PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑26 Mar 2024, 03:18
Mtshali_Motorsport wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 21:14
Vanja #66 wrote: ↑24 Mar 2024, 20:47
It's funny reading Wolff's "we have a physics problem, in the past we always understood the car and now we don't" and not laugh while remembering 2017/18 seasons and constant moaning about having a "diva"
Allison's statement from around preseason testing was very telling, going along the lines of "before we could do an upgrade and it always adds performance (downforce) and now with these cars we can't do it like that" It just confirms their aero development was basically "add winglets, strakes, wing level etc and it will go faster" because of PU supremacy. Even in 2021 this still held true.
It does not seem they bothered too much with checking how the car would behave in (as many as needed) challenging conditions on track, they could just take away or add a bit of wing front or rear to balance the car and just went for it... This level of incompetence is shocking, honestly. To think this team secured 8 consecutive WCCs...
That bold statement highlighted by Vanja pretty much summarized Mercedes tenure of domination since 2014 to 2021
Because of the baked in advantage of the PU they were able to get away with ‘top downforce’ (high downforce- high drag). Hence why majority of not all of the cars suffered in dirty air and predominantly needed clean air to be quick.
On the contrary RedBull had to heavily rely on aero (predominantly underbody) to compensate for the PU deficit, could be the reason why they utilized the high-rake concept which I feel payed massive dividends in added knowledge to the ground effect regulations.
Also makes sense why Mercedes (and Aston Martin) were hampered with the cut out of the floor in 2021.
Funny how this team was built on the success of Brawn GP, who so happened to build a car that had high underbody downforce (double diffuser loophole).
You took the bait as Ross Brawn woul say back in 2014. The engine was good, but believe you me the chassis was also one of the best under the flat floor hybrid regs.
Force India and Williams also had that engine and while it did move them up the field it wasn't a silver bullet. Once the engines were normalized, perhaps even some rivals' engines exceeding Mercedes' own, the Mercedes chasiss still could hold it's own. What we are seeing here today in the ground effect regs is not chassis incompetence but a phyisics talent gap in the Mercedes ranks.
Agree 100% PlatinumZealot, and just for the record, we have disagreed many times over many years.
In the last year or so there has been this narrative that "oh, see! Mercedes has always just been good with the engine and now it's coming to haunt them and their terrible chassis/aero team!"
Even Vanja and some of the other self proclaimed aero 'experts' subscribe to this same misconception/narrative.
The truth is - if one has any tolerance for it - is that F1 performance is much more than just "the engine is good" or "the aero and chassis are good". I would argue - with many examples to back it up - that very rarely does a team win a championship with a simple silver bullet - 2009 notwithstanding.
I do find it subjectively hilarious that the team that utterly dominated F1 for nearly a decade is criticized without merit, while the team that was in the position they are in now -ten years ago - is deemed to be full of guile and godlike wisdom. Where was RBR engineering from 2014-2021... oh yeah... it was the engine that was the problem
Talk about a bandwagon.
Human history is the long terrible story of man trying to find something other than God which will make him happy.