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Mercedes F1 2017 Italian Grand Prix – Preview

Mercedes F1 2017 Italian Grand Prix – Preview
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Battle continues with Round 13 of the 2017 season from the Autodromo Nazionale Monza

  • Toto Talks Italy
  • Featured this Week: Power Sensitivity
  • Stat Attack: Italy and Beyond

Toto Talks Italy

We said before Spa that it’s dangerous to make assumptions this year and the race weekend demonstrated why that’s the case. It was a dog fight with Ferrari and, although we came out on top, we did so by a small margin only. We can expect the same kind of close battle at every race this year. There will be no races where it is a walk in the park and we are ready for an epic battle all the way to the finish line in Abu Dhabi.

Monza is a circuit that has been good to us in recent years. It rewards low drag and peak power, both of which are among the strengths of our package; but braking stability and low-speed grip are also crucial through the chicanes, and these are areas where Ferrari has held an advantage. The team that finds the best overall compromise will come out on top.

This is often the time of year when thoughts turn to the following season. But our mission is clear: to win before and after a major regulation change. Nobody said it would be easy and it is stretching our limits in every direction. We are still pushing hard with our development to squeeze every last bit of performance from the W08.

In the coming weeks, we must grasp every opportunity, accept good fortune with humility, misfortune with resolution and show our resilience on the days when our rivals are stronger. The pendulum will swing again a number of times before Abu Dhabi, the season so far has shown us this much. Our focus is simply on extracting every possible point from each race in succession, beginning this weekend in Monza.

Featured this Week: Power Sensitivity

Monza is famously ‘the’ power circuit in Formula One, with its historic straights broken up by tight chicanes. It’s reasonable, therefore, to expect the blast around Milan’s royal park to be the most power sensitive track on the current calendar. In fact, Baku, Sochi and Montreal are all more power sensitive, with Monaco at the opposite end of the spectrum.

First of all, it’s important to understand what is meant by power sensitivity. In simple terms, it’s an indication of how much lap time improvement can be obtained through an increase in power. At Monza, power sensitivity works out at around 0.2s improvement for each additional 10 HP. For context, at a circuit like Monaco, the effect is smaller, roughly 0.12s per 10 HP. At Montreal and Baku – the most power sensitive tracks in F1 – power is worth 0.25s for each additional 10 HP.

Drivers spend 70% of lap time (79% of lap distance) at full throttle here, interrupted only by the two chicanes, the Lesmos, Variante Ascari and Parabolica. Monza’s power sensitivity is tempered due to a short lap distance (5.793 km) and high average speed, which makes it the shortest race of the season. The 2016 Italian Grand Prix, for example, took just 1 hr 17 mins at an average speed of 237.56 km/h.

Monza is one of the circuits where the impact of engine power can be most firmly felt, and any deficit in this area has direct repercussions on performance. Those with less grunt will often need to run their car lower on drag, producing less downforce through the corners but making them super slippery down the straights where positions are won and lost.

With DRS open and a strong tow, Lewis clocked 359.0 km/h through the speed trap at Monza during last year’s race – the highest top speed recorded in the 2016 season. The 2017 generation of F1 cars are both wider and draggier than their predecessors, so it will be interesting to see how close they come to those top speeds. It’s tricky to pinpoint a theoretical top speed. With stable engine regulations, slipstreaming – coupled with the effect of that extra drag – will ultimately be the deciding factor, rather than the Power Unit.

Outright top speed is the lifeblood of success at Monza. Without it, drivers become sitting ducks on the straights. But importance of a Power Unit’s driveability can’t be understated here. Turns 9 and 10 are expected to be flat in 2017, putting more emphasis on the low speed chicanes of Turns 1 / 2 and 4 / 5. Traction out of the Rettifilo chicane is key, as it’s followed immediately by a long run around Curva Grande and into the next braking zone for Turn 4 – a key passing opportunity.

While it may no longer be the most power sensitive circuit on the calendar, Monza remains the ultimate test for an engine supplier. That high full throttle percentage – the highest of the year – puts the Power Unit under more stress than any other race on the calendar. It’s a harsh testing ground, where outright speed is truly challenged. And in 2017, with cornering speeds higher than ever, the Tifosi are in for a real treat.

Stat Attack: Italy and Beyond

2017 Italian Grand Prix Timetable
Session Local Time

(CEST)

Brackley

(BST)

Stuttgart

(CEST)

Practice 1

Friday

10:00 – 11:30 09:00 – 10:30 10:00 – 11:30
Practice 2

Friday

14:00 – 15:30 13:00 – 14:30 14:00 – 15:30
Practice 3

Saturday

11:00 – 12:00 10:00 – 11:00 11:00 – 12:00
Qualifying

Saturday

14:00 – 15:00 13:00 – 14:00 14:00 – 15:00
Race

Sunday

14:00 – 16:00 13:00 – 15:00 14:00 – 16:00
Circuit Records – Silver Arrows at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza
  Starts Wins Podium

Places

Pole

Positions

Front Row

Places

Fastest

Laps

DNF
Silver

Arrows

9 5 8 5 9 5 4
Lewis

Hamilton

10 3 5 5 7 4 1
Valtteri

Bottas

4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mercedes-Benz

Power

25 10 24 11 21 13 24
Technical Stats – Season to Date (Barcelona Pre-Season Test 1 to Present)
  Laps

Completed

Distance

Covered (km)

Corners

Taken

Gear

Changes

PETRONAS

Fuel Injections

Silver

Arrows

5,333 26,247 84,766 256,053 213,320,000
Lewis

Hamilton

2,580 12,692 40,905 123,711 103,200,000
Valtteri

Bottas

2,753 13,565 43,861 132,342 110,120,000
Mercedes-Benz

Power

14,932 73,688 237,590 719,307 597,280,000
All-Time Records – Silver Arrows in Formula One
  Starts Wins Podium

Places

Pole

Positions

Front Row

Places

Fastest

Laps

1-2

Finishes

Front Row

Lockouts

Silver

Arrows

160 71 143 82 149 53 38 49
Lewis

Hamilton

200 58 111 68 113 37 N/A N/A
Valtteri

Bottas

105 2 17 2 6 1 N/A N/A
Mercedes-Benz

Power

430 157 410 165 328 148 63 84

Source : Mercedes.com

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David Martin-Janiak Motorsports has always been a passion for me, I've raced in Karting and now I have my own Motorsports news website, so i can help other racers convey their passion to the world!

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