What is going on with Mercedes? F1 Bahrain GP struggles explained

That is how George Russell summed up Mercedes’ performance on thꦜe opening day of running at the start of Formula 1𝔉’s new era in Bahrain.
Few believed Mercedes’ claims that it was on the back foot after pre-season, but based on Friday’s twꦉo practice sessions at the Bahrain International Circuit, ꦫit appears the reigning world champions are genuinely struggling.
Russell ended the day fourth-quickest but was over hal🍒f a second down on Max Verstappen on the same tyre compound.
“It’s cle🍬ar it’s all about lap time and we are certainly not where we want to be,” he said. “I think we made a bit of progress solving some issues but the pace is just not there at the moment.
“So we need to really go over the data tonight to really understand w♉hy we’re both struggling with the car.”&nb🌠sp;

🐷Merced🍌es not only appears to be lagging behind its rivals over one lap, but its long run pace in FP2 will be of equal concern.
Over a similar r🌳ace simulation run🐷, Mercedes was around a second slower compared to Red Bull, though exact fuel loads and engine settings are unknown.
“I think the high fuel pace is a bit more representative and we were consistently over a sec🥃ond slower than whereﷺ our rivals are,” Russell added.
“I need to look i🔜nto the data a bit further. Maybe there’s a reason for it but from our side, we’re definitely not overly happy with the car ♑right now and we’ve got some work to do. But if anyone can, our team can, so let’s see.”
Why is Mercedes struggling?
Mercedes’ 2022 ♋challenger looks a handful to drive and is suffering from more extreme porpoising on the straight compared to other teams.
The excessive high-frequency🍨 bouncing and balance issues are concealing the fundamental baseline pace Mercedes believes it has in the W13.
The porpoising phenomenon stems from the return of ground effe💯ct philosophy that has been adopted for F1’s new generation o▨f cars as part of the biggest overhaul to the technical regulations in decades.
“Because the ground effect on these cars is such a powerful thing, the car is wanting to suck itself to the road a bit like a magnet,” Mercedes trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin explaiꦗned.
“Obviously when you get there it’s bouncing up and it’s being driven by that effect. That’s why when you lift the ride height or you stop chopping away the floor, and you start affecting that ceiling, you can improve it, but you’re imp🔯roving it at the exp🤪ense of performance.
“Where are we at the moment? I don’t think we’ve got as good a handle on that as some of the other teams and I think the pace you are seeing at the moment is very much dominated by how 🧔well people have got on top of that problem - maybe more than the base performance of the car in the wind tunnel.”

Mercedes ran two different floor configurati❀ons on Lewis Hamilton and Russell’s floors during practice in a bid to get on top of its porpoising problems, but as yet, the team is yet to 🦩find a solution.
Adding to Mercedes’ headache, the new upgrade pac♔kage that was introduced at the second B⛎ahrain test - which features a radical sidepod design - is not delivering as expected.
“We are truly throwing everything at ♚it at the moment to try and unlock the potential that we think is there, but we’re just really struggling to tap into it at the minute,” Russell conceded.
“Everything we try is maybe one step forward and two steps back and there’s always a limitation. It’s going to take tim🍬e, we hoped we would have solved it but how things stand at the moment, we aren’t in the fight and we’ve got some work to do.”
How long will it take to solve?
Hamilto﷽n, who encountered problems with his front brakes and his DRS (Drag Reduction System), could only man🔯age a lap good enough for ninth, 1.2s adrift of Verstappen and sandwiched between the two Haas cars.
The seven-time world champion had already warned after testing that Mercedes would not be in a position to fight for victories at the start of the season, a statement that seemed an unthinkable prospect given Mercedes’ form in recent years.&nbs🍎p;
After Frida﷽y practice, Hamilton reiterated that Mercedes is facing “much bigger problems” than before last year’s𒅌 Bahrain Grand Prix, where it bounced back to win despite enduring a similarly tricky pre-season test.

Hamilton conceded there will be no quick fix to resolve the issues Mercedes is currently facing ꧙and ruled out the prospect of winning thi𓆉s weekend.
“We had smaller problems in the past,🙈 relatively, compared to this year,” he said. “We are faced with much much bigger problems this year and everything we do to try and fix it doesn't really change that.
“It appears there's probably going to be a loꦍnger-term fix, so nothing in the short term.
"We’re a long way off. We’re not bluffing like people assume w✅e were. It is what it is. We’ll work as hard as we can through it and do what we can.
“We’re not going to be in the race for the w🔯in here,” Hamilton added. “Red Bull is a long, long way ahead. It’s in the region of eight-to-ninth tenths ahead of💧 us and Ferrari is probably something like half a second, six tenths ahead of us.
“So we’re 🃏fighting and scrapping with whoever is behind them.”

Lewis regularly attends Grands Prix for wuqian0821.com around the world. Often reporting on🥃 the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories of the people who matter in the sport.