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Hamilton says Mercedes ‘haven’t improved’ since start of F1 season

Lewis Hamilton says Mercedes have not improved their car at all since the start of the 2022 F1 season. A promising start to F1’s inaugural Miami Grand Prix proved to be a false dawn as Mercedes fell back in qualifying and the race, with George Russell and Hamilton eventually finishing fifth and sixth.

Hamilton’s frustrating start to the year continued in Miami as he lost out to his new teammate Russell due to the timing of a Safety Car for the second time in five races and questioned Mercedes’ strategy. Asked if Mercedes had taken a step forward in Miami, Hamilton said: “Unfortunately not.

"We're the same speed as we were in the first race and we just haven't improved in these five races.

"But I'm hopeful at some stage we will. We just have to keep trying and keep working hard.”

The performance of Mercedes’ W13 challenger has been hampered by the high-frequency bouncing phenomenon known as porpoising, which is not showing up on the team’s simulations.

Mercedes are still trying to get to the bottom of the violent bouncing and, as a result, are yet unlock the true potential of their ‘no-sidepod’ concept, which the team insists is quicker than the original version of the W13 that hit the track at the start of pre-season testing.

Hamilton felt the porpoising was less of an issue in Miami but suspects that was largely down to the specific conditions and track surface at the new street circuit.

“It wasn’t as bad today,” he said. “From race to race, track to track, surface to surface, how high we put the car – we can put the car higher and reduce it – so today wasn’t actually really bad, just not fast.”

Mercedes won’t rule out return to old-spec F1 car

On Sunday night in Miami, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff did not discount the prospect of the team reverting to its older specification car that originally debuted in the Barcelona test.

The upcoming Spanish Grand Prix is set to be something of a make-or-break weekend for Mercedes as the team looks to take more crucial learnings from a direct, real-world comparison of the two concepts.

While Wolff stressed the team is “still committed to the current concept”, he did not dismiss a return to the car that is “much slower on paper” if progress is not made soon.

Sport

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2022-05-15T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-05-15T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://maltaindependent.pressreader.com/article/282308208702011

Malta Independent