Those bumps were to the side of a big inlet hole in the middle of the rear wing. This narrow inlet expands inside the wing to feed air a slot across the back of the rear wing. This works around the limit on two wing sections as it makes the wing work like a three section wing. The bumps were just there to guide air into inlet…gcdugas wrote:What were those big triangular bumps in the center of the Mercedes rear wing at Hungary?
Yea possibly, but the Brawn wasnt the best car throughout the year like Lotus was.xpensive wrote:Come on JET, do your homework, this is simply a 1979 Lotus season again.
you must be right .I think hammering out the commercial details with something like a OEM for automobiles it is not that easy to get what you think is a fair price.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Yea possibly, but the Brawn wasnt the best car throughout the year like Lotus was.xpensive wrote:Come on JET, do your homework, this is simply a 1979 Lotus season again.
Survival in 09 was paramount. 2010 was a bonus, and it seems as if the w01 was designed as such
Thats the point. Ross Brawn keeps banging on about the tyres being unsuitable for Schumi's driving style, yet other teams with drivers with a similar style and with the same tyres aren't having any issues.siskue2005 wrote:Err.. Lewis drives for Vodafone Mclaren Mercedes F1 TeamBoost wrote:Lewis has a very similar point the nose into the corner and let the rear slide around style to Schumi and yet he isn't suffering from tyre issues.
Schumy drives for Petronas Mercedes GP F1 team
I've always thought Brawn could make even a slow car have a decent balance and handle well.This year they're getting beat by cars with less DF and less efficiency because they can't balnce the car or make it handle. It seems like problems with the race crew getting the most of the car(including the driver).At the beginning of the weekend,before everyone get's dialed in, they're quick.Then over the weekend as others hone their setups the Mercs drop like a stone. So,maybe the race engineers could be the problem.wesley123 wrote:yes, or the car doesnt suit the tires, like Brawm himself said, wich of the three would be right
The reason in my opinion, is not that they "dial" in quickly. They use less fuel than anyone else in FP1 and FP2. Probably around 5% less fuel than those around them.Pierce89 wrote:I've always thought Brawn could make even a slow car have a decent balance and handle well.This year they're getting beat by cars with less DF and less efficiency because they can't balnce the car or make it handle. It seems like problems with the race crew getting the most of the car(including the driver).At the beginning of the weekend,before everyone get's dialed in, they're quick.Then over the weekend as others hone their setups the Mercs drop like a stone. So,maybe the race engineers could be the problem.wesley123 wrote:yes, or the car doesnt suit the tires, like Brawm himself said, wich of the three would be right
I don't think they dial in quickly. I mean they're competitive when noone is handling well at the start of weekend. Then as everyone gets their cars handling Merc can't.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:The reason in my opinion, is not that they "dial" in quickly. They use less fuel than anyone else in FP1 and FP2. Probably around 5% less fuel than those around them.Pierce89 wrote:I've always thought Brawn could make even a slow car have a decent balance and handle well.This year they're getting beat by cars with less DF and less efficiency because they can't balnce the car or make it handle. It seems like problems with the race crew getting the most of the car(including the driver).At the beginning of the weekend,before everyone get's dialed in, they're quick.Then over the weekend as others hone their setups the Mercs drop like a stone. So,maybe the race engineers could be the problem.wesley123 wrote:yes, or the car doesnt suit the tires, like Brawm himself said, wich of the three would be right