As one hasn’t been made yet I’ll do the honours .
One part of last years car that changed a lot over the season was the sidepods I wonder if they will continue with the concept or follow in the direction of a Ferrari/redbull concept
They discarded that late in the seasonStu wrote: ↑29 Dec 2022, 19:36They kept the unique front floor throughout the season, didn’t they; I wonder if they will keep with that and evolve the concept further. I thought that it was a neat touch and if controlled correctly provides a very energised airflow.
Whether that comes at the expense of some front load or not I cannot know.
The unique floor solution got patched over with their Singapore upgradeStu wrote: ↑29 Dec 2022, 19:36They kept the unique front floor throughout the season, didn’t they; I wonder if they will keep with that and evolve the concept further. I thought that it was a neat touch and if controlled correctly provides a very energised airflow.
Whether that comes at the expense of some front load or not I cannot know.
I do not think that there is any significant lag in the motor, in Monza Mercedes and McLaren were quite fast. We simply do not have the former advantage in the motor, as it was in previous years.
Is there an engine freeze in affect this year im sure there was but I’ve seen that Ferrari has an extra 30hp coming to there units im hoping merc can squeeze abit out the 23 PU
The short answer is… yeshaza wrote: ↑30 Dec 2022, 20:58Is there an engine freeze in affect this year im sure there was but I’ve seen that Ferrari has an extra 30hp coming to there units im hoping merc can squeeze abit out the 23 PU
What would be unfair about homologating highest power you reached and then looking for reliability step by step?
Because it could potentially opens up an avenue to abuse the situation to find extra power
Every engine had to demonstrate the power on the test bench. I imagine some endurance conditions had to be applied as well. No manufacturer allowed themselves to miss the trick to declare the very maximum they could reach and satisfy those conditions and it could be that no engine will reach those declared numbers ever, due to extra short life.
Thanks for taking the time to explain that, I’ll break a habit of a life time and take your word for it, and admit that does sound fairVanja #66 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2023, 21:50Every engine had to demonstrate the power on the test bench. I imagine some endurance conditions had to be applied as well. No manufacturer allowed themselves to miss the trick to declare the very maximum they could reach and satisfy those conditions and it could be that no engine will reach those declared numbers ever, due to extra short life.
All four manufacturers will bring reliability updates that will allow them to reach desired reliability in ever higher power modes. All those updates take time to get cleared and must be cleared by other three makers as well, not just the FIA.
Not sure Italians are known as being very discreetthe EDGE wrote: ↑03 Jan 2023, 22:30On a side note, I have always found it strange the Ferrari leak so much information about the upcoming cars, I used to be very sceptical of any rumours, given how secretive the world of F1 is, but I’ve come to learn that these leaks usually turn out to be true, to some extent