DAS alive and kicking
This would be very illegal if that's actually what's happening. But it's hard to explain what I'm seeing other than some form of das..
Yup, haven't noticed before but it's definitely there on W13 onboards. Weird though, why would you want the steering column to move under braking? Annoying for the drivers.
I think we'd probably need to discuss this in dedicated thread, as it will likely not fit in with forum rules in here specifically.venkyhere wrote: ↑25 Nov 2024, 13:26@Farnborough
I think you have to rephrase 'carcass temp generation' to a more layman friendly 'sidewall flex heat generation' and then it will be better understood.
I'm guessing that your point is -
despite the cold track/air and despite the higher min filling pressure (all of which make the tyre hardened and stiff) , the Mercedes with it's stiffer-than-others rear suspension, low ride AND 'whatever is the aero shortcoming that doesn't keep the rear planted in typical temp tarmac ' (their perennial problem) was helping the car have enough slippage (that would have been a disaster on a hot track) maintain a perfect heat exchange equilibrium with brakes, tarmac and even the passing air of the straights. The other teams, who are far kinder to their rear tyres, kept losing rubber temperature whenever the long straight was involved.
Did I guess your point correctly ?
Thanks for the contribution, some interesting points there.Mattchu wrote: ↑25 Nov 2024, 18:19From my albeit limited understanding of the black art of tyre warming, the teams are looking for a uniform to depth core temperature of the tyres so it doesn`t lose too much heat on the straights.
That being the surface temp of most of the tyre being pretty much the same (in the optimum band) and the base layer of the rubber down to the bead wire being just a few degrees cooler (uniform).
What Mercedes have really suffered with is the surface temperature of the compound has at most tracks been totally out of kilter.
The rears have sometimes been getting much too hot at the surface (in relation to the carcass) compared to the fronts which means the car isn`t predictable or the rear just slides, which makes it worse again!
For me, Red Bull had the opposite several races ago (when Max complained of understeer) and the fronts where getting out of range compared to the rears.
Mercedes don`t seem to have a car that has a setup window of anything other than a certain set of circumstances. i.e. very smooth track surface with minimal bumps (nice low car) and a pretty cool ambient temperature.
When the conditions are right (like Vegas), the car looks on rails, although we`ve seen the same on the Red Bull, McLaren and Ferrari at various times during the season...