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Mercedes-AMG F1 W11 EQ Performance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2020 Formula One racing car

Racing car model
Mercedes-AMG F1 W11 EQ Performance
The Mercedes AMG F1 W11 Performance in its updated livery, driven byLewis Hamilton during theTuscan Grand Prix
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorMercedes
DesignersJames Allison(Technical Director)
John Owen(Chief Designer)
Mike Elliott(Technology Director)
Loïc Serra(Performance Director)
Ashley Way(Deputy Chief Designer)
Emiliano Giangiulio(Head of Vehicle Performance)
Jarrod Murphy(Head of Aerodynamics)
Eric Blandin(Chief Aerodynamicist)
Andy Cowell(Managing Director - Power Unit)
Hywel Thomas(Engineering Director - Power Unit)
PredecessorMercedes AMG F1 W10 EQ Power+
SuccessorMercedes W12
Technical specifications[1]
EngineMercedes-AMGF1 M11 EQ Performance (AMG HPP M11) 1.6 L (98 cu in), 90° -V6turbocharged engine, limited to 15,000RPM, in amid-mounted, rear-wheel drive layout
Electric motorMotor Generator Unit–Kinetic (MGU-K),
Motor Generator Unit–Heat (MGU-H)
TransmissionMercedes co-developed withXtrac 8-speedsemi-automatic seamless-shiftsequentialgearbox + 1 reverse gear
BatteryMercedeslithium-ion battery solution
Power1,025 hp (764 kW)[2]
Weight746 kg (1,644.6 lb)
FuelPetronas Primax
LubricantsPetronas Syntium & Tutela
TyresPirelli P Zero (dry)
Pirelli Cinturato (wet)
ClutchZFcarbon fibre reinforced carbon plate
Competition history
Notable entrantsMercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team
Notable drivers44.United KingdomLewis Hamilton
63.United KingdomGeorge Russell
77.FinlandValtteri Bottas
Debut2020 Austrian Grand Prix
First win2020 Austrian Grand Prix
Last win2020 Bahrain Grand Prix
Last event2020 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
RacesWinsPodiumsPolesF/Laps
171325159
Constructors' Championships1 (2020)
Drivers' Championships1 (Lewis Hamilton, 2020)

TheMercedes-AMG F1 W11 EQ Performance is aFormula One racing car designed and constructed by theMercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team under the direction ofJames Allison,John Owen,Mike Elliott,Loïc Serra, Ashley Way, Emiliano Giangiulio,Jarrod Murphy andEric Blandin to compete in the2020 Formula One World Championship.[3][4][5][6]

The car was driven byLewis Hamilton andValtteri Bottas, who remained with the team for an eighth and a fourth season, respectively.[7]Williams driver, and Mercedes protégé,George Russell also drove for the team at the2020 Sakhir Grand Prix after Hamilton was forced to miss that event having tested positive forCOVID-19.[8] The car was planned to make its competitive debut at the2020 Australian Grand Prix, but this was delayed when the race was cancelled and at least seven upcoming events on the calendar were postponed in response to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[9][10] The F1 W11 made its competitive debut at the2020 Austrian Grand Prix. The delay to the start of the season allowed the team to address concerns they had about the car's reliability.[11]

The W11 took thirteen wins (eleven for Hamilton and two for Bottas), fifteen pole positions (ten for Hamilton and five for Bottas), nine fastest laps (six for Hamilton, two for Bottas and one for Russell), twelve front-row lockouts and five 1–2 finishes across 17 races. With it, Mercedes secured a seventh consecutiveFormula One World Constructor's Championship, breaking a record for consecutive championships previously held byFerrari. Due to its setting numerous track records (the outright fastest lap ever) at various Formula One circuits, the W11 is considered to be one of the greatest race cars of all time.[12]

Background

[edit]
The W11 in its original livery, driven byLewis Hamilton during thepre-season testing.

The W11 has a system whichMercedes had developed calledDual-Axis Steering (DAS) which allowed the driver to adjust thetoe of the front wheels to optimise mechanical grip by pulling or pushing on the steering wheel. DAS allowed the drivers to warm the car's tyres more efficiently by having a zero toe but allows for better cornering ability by using a negative toe, a feature which was of particular significance on circuits with long straights.[13] DAS was removed from the car after the 2020 championship as the system was banned for2021.[14] The design of the rear suspension was changed from that used in the previous car with the goal of reducing understeer.[15]

Following the postponement of theseason and the growing worldwide support for theBlack Lives Matter movement, it was announced in late June the W11 would feature black as the primary colour instead of the traditionalsilver that was present on its predecessors. Driver Lewis Hamilton prompted the livery change, saying he wanted the team to show its support for the cause through more than just social media posts, which led to the idea to adopt a new livery and launch a drive to improve diversity within the team.[16]

Season summary

[edit]

