Badger wrote: ↑24 Jun 2026, 20:15
zibby43 wrote: ↑24 Jun 2026, 19:32
djones wrote: ↑24 Jun 2026, 16:54
I wonder how much that diffuser ban is worth in time.
It's quite interesting that Ferrari are bringing upgrades (that seem to work well) including a better engine this weekend and at the same time Mercedes are having speed increasing items removed like the compression testing and now the diffuser. At this rate they will likely converge in about 6 races time.
That projection on convergence (no idea how you're calculating that to begin with but open to reading more) kind of assumes that Mercedes will stop developing the car and Ferrari will have zero issues with their new PU spec.
But taking upgrades off the car will speed up any convergence. The diffuser is a key area of the car and this exploit is meaningful judging by the pictures.
We don't know if/when it's coming off the car. If Silverstone, Mercedes may already have a variant that surpasses this iteration from a performance perspective by then. Also, quite a few folks Mercedes' power advantage was going to whither away after the supposedly magic compression ratio bullet was nerfed. Nothing really happened so that talking point just went away.
Next, I may need to calibrate my eyeball CFD to be able to discern lap time from pictures.
Lastly, folks thought Ferrari's new wheels were a significant performance differentiator in terms of tire degradation in Barcelona but they still had comparatively worse deg than Merc. Point being, how visually dramatic something is can be misleading.
https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/arti ... -the-rims/
I do agree that the diffuser design "has" to be worth something - whether it's lap time or car behavior - or else it wouldn't be on the car to begin with.