1) Not necessarily? That’s why it’s called a general principle lol.wesley123 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2021, 01:14Everyone relies on it.
The difference compared to other cars is fairly negligable. It isn't the 20cm longer they were in 2017.As I mentioned previously, while Mercedes lost some surface area at the rear, they still have more floor area relative to shorter-wheelbase cars. After the reg changes, Merc still has a net advantage on how long the floor can work the airflow on the way to the diffuser.Not necessarily true since they run higher from the ground, and thus less ground effect.
Because?The '21 regulation changes have seemed to penalize the low rake approach
The idea that a solution that will have less exposure to tyre squirt will face a larger impact from the loss of those slots that manage tyre squirt is highly illogical.
And like always, there is no certainty of such condition. People read waaaaaaayyyy too much into rake.Mercedes look to be attempting to run higher rake at the rear
Could very easily be mechanical, or a multiple of things.The W12 rear end has been inconsistent and unstable at times on all 3 testing days[/list]
2) Except it’s not just about the loss of the slots, is it?
It’s loss of floor surface area, rear brake duct fins, the length of the diffuser strakes, etc.
And a multitude of things need to change both upstream and downstream to compensate for the sum of those changes.
4) We’re all just speculating, but judging by how the rear end of the car is breaking away and behaving unpredictably (similar to the RB16), in a year that the aero regs were changed, smacks of an aero balance problem, and not a mechanical one.
Furthermore, it seems the gusting winds exacerbated the problem in Bahrain. Which, again, doesn’t speak to mechanical problems.
Per Mark Hughes, who spoke to Mercedes’ engineers, they’re having no trouble with switching on the tires.
Is something stalling with the aero?
Feel free to add what you think the issues are. Would love to hear it. But everything I’ve observed, and everything we’ve heard from Merc, points toward aero.