in allison's words, these tyres appeal to the teenagers who are fans of fast & furious, not the f1 engineers.DarthPlagueisTheVise wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 11:34Lewis is testing the 18 inch wheels. Looks super dope imo.
in allison's words, these tyres appeal to the teenagers who are fans of fast & furious, not the f1 engineers.DarthPlagueisTheVise wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 11:34Lewis is testing the 18 inch wheels. Looks super dope imo.
Absolutely no chance this is his final season if he’s that invested.DarthPlagueisTheVise wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 11:34Lewis is testing the 18 inch wheels. Looks super dope imo.
Personally I don't get this "Hamilton might retire this season" talk. I for one would be really suprised if he did. Hamilton has time and time again said that he wants to battle other people. And having a few seasons and races where that hasn't happend as often as he probably would've liked, he could very well be looking at the new rules and be thinking that would be a good chance of that changing for two reasons. (1) The gap closing between teams, and (2) the possibility of closer battles due to the new regulations promoting the capacity to stay closer to the car ahead in dirty air.214270 wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 12:51Absolutely no chance this is his final season if he’s that invested.DarthPlagueisTheVise wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 11:34Lewis is testing the 18 inch wheels. Looks super dope imo.
My apologies, I thought it had been superseded by the limit.dans79 wrote: ↑19 Apr 2021, 22:11the rule is still there.
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -03-19.pdf
23.5 a)Each driver may use no more than one gearbox for six consecutive Events in which his
Competitor competes. Should a driver use a replacement gearbox he will drop five places
on the starting grid at that Event and an additional five places each time a further gearbox
is used.
Any replacement gearbox will only be required to complete the remainder of the Event in
question.
Unless the driver fails to finish the race (or is unable to start the race for reasons other
than a penalty imposed by the stewards) the gearbox fitted to the car at the end of the
Event must remain in it for the remainder of the six race sequence.
Any driver who failed to finish the race at the first, second, third, fourth or fifth of the six
Events for reasons which the Technical Delegate accepts as being beyond the control of
the Competitor or driver, may start the following Event with a different gearbox without
a penalty being incurred.
No need to apologize!Big Tea wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 16:11My apologies, I thought it had been superseded by the limit.dans79 wrote: ↑19 Apr 2021, 22:11the rule is still there.
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -03-19.pdf
23.5 a)Each driver may use no more than one gearbox for six consecutive Events in which his
Competitor competes. Should a driver use a replacement gearbox he will drop five places
on the starting grid at that Event and an additional five places each time a further gearbox
is used.
Any replacement gearbox will only be required to complete the remainder of the Event in
question.
Unless the driver fails to finish the race (or is unable to start the race for reasons other
than a penalty imposed by the stewards) the gearbox fitted to the car at the end of the
Event must remain in it for the remainder of the six race sequence.
Any driver who failed to finish the race at the first, second, third, fourth or fifth of the six
Events for reasons which the Technical Delegate accepts as being beyond the control of
the Competitor or driver, may start the following Event with a different gearbox without
a penalty being incurred.
DAS only pertained to the fronts though. So it likely helped, but the W11 already adequately heated the rears. Balanced tire surface heating on all 4 corners is critical.mkay wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 10:54To be fair, I have a feeling the W11 probably had the same "issue" but it was masked by DAS. It's apparent now that DAS has been outlawed.zibby43 wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 10:39Mercedes better on tire degradation; warm-up issues costing pace in qualifying and on Inters early in stints.
A role reversal from previous Mercs that enjoyed cool temperatures.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merc ... l/6361748/
Tyre warmup is one thing, but Merc's priority should be on improving rear aerodynamic performance and improving 1-lap PU performance. Mercedes gave up a lot of lap time through fast corners in both Imola and Bahrain and the clipping is bound to have cost Merc probably a tenth or so at Imola, and more in Bahrain.
On the PU side, still unclear to me how the PU can be so good over deploying/harvesting over a race distance, but be clipping like hell over 1-lap. Fortunately, it may suggest there is nothing fundamentally wrong with the PU, but they need to get to the bottom of this given how tight qualifying has been thus far. A few tenths here and there will go a long way.
It’s also a setup choice I think. The slower warmup seems to lengthen the useful tirelife. Could be we will have several races where a redbull will gain pole, with a few seconds clear after 6 laps, with Hamilton gaining after that. Especially fighting with a RedBull, who are usually set up for max corner speed and less with top speed, track position isn’t as critical as it was when Ferrari was challenging them.zibby43 wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 20:46DAS only pertained to the fronts though. So it likely helped, but the W11 already adequately heated the rears. Balanced tire surface heating on all 4 corners is critical.mkay wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 10:54To be fair, I have a feeling the W11 probably had the same "issue" but it was masked by DAS. It's apparent now that DAS has been outlawed.zibby43 wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 10:39Mercedes better on tire degradation; warm-up issues costing pace in qualifying and on Inters early in stints.
A role reversal from previous Mercs that enjoyed cool temperatures.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/merc ... l/6361748/
Tyre warmup is one thing, but Merc's priority should be on improving rear aerodynamic performance and improving 1-lap PU performance. Mercedes gave up a lot of lap time through fast corners in both Imola and Bahrain and the clipping is bound to have cost Merc probably a tenth or so at Imola, and more in Bahrain.
On the PU side, still unclear to me how the PU can be so good over deploying/harvesting over a race distance, but be clipping like hell over 1-lap. Fortunately, it may suggest there is nothing fundamentally wrong with the PU, but they need to get to the bottom of this given how tight qualifying has been thus far. A few tenths here and there will go a long way.
I think finding a wider operating window for the car setup will not only help with the consistency of performance at the rear of the car, but with managing the tire temperatures, too.
The tire temperatures alone are a huge performance differentiator. They were the difference between Bottas setting a lap in Q1 that would’ve been good enough for P4 and him ultimately settling for P8 in Q3.
Crucial to get that sorted. Maybe the warmer temperatures on non-cheese grater circuits (e.g., Bahrain) will help.
Not shocked. Thrust bearings, main / con bearings, etc. all take a beating in a hard impact.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 19:28Bottas may need a new PU after the crash last race... Which will get him off sync for PU elements for the season and ensures a penalty down the season:
https://www.racefans.net/2021/04/21/bot ... -in-crash/
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The cars would become very bulky and even heavier.MKlaus wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 20:24while fia is on austerity mode, shouldn't they bring changes to the crash structure to include a hard survival cell type protection casing to the pu? these are extremely expensive components and ensuring their safety would save a lot of money for all the teams. may be i am too dumb to talk on this and there can be several technical aspects for not doing it or might not seem possible, but i think it should be considered at least.