Opening rounds

[edit]

At the season-openingAustrian Grand Prix, Bottas qualified onpole position. Hamilton initially qualified in second place but prior to the race, he received a three-place grid penalty for failing to slow down sufficiently for yellow flags at the end of qualifying, dropping him to fifth.[17] Despite both drivers having to deal with gearbox issues which developed during the race, Bottas went on the win the race, the eighth of his career. Hamilton quickly recovered to second place but in the closing laps of the race received a five-second time penalty for causing a collision withAlexander Albon. Hamilton crossed the finish line in second but the penalty demoted him to fourth place.[18] Hamilton took pole position at the rain-affected qualifying session for theStyrian Grand Prix, over 1.2 seconds clear of nearest rivalMax Verstappen.[19] Hamilton led most of the race and took the W11's second consecutive victory, whilst Bottas overtook Verstappen in the closing laps to finish second, having started fourth on the grid.[20]

At theHungarian Grand Prix, the pace of the W11 was apparent when Mercedes easily took a 1–2 in qualifying, with Hamilton and Bottas outqualifying their nearest competitor, third-placedLance Stroll, by 0.8 seconds. Hamilton took pole, 0.1 seconds ahead of Bottas.[21] Hamilton would go on to win the race for his second consecutive win and eighth overall at theHungaroring equalling the record for most wins at one venue. Bottas made a mistake at the start when he moved slightly just before the lights went out and then stopped his car and got away slowly, falling to sixth by turn one. He avoided a penalty for a jump start and managed to recover to third place, finishing just behind second-placedMax Verstappen.[22] At theBritish Grand Prix, Hamilton led Mercedes to another front-row lockout by taking his third consecutive pole position over Bottas by over 0.3 seconds. Bottas took second by 0.7 seconds over Verstappen who qualified in third.[23] Lewis Hamilton led from pole position at the race start, building up a large lead throughout the race. In the dying stages of the Grand Prix, Bottas and Hamilton both suffered tyredelaminations on laps 50 and 52 respectively, which caused Bottas to come into the pits which made him drop to 11th place. Hamilton was forced to limp home with his delaminated tyre over the entire final lap, and the gap to second place shrank from 30 to about 6 seconds as Hamilton crossed the line.[24]

At the70th Anniversary Grand Prix, Mercedes were once again unchallenged in qualifying as Bottas led Mercedes to another front-row lockout by edging Hamilton for pole position by only .063 seconds withNico Hülkenberg a further 0.8 seconds back.[25] Mercedes struggled with race pace due to high temperatures causing excessive tyre wear and blistering. As a result,Red Bull Racing driverMax Verstappen was able to take the lead of the race and win. This was the first time in 2020 that Mercedes failed to win a race.[26]

Mid season

[edit]

At theSpanish Grand Prix, Mercedes continued their dominance in qualifying with Hamilton leading a fourth consecutive front-row lockout, qualifying 0.059 seconds faster than Bottas who was over 0.7 seconds faster than third-placed Verstappen.[27] Hamilton took the win in the race itself, leading every lap and coming home over 24 seconds clear of Verstappen in second. Furthermore, Hamilton also set a new Formula One record as he scored his 156th career podium finish, surpassingMichael Schumacher for most all-time. Bottas started poorly and dropped to fourth at the first corner. Although he was able to recover to regain third place, he was not able to overtake Verstappen and lost more ground to him in the drivers' championship.[28] At theBelgian Grand Prix, Hamilton set a new track record at theCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps with a time of 1:41.252, qualifying half a second clear of teammate Bottas in second.[29] The race saw the pair take a 1-2 finish, the team's second of the season, with Hamilton leading from lights to flag and Bottas holding second ahead of Red Bull's Verstappen. Hamilton extended his lead in the Drivers' Championship to forty-seven points over Verstappen in second and fifty points to Bottas in third. Likewise, Mercedes increased their lead in the Constructors' Championship to eighty-six points over second-paced Red Bull Racing heading into middle phase of the season.[30]

Closing rounds

[edit]

It was another front row lockout in Bahrain for Hamilton and Bottas. Hamilton won from pole at theBahrain Grand Prix for the third time in his career but Bottas finished eighth after a puncture under the safety car. Hamilton was forced to miss the2020 Sakhir Grand Prix following a positive test forcoronavirus and was replaced by Williams driver and Mercedes young driverGeorge Russell for that event. Russell started second and led most of the race having overtaken Bottas, who had taken pole,[31] at the start. At the second pit stop, Mercedes made an error and Russell was fitted with Bottas' tyres, forcing Russell to make another pit stop on the following lap, effectively ending his chances of winning the race. A late puncture then cost Russell a potential podium and he finished ninth with the fastest lap. Bottas finished the race in eighth, having poor performance and old tyres at the end of the race.[32] Hamilton returned for the season finale having performed a series of negativecoronavirus tests ahead of theAbu Dhabi Grand Prix alongside Bottas, meaning Russell returned to Williams.[33] The Mercedes drivers took second and third on the grid behind Red Bull's Max Verstappen and held those positions during the race.[34]

Other

[edit]

The W11 was featured as a playable vehicle inF1 2020,Real Racing 3 andCSR2. It was featured as a non-playable vehicle inF1 2021Braking Point story mode.

