Mercedes has been consistent in saying its W15 is a step forward compared to the recalcitrant W13 and W14 cars with which it opened F1’s latest ground-effect era in 2022 and 2023, but mainly in the sense that its handling is more predictable.
As he addressed the media in the Bahrain paddock ahead of this weekend’s season opener, Russell was asked if there was any specific hangover from the weaknesses Mercedes’ previous cars still being felt in the W15.
“I would say this year’s car is a totally different race car,” he replied. “To the point that the things we learned from last year in the way we were setting the car up, we will need to approach it differently this year.
“So, there’s a lot to learn about this. And it feels much closer to how a race car should feel. But the one area that we need to continue to work on is probably the bouncing that we’re seeing. We got caught up with a bit of bouncing [in testing] last week.
“We were pushing the car really aggressively. But as I said, we’re dealing with a totally different beast this year, whereas 2022, 2023 they were both cut from the same cloth.”
George Russell, Mercedes F1 W15
Photo by: Steve Etherington / Motorsport Images
The bouncing Russell refers to is centred on braking stability, rather than porpoising and bouncing problems Mercedes encountered so famously in the 2022 campaign with the ‘zeropod’ W13.
Motorsport.com observed during pre-season testing that Mercedes was among the worst cars to be bouncing at its front end when its drivers applied the brakes for Bahrain’s tight, downhill right-hand Turn 8 hairpin.
Russell said Mercedes is “still pushing the boundaries” and “exploiting the limitations of the car”. He added: “That’s what testing is for. I’d like to think you’ll be seeing much less of that this weekend.
“So, three years on [from the start of the new ground-effect era], I think a lot of teams can still enter this circuit and set the car up in a too low and aggressive manner. But it’s always a fine line because that’s where the downforce is.”
George Russell, Mercedes-AMG
Photo by: Erik Junius
When asked if he was confident in Mercedes 2024 upgrade plan in the context of the W15’s early issues, Russell also said his team was “lacking downforce”.
“I’m confident the development slope of this car should be greater than we’ve seen in the past two cars, because we’ve got a better platform,” he…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Motorsport.com – Formula 1 – Stories…