What is the fatigue factor in an F1 chassis? Brawn have two drivers that don't crash and I think they still only have two chassis made. Ferrari, Mac, Renault and other teams often make as many as 5-6 chassis per season. Now we do have less testing so that figures in but I am wondering if a F1 chassis endures appreciable fatigue during the season. Things like torsional rigidity, torsional harmonics remaining constant, shock absorption and shock transfer.deadening properties remaining constant for 20,000 Km or so etc.
I know that it is a dirty little secret among golfers that carbon shafts age somewhat and their flex characteristics vary. I guess nothing in life is exempt from entropy so I ask about F1 main monocoques? The suspension parts are almost alway new, the gearboxes are replaced every four races, the motors are replaced regularly so all that remains "unrefreshed" is the main monocoque.
Has this been discussed? Might it be a reason why Button can't find the "sweet spot" any more? I know that in 2002 Schumi had a favorite chassis and one he wasn't fond of. Perhaps it is manufacturing consistency, perhaps it is mileage fatigue or temperature fatigue.
Any comments?