Yep, instead of them gaining on us, we increased the spread.Michelangelo wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 17:58A silent race for both Alpines but it was nice to gain some points over Alpha Tauri.
Yep, instead of them gaining on us, we increased the spread.Michelangelo wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 17:58A silent race for both Alpines but it was nice to gain some points over Alpha Tauri.
Apart from a few million in prize money, wouldn't finishing higher lower your testing/wind tunnel time for next year?diffuser wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 18:42Yep, instead of them gaining on us, we increased the spread.Michelangelo wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 17:58A silent race for both Alpines but it was nice to gain some points over Alpha Tauri.
peewon wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 10:04Apart from a few million in prize money, wouldn't finishing higher lower your testing/wind tunnel time for next year?diffuser wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 18:42Yep, instead of them gaining on us, we increased the spread.Michelangelo wrote: ↑12 Sep 2021, 17:58A silent race for both Alpines but it was nice to gain some points over Alpha Tauri.
Teams' previous season's % of aero testing % of aero testing championship position allowed for 2021 allowed for 2022-25 1 90% 70% 2 92.5% 75% 3 95% 80% 4 97.5% 85% 5 100% 90% 6 102.5% 95% 7 105% 100% 8 107.5% 105% 9 110% 110% 10+ or new team 112.5% 115%
That seems rather arbitrary and frankly,impossible to enforce effectively, which is my fear with the budget cap as well, considering Alpine doesnt have customer/junior teams to pool resources/testing from. You can bet that most of the research and designs Mercedes come up with up, will be shared with the likes of AM and Williams. They can even split areas of research amongst them and share that knowledge with each other, through parts purchase or shadowy parallel thinking claims as they did with the brake ducts. Same for Ferrari/Haas/AR and Red Bull/AT.diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 15:17
I'm not sure if they adjust the amount of time twice a year. I know they do it in the middle of the year, they did it back in June or July(think it was after Silverstone). My Guess is they do it twice a year (January 1st/July 1st). The real pain starts next year.
.
New sliding scale on aerodynamic testing in F1
Teams' previous season's % of aero testing % of aero testing championship position allowed for 2021 allowed for 2022-25 1 90% 70% 2 92.5% 75% 3 95% 80% 4 97.5% 85% 5 100% 90% 6 102.5% 95% 7 105% 100% 8 107.5% 105% 9 110% 110% 10+ or new team 112.5% 115%
So the cars have to be significantly different right????peewon wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 18:04That seems rather arbitrary and frankly,impossible to enforce effectively, which is my fear with the budget cap as well, considering Alpine doesn't have customer/junior teams to pool resources/testing from. You can bet that most of the research and designs Mercedes come up with up, will be shared with the likes of AM and Williams. They can even split areas of research amongst them and share that knowledge with each other, through parts purchase or shadowy parallel thinking claims as they did with the brake ducts. Same for Ferrari/Haas/AR and Red Bull/AT.diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 15:17
I'm not sure if they adjust the amount of time twice a year. I know they do it in the middle of the year, they did it back in June or July(think it was after Silverstone). My Guess is they do it twice a year (January 1st/July 1st). The real pain starts next year.
.
New sliding scale on aerodynamic testing in F1
Teams' previous season's % of aero testing % of aero testing championship position allowed for 2021 allowed for 2022-25 1 90% 70% 2 92.5% 75% 3 95% 80% 4 97.5% 85% 5 100% 90% 6 102.5% 95% 7 105% 100% 8 107.5% 105% 9 110% 110% 10+ or new team 112.5% 115%
This is very interesting. Is there enough room in the new rules for such differences in philosophy/car design? I have a feeling it's impossible to have significantly different cars... Or am I being naive?diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 19:13So the cars have to be significantly different right????peewon wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 18:04That seems rather arbitrary and frankly,impossible to enforce effectively, which is my fear with the budget cap as well, considering Alpine doesn't have customer/junior teams to pool resources/testing from. You can bet that most of the research and designs Mercedes come up with up, will be shared with the likes of AM and Williams. They can even split areas of research amongst them and share that knowledge with each other, through parts purchase or shadowy parallel thinking claims as they did with the brake ducts. Same for Ferrari/Haas/AR and Red Bull/AT.diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 15:17
I'm not sure if they adjust the amount of time twice a year. I know they do it in the middle of the year, they did it back in June or July(think it was after Silverstone). My Guess is they do it twice a year (January 1st/July 1st). The real pain starts next year.
.
New sliding scale on aerodynamic testing in F1
Teams' previous season's % of aero testing % of aero testing championship position allowed for 2021 allowed for 2022-25 1 90% 70% 2 92.5% 75% 3 95% 80% 4 97.5% 85% 5 100% 90% 6 102.5% 95% 7 105% 100% 8 107.5% 105% 9 110% 110% 10+ or new team 112.5% 115%
If the RBR and ATR cars are identical, some team like Alpine will says something(like 2020 RP...but now the rules are clearer on what the teams can or can't do with regards to copying). Then RBR/ATR will both have to prove that they each designed their own car and came up with the same design, while 8 other teams designed their own cars and came up with DIFFERENT designs. Once the cars have gone down different aero paths, they can't help each other. What helps one car's aero will not likely help the other. The only thing they have left is for ATR to do aero work for RBR. I have no idea how they're policing that or how they're restricting the amount of time a team can spend in the tunnel and on what they're working on.
For example before the 2021 season started, the rules pretty much said you could change only the front or the rear of the chassis structure (the rules were more complicated that that, I'm just simplifying it for speed). RBR completely reworked the rear of the car. while ATR choose to keep last year's rear end and work on the front.
