022, 17:03
Wouldn't you be calm if the car you were driving had won 6 races straight, and it was your team mate 2nd place in the table, and you're 2 race victories ahead of your next non RB challenger with less than half the season gone?
Thought Red Bull fans wanted competitive seasons....
But everyone would get them back. It's not like Merc would be the only team with it.carisi2k wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 08:33yes you want competitive seasons and yes red bull have won 6 on the trot but look at the circumstances. Only Imola could it be said that the Red Bull was really superior and if it wasn't for Ferrari being Ferrari then maybe the championship would be a lot closer.Quantum wrote: β30 Jun 2022, 17:03
Wouldn't you be calm if the car you were driving had won 6 races straight, and it was your team mate 2nd place in the table, and you're 2 race victories ahead of your next non RB challenger with less than half the season gone?
Thought Red Bull fans wanted competitive seasons....
What we don't want is to see an unnecessary rule change just to bring Mercedes back in to the fight. Allowing Mercedes to have a nice hydraulic suspension system just because they have no idea how to build a normal suspension system is not right especially when Wolff was very upfront about this when Mercedes had significant advantages between 2014-2020 with things like the DAS allowed them to have there significant performance advantages over the rest of the field.
JordanMugen wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 04:23That was Toto Wolff saying that and he has his wish, with strong Ferrari and Red Bull competition for the Mercedes GP team to race against.
No and no.adrianjordan wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 08:40And F1 is supposed to be about pushing the boundaries. Hardly does that when my SUV has more advanced suspension than an F1 car!!
Also no.
I agree. With Hindsight everyone can look like a genius or an idiot, and Mercedes got it wrong. Not dropping the ball kinda wrong, just missed the hoop.basti313 wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 09:17
Also no.
The issue is not that Merc can not build a normal suspension. We have seen last year that they are very capable with this. The issue is the rake concept. RedBull suffers the least as they use the most rake. Merc suffers the most as they use the least rake, it even looks like their floor edge has sometimes a negative rake...
So Mercedes should get the easy way out of it's problem should it. This ruling is really taking the cars back to what they were suspension wise in the mid 90's post the banning of active suspension. These are supposed to be racing cars and not a luxury SUV and I want to see them moving around a bit like they used to in those days. Sort the men from the children.adrianjordan wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 08:40
But everyone would get them back. It's not like Merc would be the only team with it.
And F1 is supposed to be about pushing the boundaries. Hardly does that when my SUV has more advanced suspension than an F1 car!!
I bet if you asked Newey whether he would prefer basic or hydraulic suspension, he'd snap your hand off.
Also Yes this is the issue and no they didn't have a normal suspension last year but a hydraulic unit.basti313 wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 09:17
Also no.
The issue is not that Merc can not build a normal suspension. We have seen last year that they are very capable with this. The issue is the rake concept. RedBull suffers the least as they use the most rake. Merc suffers the most as they use the least rake, it even looks like their floor edge has sometimes a negative rake...
Well, the point of "wrong" is the essence. As you say it is not 100% wrong, Merc is clearly leading Formula 1.3 with some glimpses towards F1. Completely different field to the F1.5 with sometimes Alpine or Alfa leading.Quantum wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 09:40I agree. With Hindsight everyone can look like a genius or an idiot, and Mercedes got it wrong. Not dropping the ball kinda wrong, just missed the hoop.basti313 wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 09:17
Also no.
The issue is not that Merc can not build a normal suspension. We have seen last year that they are very capable with this. The issue is the rake concept. RedBull suffers the least as they use the most rake. Merc suffers the most as they use the least rake, it even looks like their floor edge has sometimes a negative rake...
I think this might be the Achilles heel of the budget and resource caps though. In previous year the top teams could turn it around.
This season though, if you have a set back like Mercedes, seems like you're baked in for the rest of the season unfortunately. Changing floor and suspension concepts in season was a tough task without restrictions, now I'd say it's a practical impossibility.
I also don't think it's actually made a difference to helping less well funded teams close the gap at all either, but maybe it will take time.
This is borderline wrong. The third element was a hydraulic spring, but this does not play any role, it is hydraulic to be easy tuneable. There is nothing hydraulically interconnected. The actuation of the rear collapsing was a mechanical drive that simply goes over center. The best explanation was the tailgate opening of a car. It does not play a substantial role if the springs have hydraulic fluid inside or not...the point is where they are mounted....it is a mechanical system.
The amount of rake is significant in the point of bottoming less.
Well, it was the same with "Party" modes and DAS. And for the umpteenth time, it is not just Merc. Drivers up and down the grid have been complaining, teh onboard camera shots are often just a blurry mess and the cars aren't just "moving around" they look absolutely ridiculous.carisi2k wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 10:23So Mercedes should get the easy way out of it's problem should it. This ruling is really taking the cars back to what they were suspension wise in the mid 90's post the banning of active suspension. These are supposed to be racing cars and not a luxury SUV and I want to see them moving around a bit like they used to in those days. Sort the men from the children.adrianjordan wrote: β01 Jul 2022, 08:40
But everyone would get them back. It's not like Merc would be the only team with it.
And F1 is supposed to be about pushing the boundaries. Hardly does that when my SUV has more advanced suspension than an F1 car!!
I bet if you asked Newey whether he would prefer basic or hydraulic suspension, he'd snap your hand off.
The red bull isn't running any rake. There are photo's on the RB thread showing the car is not running any rake. The RB18 is bottoming less because it is running a higher ride height, better suspension and a better underfloor design.