I think a younger Lewis would have adapted better to these cars. He loses a lot of his laptime mid-corner right after his usual hard braking, perhaps it's not what these cars like.
There's no compelling argument for why he would be bad with venturi cars, it's just an excuse. These cars aren't that dissimilar to the previous gen, they have similar amounts of downforce, cornering performance, braking performance etc. The driving style change is small enough that for a guy of Hamilton's talent it should have been a relatively easy transition, not something you struggle with for 4 years. The reasons for his decline are simple, natural decline because of age and stronger teammates.
I agree, next year will be no difference than last few years. When he admitted it to himself, he will retire at the end of 2026.
Badger wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 16:14There's no compelling argument for why he would be bad with venturi cars, it's just an excuse. These cars aren't that dissimilar to the previous gen, they have similar amounts of downforce, cornering performance, braking performance etc. The driving style change is small enough that for a guy of Hamilton's talent it should have been a relatively easy transition, not something you struggle with for 4 years. The reasons for his decline are simple, natural decline because of age and stronger teammates.
As for next season I would actually be more worried about how his driving style adapts than current gen. His signature is late braking. With the new gen cars late braking is basically not going to be a thing because of all the harvesting towards the end of the straight. The deceleration distance will be elongated and the performance is going to come from whoever can carry the most speed through the corner and get back on power first. It won't be last of the late brakers.
venkyhere wrote: ↑19 Nov 2025, 17:38While I don't want to comment on his involvement(or lack of) in 'car development' (we are reminded of the various 'I am the man for experiements' in 2022 and 2023 at Mercedes) ; one thing I can say with confidence - he hasn't adapted his driving to suit a ground effect (GE) car, where combined entry (steering + super-aggressive braking) into a corner disturbs the car so much, that it loses balance.
That's because of the shape of the underfloor 'low pressure slice of air' :
-- in the 'normal flat floor era', this was a wedge shaped high speed air, which produced suction that was less sensitive to the dynamic shape changes to the wedge (which comes mainly from hard braking under 'yaw')
-- int the GE venturi floor era, this is a small volume 'snake body shaped' tunnel with ultra-fast moving air, which produces suction ; thus making it super-sensitive to dynamic shape/orientation changes in corner entry. A big clue that this is the case, is the amount of anti-dive/anti-squat present in the GE designs, compared to the previous era.
Decades of muscle memory and 'instinct' (or just plain old stubborness) that makes him repeat the same 'hard late braking with not-little steering angle' on corner entry, is a technical deficiency from a driving standpoint. I am sure he is aware of this already. Hamilton will be happiest to see the back of 4 years of GE cars, and will be eager for the flat floor 2026 car.
This generation of car really dislikes late breaking for 2 interrelated reasons. Downforce from the floor is very ride height and pitch sensitive. The simplified suspensions (no more hydraulics) has limited the engineers abilities to control pitch. Late breaking makes a car pitch more severely, and doing it in a ground effects car leads to DF instability.Badger wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 16:14There's no compelling argument for why he would be bad with venturi cars, it's just an excuse. These cars aren't that dissimilar to the previous gen, they have similar amounts of downforce, cornering performance, braking performance etc. The driving style change is small enough that for a guy of Hamilton's talent it should have been a relatively easy transition, not something you struggle with for 4 years.
In 2014-2016 they did lots of lifting and costing and he did just fine then! Mostly because you only had to ease into some corners on some tracks to recharge, not every corner on every track!Badger wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 16:14As for next season I would actually be more worried about how his driving style adapts than current gen. His signature is late braking. With the new gen cars late braking is basically not going to be a thing because of all the harvesting towards the end of the straight. The deceleration distance will be elongated and the performance is going to come from whoever can carry the most speed through the corner and get back on power first. It won't be last of the late brakers.