If you look at all the bargeboards that ATR and RBR teams came up with this year, they are all similar in idea but at the same time different in execution. Why ? cause the cars are significantly different. What works for 1 will not work on the other.Gillian wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 19:42This is very interesting. Is there enough room in the new rules for such differences in philosophy/car design? I have a feeling it's impossible to have significantly different cars... Or am I being naive?diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 19:13
So the cars have to be significantly different right????
If the RBR and ATR cars are identical, some team like Alpine will says something(like 2020 RP...but now the rules are clearer on what the teams can or can't do with regards to copying). Then RBR/ATR will both have to prove that they each designed their own car and came up with the same design, while 8 other teams designed their own cars and came up with DIFFERENT designs. Once the cars have gone down different aero paths, they can't help each other. What helps one car's aero will not likely help the other. The only thing they have left is for ATR to do aero work for RBR. I have no idea how they're policing that or how they're restricting the amount of time a team can spend in the tunnel and on what they're working on.
For example before the 2021 season started, the rules pretty much said you could change only the front or the rear of the chassis structure (the rules were more complicated that that, I'm just simplifying it for speed). RBR completely reworked the rear of the car. while ATR choose to keep last year's rear end and work on the front.
yep.Gillian wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 22:32Ah okay I get what you mean. I was thinking along the lines of low rake vs high rake, double diffuser, F-duct etc which I think will be difficult to do within the constraints of the new rules.
Really hope Alpine will be competitive next year so Alonso can get in the mix too.
diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 22:23Gillian wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 19:42I mean the rules were there before also and it didnt stop RP and Merc. Protests were lodged but in the end, I feel Toto and Stroll have a lot of power with FIA and liberty. Leaving aside blatant violations like that, big teams could also assign the junior teams separate areas of research, so if they have 3-4 promising design options, They can split them up amongst the diff teams and provide feedback to each other on what works and doesnt. You cant regulate teams from landing on the optimal solutions and the design work is not hard to fake when you know where you want to end up.diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 19:13
So the cars have to be significantly different right????
If the RBR and ATR cars are identical, some team like Alpine will says something(like 2020 RP...but now the rules are clearer on what the teams can or can't do with regards to copying). Then RBR/ATR will both have to prove that they each designed their own car and came up with the same design, while 8 other teams designed their own cars and came up with DIFFERENT designs. Once the cars have gone down different aero paths, they can't help each other. What helps one car's aero will not likely help the other. The only thing they have left is for ATR to do aero work for RBR. I have no idea how they're policing that or how they're restricting the amount of time a team can spend in the tunnel and on what they're working on.
For example before the 2021 season started, the rules pretty much said you could change only the front or the rear of the chassis structure (the rules were more complicated that that, I'm just simplifying it for speed). RBR completely reworked the rear of the car. while ATR choose to keep last year's rear end and work on the front.
Redbull can buy parts of Alpha Tauri, but officially the buyer cannot have any influence on the design proces.peewon wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 18:04That seems rather arbitrary and frankly,impossible to enforce effectively, which is my fear with the budget cap as well, considering Alpine doesnt have customer/junior teams to pool resources/testing from. You can bet that most of the research and designs Mercedes come up with up, will be shared with the likes of AM and Williams. They can even split areas of research amongst them and share that knowledge with each other, through parts purchase or shadowy parallel thinking claims as they did with the brake ducts. Same for Ferrari/Haas/AR and Red Bull/AT.diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 15:17
I'm not sure if they adjust the amount of time twice a year. I know they do it in the middle of the year, they did it back in June or July(think it was after Silverstone). My Guess is they do it twice a year (January 1st/July 1st). The real pain starts next year.
.
New sliding scale on aerodynamic testing in F1
Teams' previous season's % of aero testing % of aero testing championship position allowed for 2021 allowed for 2022-25 1 90% 70% 2 92.5% 75% 3 95% 80% 4 97.5% 85% 5 100% 90% 6 102.5% 95% 7 105% 100% 8 107.5% 105% 9 110% 110% 10+ or new team 112.5% 115%
Those would be called Transferable Components (TRC) in the regsNL_Fer wrote: ↑14 Sep 2021, 20:49Redbull can buy parts of Alpha Tauri, but officially the buyer cannot have any influence on the design proces.peewon wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 18:04That seems rather arbitrary and frankly,impossible to enforce effectively, which is my fear with the budget cap as well, considering Alpine doesnt have customer/junior teams to pool resources/testing from. You can bet that most of the research and designs Mercedes come up with up, will be shared with the likes of AM and Williams. They can even split areas of research amongst them and share that knowledge with each other, through parts purchase or shadowy parallel thinking claims as they did with the brake ducts. Same for Ferrari/Haas/AR and Red Bull/AT.diffuser wrote: ↑13 Sep 2021, 15:17
I'm not sure if they adjust the amount of time twice a year. I know they do it in the middle of the year, they did it back in June or July(think it was after Silverstone). My Guess is they do it twice a year (January 1st/July 1st). The real pain starts next year.
.
New sliding scale on aerodynamic testing in F1
Teams' previous season's % of aero testing % of aero testing championship position allowed for 2021 allowed for 2022-25 1 90% 70% 2 92.5% 75% 3 95% 80% 4 97.5% 85% 5 100% 90% 6 102.5% 95% 7 105% 100% 8 107.5% 105% 9 110% 110% 10+ or new team 112.5% 115%