kilcoo316 wrote:They did 22.9s in last years testing, they got down to a 20.1 in this years testing. 1.8 sec minus the tyreDelta (which Pirelli estimate at ~0.6-0.8 sec).
Its a net 1 - 1.2 second difference in their absolute times* over 12 months. Which is in line with reasonable expectations.
*=/= relative pace as the others are improving too. I would estimate the general pace of improvement in F1 to be in around ~0.1 sec/month [given consistent regs - but with all the chopping and changing in the regulations most winters its hard to verify that].
Kilcoo316, aren't you jumping to a few conclusions here?
I don't doubt that under
normal conditions perhaps an improvement of ~0.1sec/month is realistic. I would say that this
only applies under normal conditions (i.e. car upgrades are an evolution like over a season) but doesn't necessarely apply when there is a
fundemental flaw within the car's design.
By the same reasoning, a fundemental flaw can very well cost you 2 seconds of performance - on the other hand, correcting that, could gain you 2 seconds using the same logic. I'm not saying that Mercedes had a fundemental flaw that cost them that exact amount, but it's clear to see that they did have a major tyre deg issue and that the car had stagnated mid season. IMO I wouldn't bet against them that they have indeed corrected fundemental flaws that cost them dearly the last couple of seasons.
Its easier to gain exponentially on a bad car than it is to gain on a good car that is already running very efficient. I do not believe this applies to the Mercedes at all, hence why your metric doesn't entirely add up in this case.