150 is too much, the race (Canada) where Hamilton and Rosberg lost eletric power they where underpowered compared to a Red Bull-Renault.
As elsewhere pointed out, Rosberg lost the complete hybrid power, which was estimated to be around 160 bhp. He almost scraped home ahead of Riccardo. That's why I think it was legitimate. That's what I read back in the day.
mendis wrote: ↑22 Mar 2023, 16:45As elsewhere pointed out, Rosberg lost the complete hybrid power, which was estimated to be around 160 bhp. He almost scraped home ahead of Riccardo. That's why I think it was legitimate. That's what I read back in the day.
Were you aware that Mercedes customer teams were not allowed to use the higher performance modes?
During our cooperation, Mercedes managed the engine. They decided what mode you were going on, they could block driver changes on the steering wheel to protect the engine, too high temperatures, etc. "- said Carter. Asked if such a thing could still be possible, he replied: "At 100%. I have no doubt about it that they give other engine modes. When Romain won the podium for Spa [2015], Mercedes had to give him something more, because they did not want Vettel to overtake him and win the podium. And they admitted it after the race, they said why they did it. Romain came to me later and said: this car has never been so good. Because if you have a faster car, aero works better, you can heat your tires faster, you can brake later
- Luca Marmorini from Race Engine Technology Issue 100, Feb 2017“In the first year of the regulations, to have such a new concept of car, with the powertrain frozen, that was not good", "of course we had a lot of frustation being behind Mercedes, both us and Renault were struggling. If we had a chance to introduce some performance modifications during the year, Mercedes would have still won anyway, but we could have made their lives a bit harder"”but we couldn't introduce anything for performance. It was very frustrating already having an engine that was much better on the dyno but not being able to use it because of the regulations. So it was very good that the FIA accepted the change of regulations at the end of 2014, allowing teams to use tokens for performance during the race season".
"I think the FIA did a great job of coordinating the input from different manufacturers. At the very beginning, I remember, Toyota, BMW, and Honda were also present and involved in the definition of the rules. People now claim the rules were designed for Mercedes but that is completely wrong"
"I remember that at the time, some decisions had to be based on the taking the safer route. We thought reliability would have played a major role in the season, but in the end that was not the case. By the time we got to Bahrain we realized the deficit, but there was not time to react because we were already building engines for the first race".
“So we were struggling to handle a racing season where the company was expecting you to succeed, while at the same time you were using the dynos to run the new concept. We paid the price for that in 2013, as we developed the new engine on just one dyno and a single-cylinder engine. The V8 and the new engine could not share the same dyno. It was only at the end of 2013 that were were able to use all our facilities for the new powertrain"... "the overlapping period needed to be done with more redundancy". "This was the approaching taken by Mercedes, which by mid-2013 had a skeleton team working on its V8 program."
Reaaally?!!
There were no high altitude tracks in 2020 (corona year), only 2 austrian GPs where they mopped up easily. 2020 merc PU was dominant, with Ferrari a total train wreck (-15 kmh on straights compared to 2019) and actually renault of all engines was probably second best in power output or at worst level with honda, who as we know, got massively nerfed between cancelled 2020 australian gp and austrian gp, as new TD on engines got introduced by FIA. All this is known.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑22 Mar 2023, 21:47In 2020 it was leading but not dominant. Being weak on high altitude tracks.