Complete Formula One results

[edit]

(key)

YearEntrantEngineTyresDriversGrands PrixPointsWCC
AUTSTYHUNGBR70AESPBELITATUSRUSEIFPOREMITURBHRSKHABU
2020Mercedes AMG PetronasF1 TeamMercedes-AMGF1 M11 EQ PerformancePValtteri Bottas1P23113P3F2521FRetP22P1488P25731st
Lewis Hamilton41P1PF1P2F1P1P7PF1PF3P11PF1F11P3
George Russell9F
Notes

References

[edit]
  1. ^Coch, Mat (26 November 2018)."Pirelli to remain F1 tyre supplier until 2023".speedcafe.com.Speedcafe.Archived from the original on 21 August 2019. Retrieved10 February 2019.
  2. ^"MERCEDES NEW ENGINE IN 2021 WITH MORE 25 HORSEPOWER – "PARTY MODE WHOLE RACE"!".F1Lead.com. 5 January 2021. Retrieved27 May 2021.
  3. ^"James Allison".Mercedes. 12 October 2017. Archived fromthe original on 28 April 2019. Retrieved12 October 2017.
  4. ^"John Owen". Mercedes F1. Retrieved1 August 2020.
  5. ^"Mike Elliott".Mercedes. Archived fromthe original on 28 April 2019. Retrieved9 September 2018.
  6. ^"Jarrod Murphy". LinkedIn.
  7. ^"F1 – 2020 Provisional Entry List".Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 30 November 2019. Retrieved30 November 2019.
  8. ^"George Russell to replace Hamilton at Mercedes for Sakhir Grand Prix".Formula1.com. 2 December 2020. Retrieved2 December 2020.
  9. ^Coch, Mat (13 March 2020)."Confirmed: F1 cancelled at Australian Grand Prix". Retrieved13 March 2020.
  10. ^"Bahrain and Vietnam Grands Prix postponed".formula1.com. 13 March 2020. Retrieved13 March 2020.
  11. ^Kalinauckas, Alex (25 November 2020)."How COVID-19 played a part in Mercedes' domination".autosport.com. Retrieved25 November 2020.
  12. ^"The Mercedes-AMG F1 W11 Is The Greatest Race Car Ever Made".Jalopnik. 7 December 2020. Retrieved11 September 2021.
  13. ^"DAS explained: what we know so far about Mercedes' steering system".www.formula1.com. Retrieved21 February 2020.
  14. ^Benson, Andrew (31 March 2020)."Formula 1: Mercedes revolutionary 'DAS' steering remains banned for 2021".BBC Sport. Retrieved31 March 2020.
  15. ^Hughes, Mark (16 November 2020)."MPH: Hamilton's slick strategy — 'He just knows what to do'".Motor Sport. Retrieved1 January 2021.
  16. ^"Phone call from Hamilton led to Mercedes' black livery switch · RaceFans".RaceFans. 30 June 2020. Retrieved8 February 2021.
  17. ^"Hamilton handed three-place grid penalty for Austrian GP after Red Bull protest".formula1.com.Formula One. 5 July 2020.
  18. ^"Bottas beats Leclerc and Norris to win dramatic Austrian GP as Hamilton is penalized".formula1.com.Formula One. 5 July 2020.
  19. ^Collantine, Keith; Rencken, Dieter (11 July 2020)."Hamilton: Dominant pole position lap was "close to perfect"".racefans.net. Retrieved12 July 2020.
  20. ^Collantine, Keith (12 July 2020)."Hamilton wins as Bottas passes Verstappen for Mercedes one-two".racefans.net. Retrieved12 July 2020.
  21. ^"Qualifying report: Electric Hamilton beats Bottas to Hungarian Grand Prix pole".Formula1.com. 18 July 2020. Retrieved19 July 2020.
  22. ^"Hamilton romps to eighth Hungarian Grand Prix win, as Verstappen recovers to second".Formula1.com. 19 July 2020.
  23. ^"Qualifying report: Hamilton recovers from spin to take record seventh Silverstone pole".Formula1.com. 1 August 2020.
  24. ^"Race report: Hamilton limps home to take record 7 home gp wins".Formula1.com. 2 August 2020.
  25. ^"Qualifying report: Bottas beats Hamilton to 70th Anniversary GP pole as Hulkenberg stars".Formula1.com. 8 August 2020. Retrieved8 August 2020.
  26. ^Morlidge, Matt (9 August 2020)."Anniversary GP: Lewis Hamilton mystified as Mercedes feel the heat".Sky Sports. Retrieved18 February 2023.
  27. ^"FORMULA 1 ARAMCO GRAN PREMIO DE ESPAÑA 2020 - QUALIFYING".Formula1.com. 15 August 2020. Retrieved17 August 2020.
  28. ^"How the Spanish Grand Prix unfolded".bbc.co.uk/sport. 16 August 2020. Retrieved17 August 2020.
  29. ^"FORMULA 1 ROLEX BELGIAN GRAND PRIX 2020 - QUALIFYING".Formula1.com. 29 August 2020. Retrieved31 August 2020.
  30. ^"F1 Belgian GP: Daniel Ricciardo delivers as Lewis Hamilton points out Red Bull flaw".news.com.au/sport. 31 August 2020. Retrieved2 September 2020.
  31. ^"Bottas just beats Russell to Sakhir pole".BBC Sport.
  32. ^Richards, Giles (6 December 2020)."Sergio Pérez wins Sakhir F1 GP after pit error robs George Russell".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 6 December 2020. Retrieved7 December 2020.
  33. ^"Lewis Hamilton to race at Abu Dhabi Grand Prix on Sunday".BBC Sport. 10 December 2020. Retrieved15 March 2021.
  34. ^Morlidge, Matt (13 December 2020)."Abu Dhabi GP: Max Verstappen crushes Mercedes to win F1 finale".Sky Sports. Retrieved18 February 2023.

