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Mercedes: Initial signs show ‘good step’ on solving F1 car’s woes

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Mercedes isn’t popping the champagne just yet, but the team has a spring in its step after pre-season testing, convinced they’ve ironed out the gremlins that plagued its silver arrow last season.

The stakes are high for the German squad. Mercedes has struggled with frustrating limbo since F1 kicked off its ground-effect era in 2022, where maddening inconsistency has drowned out flashes of brilliance.

The W15 was a diva, thriving one weekend and sulking the next, its performance tied to track conditions like a weather vane in a storm.

Bahrain’s chilly testing days didn’t fully spill the beans on whether the W16’s a cure, as team boss Toto Wolff suggested, but for Andrew Shovlin, the outfit’s trackside engineering director, the early vibes are positive.

With George Russell and rookie Andrea Kimi Antonelli racking up a whopping 458 laps – the most of any team – Mercedes flexed some serious reliability muscle.

Shovlin’s beaming about the progress, and as the countdown to Melbourne ticks down to two weeks, the team’s ready to dig into the data and polish their new toy.

The 2025 season’s shaping up to be a dogfight, and Mercedes wants to be in the thick of it.

Solid Steps Forward

Shovlin didn’t mince words when reflecting on the Bahrain test.

“We’ve had a solid three days of pre-season testing here in Bahrain,” he said, a note of satisfaction in his voice.

The W15’s laundry list of woes—unpredictable handling, sensitivity to conditions—had the team burning the midnight oil over the winter. Now, he’s optimistic.

“The team has worked hard over the winter to improve on the weaknesses of the W15 and, from the initial signs, we seem to have made good steps in those areas.”

It’s not a victory lap, but it’s a start. And the lap count backs him up.

“It is a testament to the hard work of everyone at Brackley and Brixworth that we were able to complete the most laps of any team over the course of the test,” Shovlin noted, nodding to the 458 circuits Russell and Antonelli churned out.

That’s not just busywork—it’s a sign the W16’s got legs, even if the cool Bahraini air masked some of its true pace. For a team desperate to ditch the inconsistency, reliability’s a solid foundation to build on.

Crunching the Data

With the season opener in Australia looming, Shovlin’s already plotting the next move.

“Over the next week, we will pick through that data to assess areas of improvement and to bring the most effective race car we can for the first race in Melbourne in two weeks’ time,” he said.

The W16 is a work in progress, and with 2025 promising tight margins, every tweak counts.

Russell echoed the sentiment, adding, “We’ve compiled significant data and knowledge which gives the opportunity to find further improvements ahead of Melbourne.”

However, Shovlin is keeping his cards close on the pecking order.

“It is of course far too early to make an accurate prediction of the competitive order,” he cautioned.

“However, we can be pleased with how the test has gone and look forward to heading to Australia to begin the 2025 season.”

McLaren’s MCL39 might be the early favorite – Russell agrees, saying, “It is no surprise to see some of our competitors, particularly McLaren, looking strong” – but Mercedes isn’t here to play catch-up forever.

Ready for the Fight

Russell, stepping into the senior driver role, mirrored Shovlin’s take.

“We’ve had a productive three days here at pre-season testing in Bahrain. The team at Brackley, Brixworth, and here trackside have done a great job to have us ready for the test and rack up an amount of mileage.”

“The car is running well,” he said—and the operation’s humming.

“We’ve had a seamless three days,” Russell added, a rare brag for a team that’s battled chaos in recent years.

“Kimi and I will be in the factory next week, driving on the simulator, and everyone will be pushing flat out to ensure we bring our best to Australia. I can’t wait to get started.”

Shovlin’s crew feels the same—those “good steps” with the W16 are a lifeline, a chance to ditch 2024’s baggage and slug it out with the front-runners.

The data is in hand, the laps are logged, and Mercedes is gunning to turn promise into podiums. Australia is where the truth comes out.

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The post Mercedes: Initial signs show ‘good step’ on solving F1 car’s woes appeared first on F1i.com.

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