So then what you are saying if it aint broke, dont fix it.
Which means then that changing the wing when the nose is the problem would be resource suicide. Why change somthing that works right?
Moving the weight to the rear is the target. At least someone you said so.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:mep wrote: What is so hard in building a new lighter spliter?
Sounds very easy when you can solve your problems with that.As Wesley said.wesley123 wrote:yes and then you still got to move the weight backwards, wich is the problem.
When you optimize car for a certain weight distribution, having to change the front splitter weight and --- it backwards into a compact and tight rear can be an issue.
This can be overcome, but what about the aero balance?
This then needs to be changed.
And what you are left with is a compromised car.
When they really have more front weight bias then they need to have more wings on the front now. Maybe they dont move the weight more to the rear because they lack rear downforve even with a high angled rear wing.by JET
That front splitter is the heaviest in the paddock according to Scarbs, it retains the characteristics of the BGP 001 with forward biased weight distribution, allied to a very compact rear end.
Meaning weight transfer to the rear would be very difficult, and would require tungsten components or parts in places where performance could be hampered(suspension components etc).
And crucially, the aero balance would need to change, more rear wing to balance the weight transfer, which explains the slow straightline speeds of the W01.
It certainly wouldn't surprise me if Mercedes, Brawn and Schumacher tried to get as much feedback from and through him as possible with the tyres. Schumacher doesn't adapt to tyres, they adapt to him. He's not about to change now.Mandrake wrote:With Heidfeld being the Pirelli Test driver now, might there be some knowledge transfer to MGP that helps them not to make the same mistakes again?
If it was so easy to fix it, dont you think it was already fixed by now? Seriously, it is easy to say 'you should put weight in the back' but you can hardly drop an piece of tungsten on the rear wing because you want rearward balance?mep wrote:Moving the weight to the rear is the target. At least someone you said so.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:mep wrote: What is so hard in building a new lighter spliter?
Sounds very easy when you can solve your problems with that.As Wesley said.wesley123 wrote:yes and then you still got to move the weight backwards, wich is the problem.
When you optimize car for a certain weight distribution, having to change the front splitter weight and --- it backwards into a compact and tight rear can be an issue.
This can be overcome, but what about the aero balance?
This then needs to be changed.
And what you are left with is a compromised car.
So you take out the weight on the front and place it in the rear.
I am sure they will find a place for it. Otherwise this car would be really crap.
Other teams can do the same thing. It is reasonable that smaller front tires will cause more rear weight bias so they need to take this into account when designing the car.
None of that explains why Rosberg has no problem. He runs with the same aero. Or maybe he does suffer but is able to drive around the prblem. Schumacher used to be able to drive around a problem, but now he is stymied.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:The problem mep is that the car had a forward biased weight distribution, they made the rears as small as possible.
But the problem is when you shift the weight rearwards you spoil aero dynamic balance too.
So they may have solved the distribution problem, but this has problems has a knock on effect to the rest of the aero.
A mire of deep proportions.
gilgen look at the difference in time between the two. Hardly a light year eh?gilgen wrote: None of that explains why Rosberg has no problem. He runs with the same aero. Or maybe he does suffer but is able to drive around the prblem. Schumacher used to be able to drive around a problem, but now he is stymied.
Look at the vast difference in experience. And the fact that Rosberg has finished far, far better than Schumacher, shows that it is not entirely the car. But I do agree that there is a problem with the car. This is caused by a team that seems to have lost its way.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:gilgen look at the difference in time between the two. Hardly a light year eh?gilgen wrote: None of that explains why Rosberg has no problem. He runs with the same aero. Or maybe he does suffer but is able to drive around the prblem. Schumacher used to be able to drive around a problem, but now he is stymied.
Fact is Schumacher is actually very close in lap times to Rosberg as Marcush will testify.
The drivers isnt the issue, the car is.