External links

[edit]
Awards
Preceded byAutosport
Racing Car of the Year

2020
Succeeded by
Wikimedia Commons has media related toMercedes-AMG F1 W11 EQ Performance.
Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team (2010present)
Ownership
Mercedes-Benz Group (33.3%)
Ineos (33.3%)
Toto Wolff (28.3%)
George Kurtz (5.0%)
Executive management
Toto Wolff (CEO & team principal)
Ola Källenius (Head of Mercedes-Benz)
Current personnel
James Allison
Peter Bonnington
Russell Braithwaite
Simon Cole
Holly Chapman
Matt Deane
Marcus Dudley
Karl Fanson
Michael Harre
Katsuhide Kuwahara
Bradley Lord
Ron Meadows
Jarrod Murphy
Riccardo Musconi
John Owen
Gilles Pironi
Jim Ratcliffe
Simone Resta
Dom Riefstahl
Mike Sansoni
Britta Seeger
Kim Stevens
Andrew Shovlin
Hywel Thomas
Rob Thomas
Giacomo Tortora
Marga Torres
Rosie Wait
Geoff Willis
Former personnel
Enrico Balbo
Bob Bell
Loïc Bigois
Eric Blandin
Ross Brawn
Jock Clear
Steve Clark
Aldo Costa
Andy Cowell
Angela Cullen
Tad Czapski
Jérôme d'Ambrosio
Leonardo Donisete da Silva
Mark Ellis
Mike Elliott
Nick Fry
Thomas Fuhr
William Goulbourne
Norbert Haug
Ben Hodgkinson
Jürgen Hubbert
Adam Kenyon
Niki Lauda
Paddy Lowe
Phil Prew
Tony Ross
Wolfgang Schattling
Loïc Serra
Mark Slade
Evan Short
Stefan Strahnz
James Vowles
Thomas Weber
Craig Wilson
Ian Wright [pt]
Dieter Zetsche
2026 race drivers
12.ItalyKimi Antonelli
63.United KingdomGeorge Russell
2026 test and reserve drivers
DenmarkFrederik Vesti
2026 development drivers
ParaguayJoshua Dürksen
FranceDoriane Pin
Simulator drivers
United KingdomJake Hughes
United KingdomAnthony Davidson
Junior Team drivers
Australia James Anagnostiadis
United Kingdom Kenzo Craigie
ChinaYuanpu Cui
Spain Luna Fluxá
United Kingdom Ethan Jeff-Hall
JamaicaAlex Powell
United Arab EmiratesRashid Al Dhaheri
France Andy Consani
France Julia Montlaur
France Many Nuvolini
NorwayNoah Strømsted
World Champions
United KingdomLewis Hamilton
GermanyNico Rosberg
Ambassadors
GermanyNico Rosberg
MexicoEsteban Gutiérrez
United KingdomSusie Wolff
Notable drivers
 FinlandValtteri Bottas
 GermanyMichael Schumacher
Drivers' titles
2014
2015
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2017
2018
2019
2020
Constructors' titles
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
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Formula One cars
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W03
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Engine division
Mercedes AMG High Performance Powertrains
Related
Mercedes-Benz Group
Mercedes-Benz
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Daimler-Benz AG (19541955)
World Championships with Mercedes-Benz engines
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