From what i can read (being Dutch, not German tho), the article wrote there being a crack in the brake-drum. That caused hot air to blow onto the "Sättel", which in brake-terms look to be the brake-calipers. To me, it sounds like something unfortunate, being on the limit of engineering. Altho, leaving a bit more margin couldn't hurt aparently. Another explaination could be too much stress on the failed part (temps too high, or in combination with vibrations, etc).seventhsin wrote: ↑03 May 2017, 07:36From the link TNTHead posted, it reads as if there was a crack in the cake-tin or another component that led to overheating of the RR brake assembly. Hard to tell as the translation isn't great. RB is using heat from rear braking applications to keep the rear tyres hot.
Maybe someone with a native tongue can translate better.
where are these rumors?gandharva wrote: ↑03 May 2017, 11:03According to Helmut Marko RedBull is on the absolute limit with the brakes. They need to reduce cooling to a minimum because they need all the heat they can get to warm up the rims/tires. Especially on the rear end. RB13 has huge problems getting temps into rear tires. Ricciardos failure came from a broken heat sensor at the brakes that lead to quick overheating.
B-spec needs to deliver... Btw... rumors are that the B-spec is around 1 sec per lap quicker...
And I guess the need for more aggressive heat collection from brakes to tyres comes from relative lack of downforce vs Mercedes /ferrari.gandharva wrote: ↑03 May 2017, 11:03According to Helmut Marko RedBull is on the absolute limit with the brakes. They need to reduce cooling to a minimum because they need all the heat they can get to warm up the rims/tires. Especially on the rear end. RB13 has huge problems getting temps into rear tires. Ricciardos failure came from a broken heat sensor at the brakes that lead to quick overheating.
B-spec needs to deliver... Btw... rumors are that the B-spec is around 1 sec per lap quicker...
??? If they know how to find a full Second(!!!) why didn't they do it in the first place???
Nope. More than likely They started B spec development 6-8 months ago, maybe more.henra wrote: ↑05 May 2017, 00:02??? If they know how to find a full Second(!!!) why didn't they do it in the first place???
So in other words for 15 Months they developed a car that is almost 1,5s down on Merc/Ferrari and after having completed the design, having it run in races for just 6 weeks they suddenly know how to find a full second???!
Really?
If they were behind on the car or had some good concepts, they may have chosen to put out a simple stable platform until those solutions/the proper car could be properly designed.henra wrote: ↑05 May 2017, 00:02??? If they know how to find a full Second(!!!) why didn't they do it in the first place???
So in other words for 15 Months they developed a car that is almost 1,5s down on Merc/Ferrari and after having completed the design, having it run in races for just 6 weeks they suddenly know how to find a full second???!
Really?
Well, that is what "development" meanshenra wrote: ↑05 May 2017, 00:02??? If they know how to find a full Second(!!!) why didn't they do it in the first place???
So in other words for 15 Months they developed a car that is almost 1,5s down on Merc/Ferrari and after having completed the design, having it run in races for just 6 weeks they suddenly know how to find a full second???!
Really?