It's Spa more than the TD.Hammerfist wrote: ↑31 Aug 2022, 18:36It seems the TD has helped Redbull and hurt Ferrari and Merc. That’s what I thought would happen when it was announced but rbr surprisingly was complaining, which was bizarre. They’ve had the less porpoising out of all the teams from the start of the season and were still among the fastest. Now other teams have to comply and rbr does not have to compromise at all. Merc is on the same level as Ferrari now in race trim. It’s fairly obvious who has been affected and who has not. I don’t really care who was pushing for the rule changes. Just the resulting fallout is plain to see and I don’t expect Ferrari or any team to come close to rbr pace ever again this season. The end.
Question is, can they hire more? Mercedes were running with $500 million until 2021. They were the highest spenders until the budget caps came in. So they had to reduce staff and I am sure they haven't done a mass lay off, which means they have been restructuring their F1 workforce around differently and in some cases, probably letting go and then there was attrition. I haven't read any report on if they have managed to downsize the staffing completely to meet the new budget cap of $145 million. In such a scenario, hiring top talent might not be an option at this point, unless they let go more of the existing staff.CHT wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 07:01Supposed it is true that Mercedes no longer have the clear advantage in their PU the team may have fallen behind in aero development, and I think this is where RBR will shine because they have the brilliant Adrian Newey. For 2023, Merc may need to bring in new aero engineers if they are going to catch Ferrari and RBR.
The porpoising was happening if Mercedes raised the rear, with slightly less frequency. That was direct from Ham and Russell.
You are deviating away from answering a simple question. Why was Mercedes driving regulations change when every team could and they did, control porpoising without regulatory change. It was only Mercedes that was asking for regulations change. Why?Quantum wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 09:55The porpoising was happening if Mercedes raised the rear, with slightly less frequency. That was direct from Ham and Russell.
I find it bewildering that you still think this problem was specific to Mercedes, when I have given you examples of practically every teams drivers having issues, including visits to the medical centre.
And yes Mercedes were vocal.
And I find it confusing, first you accuse Mercedes of lobbying to solve the issue. Then you accuse them of risking driver safety. These are 2 polarised positions.
Because what you are saying is that Mercedes wilfully risked their drivers health in the first part of the season, despite the fact we know that raising the rear of their car was not solving the problem to eliminate porpoising.
That's a pretty big accusation to make.
Zero pods and a large surface area of exposed floor will not work exactly the same, which is why Mercedes was experimenting with 2 stays in practice. It's really not as simple as raising the rear when that will leave an even larger AoA that is then translated into more floor shimmy taken away whatever you gained from raising the rear.
At the opposite end of the spectrum we had drivers told to shut up by team bosses after this got the attention of the FIA. What's worse?
They lobbied for mandatory changes on the floor that would solve porpoising, at the cost of downforce (Large cutouts at the floor edge as they tested in FP1 in Canada, according to Michael Schmidt https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... i-porsche/). This would have hurt the downforce of all teams, also the ones without porpoising, and thus relatively have helped Mercedes. So it would have been a win-win, solve porpoising (and thus protect the drivers), while also likely to improve their competitiveness.mendis wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 10:27You are deviating away from answering a simple question. Why was Mercedes driving regulations change when every team could and they did, control porpoising without regulatory change. It was only Mercedes that was asking for regulations change. Why?Quantum wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 09:55The porpoising was happening if Mercedes raised the rear, with slightly less frequency. That was direct from Ham and Russell.
I find it bewildering that you still think this problem was specific to Mercedes, when I have given you examples of practically every teams drivers having issues, including visits to the medical centre.
And yes Mercedes were vocal.
And I find it confusing, first you accuse Mercedes of lobbying to solve the issue. Then you accuse them of risking driver safety. These are 2 polarised positions.
Because what you are saying is that Mercedes wilfully risked their drivers health in the first part of the season, despite the fact we know that raising the rear of their car was not solving the problem to eliminate porpoising.
That's a pretty big accusation to make.
Zero pods and a large surface area of exposed floor will not work exactly the same, which is why Mercedes was experimenting with 2 stays in practice. It's really not as simple as raising the rear when that will leave an even larger AoA that is then translated into more floor shimmy taken away whatever you gained from raising the rear.
At the opposite end of the spectrum we had drivers told to shut up by team bosses after this got the attention of the FIA. What's worse?
But the big question is if the TD is really that useless for them. Spa was the worst track to judge this in hindsight as the ride height for all cars needed to be raised. That affected Merc the most of the front runners.TimW wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 11:16They lobbied for mandatory changes on the floor that would solve porpoising, at the cost of downforce (Large cutouts at the floor edge as they tested in FP1 in Canada, according to Michael Schmidt https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... i-porsche/). This would have hurt the downforce of all teams, also the ones without porpoising, and thus relatively have helped Mercedes. So it would have been a win-win, solve porpoising (and thus protect the drivers), while also likely to improve their competitiveness.mendis wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 10:27You are deviating away from answering a simple question. Why was Mercedes driving regulations change when every team could and they did, control porpoising without regulatory change. It was only Mercedes that was asking for regulations change. Why?Quantum wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 09:55
The porpoising was happening if Mercedes raised the rear, with slightly less frequency. That was direct from Ham and Russell.
