AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Nov 2022, 04:25
zibby43 wrote: ↑14 Nov 2022, 04:18
AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Nov 2022, 01:11
It's possible but I would be cautious. On the surface, the W13 has performed in exactly the same manner as the RB14 and the RB15. Cars that were extremely proficient in uncanny circuits like Austria, Singapore, Mexico, Brazil but there were not enough of these circuit types to mount anything close to a full season challenge.
I understand a lot of people have been starving for a Mercedes victory, but it feels like people don't know how to interpret Merc's current run of form because they are basically used to Merc having their way for the last 8 years or so.
Put yourself in the shoes of a Mclaren fan when they nearly won 2 races last year and bagged some poles as well. Or when RB was winning the altitude tracks in 2018 and 2019 and look at how fans react to those results and compare it to people prophesizing that Merc are back after a day like today.
Not really. I’m specifically referencing the clear performance gains since the Austin upgrade. Pretty much the first substantial performance upgrade of the season that wasn’t brought to fix an underlying fundamental flaw, but purely to make the car faster (with some weight reduction to boot).
This wasn’t some McLaren outlier win because of a crazy race. This has been a clear trend.
Ferrari and Red Bull have publicly acknowledged it as well. I don’t know why we have to always invent some sort of mental gymnastics to make something more difficult to interpret than it really is.
The RBR remains the best overall package, but now Merc can compete in races with the additional pace and superior degradation. Mexico and Brazil are very different circuits, and Merc performed well at both venues.
Mexico and Brazil are the same circuits that the RB14 and the RB15 excelled at. Those cars were never close to full season competitiveness. These aren't gymnastics.
Ferrari canned their '22 car in France. RB moved on in Spa. Naturally, Mercedes who is working with 10% more windtunnel time than RB and 5% more time than Ferrari, in addition to throwing on a 3-4 tenths upgrade package in Austin where RB and Ferrari remain with their midseason cars, then it looks like Mercedes are closing down gaps but its far more complex than that. Even today, RB was shafted by the limited free practice time. This performance that we saw today in Brazil is the same performance from Austria. Hamilton was very fast there. Had he not had the qualy crash, he would have been fighting Verstappen in a similar fashion because once again there are some circuits where the RB just doesn't work at all.
Ultimately we don't really know "what" the perspective for this Mercedes performance is until the first couple of rounds next season. That will show whether the current gains are real or if it was all a mirage based in the fact that RB and Ferrari moved on to their '23 package months before Mercedes did.
There would have been absolutely enormous pressure from Germany to win a race this season. It's now done thanks to the Austin upgrade. Mercedes are operating on a completely different run plan because they lost 8 to 10 months according to Toto finding out their porpoising issues. He said that here:
https://www.formulanerds.com/news/toto- ... velopment/ The reality is they are likely still 8 to 10 months behind in the development for '23 car as well. One does not erase an 8 to 10 months development gap at the snap of a finger. These things are very complex. Teams develop at similar rates, when one team is making leaps relative to the others, it typically means the other teams are banking this performance in a different domain (i.e 2023). It's quite naive to think RB and Ferrari were just holding their nether regions while Mercedes "caught" them. One must get out of the habit of aggrandizing the development ability of 1 F1 team vs another when it comes to the big 3.
The W13 and its strengths/weaknesses have absolutely nothing to do with the RB14 and RB15. The altitude the past 2 races has probably helped the W13’s drag issues. But, again, the largest performance upgrade of the season took place across Austin and Mexico (important new front wing).
lol Austria? Merc finished a minute off the leaders. The car’s in a much different place.
The recent upgrade helped claw back pace against RB, who haven’t brought updates in a while.
Merc have been on par or better than Ferrari for a while now in race trim. I don’t know what Ferrari have been doing, but Ferrari and RBR were at level-pegging on pace to start the year, and Merc are now clearly faster in race trim, with better deg, and in a prime position to pass them in the WCC. Part of it is development, part of it was the floor changes, which clearly hurt them the most.
Aggrandize? I’ve heard it all now. It’s such a far cry to imagine the 8x WCC actually sorting its problems to become competitive once they figured out the bouncing that stopped them from pursuing performance (insert sarcasm here).
The W14 already started development months ago as well. Merc have publicly stated that. Red Bull showed last year that you can develop 2 concepts. It’s not a mutually exclusive choice (at least that’s what you used to vehemently argue).
If anything, the fact that Merc don’t have to start over with the W14 gains them back a huge swath of time.
Anyway, I’m done with this conversation. I’ll let the on-track results speak, and continue to speak, for themselves.