Yep. This isn't unfamiliar territory at all for Mercedes. There was a lot of Mercedes hype last year during testing and after Melbourne quali, and then Ferrari went on to get 3 straight pole positions (including 2 front row lockouts) at Bahrain, China, and Azerbaijan.dans79 wrote: ↑21 Feb 2019, 23:31This really isn't anything new for Merc, they always have a hell of a time getting the car dialed in early in the year, but as the year goes on it gets better and better. Ferrari seems good out of the box, but doesn't seem to improve as much. RBR is some place in the middle.zibby43 wrote: ↑21 Feb 2019, 23:26I feel like the front wing designs are a bit of red herring right now.
It appears Ferrari has made some gains with their underfloor and rear suspension (watching the way the car behaves in transition areas like corner entry/exit). There have been changes "under the skin" on that Ferrari which we can't see. I think Merc needs to explore these routes.
The way Bottas made it sound, is that the W10 has a lot of potential (kept improving each session/day), but they're still trying to arrive at a setup that makes the car easy to drive *and* quick.
The Ferrari seems on rails and quick out of the box.
Then, starting in Barcelona, and once more in Austria, Merc rolled out big upgrades. And Merc's development path over the course of the rest of the season was devastatingly effective - on both the PU and chassis fronts.
Last year, Ferrari had an outstanding package. It just took them testing and Melbourne for them to fully figure it out. Merc could very well be in that position this year.