I find it bewildering that you still think this problem was specific to Mercedes, when I have given you examples of practically every teams drivers having issues, including visits to the medical centre.
And yes Mercedes were vocal.
And I find it confusing, first you accuse Mercedes of lobbying to solve the issue. Then you accuse them of risking driver safety. These are 2 polarised positions.
Because what you are saying is that Mercedes wilfully risked their drivers health in the first part of the season, despite the fact we know that raising the rear of their car was not solving the problem to eliminate porpoising.
That's a pretty big accusation to make.
Zero pods and a large surface area of exposed floor will not work exactly the same, which is why Mercedes was experimenting with 2 stays in practice. It's really not as simple as raising the rear when that will leave an even larger AoA that is then translated into more floor shimmy taken away whatever you gained from raising the rear.
At the opposite end of the spectrum we had drivers told to shut up by team bosses after this got the attention of the FIA. What's worse?
Instead the FIA technical directive simply put a limit to porpoising based on accelerations, which was definitely not to what they wanted. That the TD it also included a clampdown on floor flexing was a bit of a sweetener (but proved worthless).
So Mercedes simply lobbied for something that would help them, like all teams do. But the current TD is definitely not what they had in mind.
Zandvoort is far from "flat". On top of the banking which will throw up some suspension curveballs, the track surface is quite bumpy eg through turn 3 and especially on the exitbasti313 wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 11:56But the big question is if the TD is really that useless for them. Spa was the worst track to judge this in hindsight as the ride height for all cars needed to be raised. That affected Merc the most of the front runners.TimW wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 11:16They lobbied for mandatory changes on the floor that would solve porpoising, at the cost of downforce (Large cutouts at the floor edge as they tested in FP1 in Canada, according to Michael Schmidt https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... i-porsche/). This would have hurt the downforce of all teams, also the ones without porpoising, and thus relatively have helped Mercedes. So it would have been a win-win, solve porpoising (and thus protect the drivers), while also likely to improve their competitiveness.
Instead the FIA technical directive simply put a limit to porpoising based on accelerations, which was definitely not to what they wanted. That the TD it also included a clampdown on floor flexing was a bit of a sweetener (but proved worthless).
So Mercedes simply lobbied for something that would help them, like all teams do. But the current TD is definitely not what they had in mind.
So I am very curious on this weekend. The track should be nice and flat, so we may see a complete shift of the performance now.
“We have cars which are a lot more mechanical, and at tracks like Baku and others they’re a bit harder than we’d like it to be, and I guess Zandvoort is going to be one of those tracks as well. We have banked corners where cars are getting quite low, and we saw this year that once we get low, things turn out to be very bumpy.”
According to the engineers, there is only one of the next three locations where Mercedes can come up trumps again. Ironically, in the Ferrari stronghold of Monza. "Zandvoort and Singapore are bumpy tracks. That could mean that everyone has to go up with the ground clearance." If that were the case, directive 039 would still catch up with Mercedes.
The bottom line here is you are intentionally ignoring the fact that most the grid had a problem with this.
Some teams could have contorlled the porpoising, but they chose not to and hence, endangered the drivers. Once FIA threatened with a non-favorable TD, those teams behaved well and porpoising was gone. Team's fault.Quantum wrote: ↑01 Sep 2022, 13:43The bottom line here is you are intentionally ignoring the fact that most the grid had a problem with this.
You ignore this, to level criticism of Mercedes calling for the FIA to do something about it.
So for the record:
Drivers from most teams complained about porpoising.
We visibly saw many cars other than Mercedes porpoising.
FIA medical examiners finding most cars were 3 times over the 1-2hz frequency sustained over a few minutes(limit to long term brain damage) to 6+hz over a couple of hours.
You take no issue with any of the above, only that it was Mercedes that complained.
I find this incomprehensible.
Teams already solved the porpoising problems. Cars now barely porpoise. Nothing to do with Horner, but he was right too. Porpoising was solved without any regulatory change.
Robson also revealed that, following the technical directive brought in by the FIA to address porpoising, the team initially encountered it on Albon’s car on Friday. “There were a couple of laps that exceeded the FIA’s limit,” he said. That was resolved by Saturday, giving Williams confidence in the changes it made for and during the weekend.
No, how is Baku the same as Silverstone/Austria/France/Hungary?
Did you even watch any race after Baku or are you just making it up?