To be fair to Red Bull, their gains in cutting drag this season have been extraordinary. In contrast, Mercedes are finding themselves in the situation Red Bull have been in for some time although not to the same extent. At least, thanks in part to the Mercedes power, they have decent top speed. The W04 is just a better car when more downforce producing components applied to the car.ringo wrote:What's up with the poor downforce efficiency?
It's seems the car can't have good downforce and a decent top speed.
Look on Webber's car in contrast. He can have a good combination of DF and tall 7th gear.
I think the engineers at Mercedes have found that qualifying as high up as possible with a short 7th gear is better than running a long 7th gear and potentially slipping back a few places on the grid. This has become particularly apparent in recent races as Lotus have closed the gap to them in terms of qualifying speed so they must feel the need to get ahead of them in qualifying. There are a number of obvious reasons why they would want to do this (e.g. less cars in front and therefore extended tyre life).
The problem with this is, as demonstrated by HAM today, if the driver ends up back in the pack then they will have a hard time getting past at the end of the straight. Exactly the same thing has happened to both the Red Bull drivers in the past although this year they seemed to have cured their top speed issues.