Formula 1: Mercedes’ engineering chief Andrew Shovlin has made a massive claim about the W13 challenger as the team declared porpoising issues have been now cured and taken care of. The duo at Silver Arrows, Hamilton, and Russell can now take advantage of this and have a chance of winning races in the second half of the F1 2022 season. Follow Formula 1 updates on InsideSport.IN
Mercedes are one of the teams who believe that they have at long last figured out how to control porpoising without sacrificing too much performance. “Bouncing is no longer an issue at all,” Shovlin said.
“We still have a few things up our sleeve, nothing spectacular, but things that will take us further. We’re no longer going in circles, but are now moving forward continuously. Also with the setup,” Shovlin added.
To contrasting degrees, each group on the grid needed to battle the bouncing issue toward the beginning of the year. The phenomenon was caused by the renewed introduction of ground-effect aerodynamic features on vehicle designs, which assists with closer racing.
In any case, the unfortunate aftereffect was the porpoising. It turned out to be clear in pre-season testing that the new optimal design were making the vehicles skip viciously at high speeds, making them lose grip in corners.
A few groups got to grips quickly, yet Mercedes were one of the outfits left scratching their heads the longest. What’s more, it negatively affected drivers, Lewis Hamilton and George Russell – particularly at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix where Hamilton was left with extreme back pain after racing on the bumpy Baku circuit.
Formula 1: Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton suffered back pain after the Azerbaijan GP.After the end of the week, the FIA stepped in with a specialized order which will come into force in Belgium later this month. Yet, after that, the point faded away fairly, as the skipping turned out to be substantially less observable on smoother tracks.
The FIA is to take steps to reduce the porpoising of new generation of F1 cars in the safety and wellbeing of the drivers. pic.twitter.com/alaOyDTYsS
— ESPN F1 (@ESPNF1) June 16, 2022
Meanwhile, former F1 driver Jolyon Palmer believes it’s only a matter of time before Mercedes will be back to winning ways. “Thirteen races in and the trajectory of the team is the clearest of all on the grid they are undoubtedly edging their way towards a first victory of the season, which I predict they will have in the next handful of races,” Palmer added.
“We head into the summer shutdown with Verstappen and Red Bull sailing away into the distance and Ferrari looking over their shoulders at Mercedes fast approaching, a feat you’d have struggled to believe after the way this season started,” Palmer concluded.