langedweil wrote: ↑01 Nov 2022, 06:11
e30ernest wrote: ↑01 Nov 2022, 03:07
langedweil wrote: ↑01 Nov 2022, 02:20
Of which they knew they could expect a (minor) punishment for, and which they rightfully did get. A typical form of a calculated risk ..
They potentially hold an advantage for the next several years especially seeing how much pace their current car has over the rest of the field.
...
That said, because Red Bull did it during a major rules change, this would put them at an advantage over any other team that decides to do this moving forward.
To be clear, I'm not rooting for any team in particular, and in this case maybe I'm just the Devil's Advocate ..
But as it stands according to the report there was a 400K+ overspend. Aside from hrs put in, CFD time, that get's you about at most a few wings and a slightly adapted floor, and well let's put in some weight reduction. That's it; it doesn't give you a whole new car platform with a 1s advantage. Even Merc back in the day (when they outspend everyone with at least 20m) couldn't make that happen.
And yet, that 400K gifted the 2021 title plus it gave the team an insane advantage for this year and the ones to come after that?
Like you say, 2021-2022 was the largest major aero change ever .. like ever. But still those 400K on upgrades were carried over as-is to a completely different platform philosophy, working perfectly fine.
Sorry .. I don't buy that, it's silly at minimum, and it's a kick in the face of all teams/engineers that work off their asses to get their package in shape (which some really have done).
Maybe, just maybe, maybe that RB18 was, together with Fer ofcourse, simply one of the best base-solutions towards the groundeffect philosophy? Little to no bouncing, great in riding kerbs etc. Well, maybe it was even better than Ferrari, as they were not hurt by TD39 where Fer most certainly did.
Merc absolutely stepped out of their box with the very unusual zero-pod concept, but they just cannot seem to tame the beast. They're progressing quite a bit, but it will take more time to unleash the potential they still feel is in there. Or maybe they'll switch (we'll learn in five months time).
Anyway, starting with a (very) good basepoint gives you the momentum to develop better and faster as you appear to be right on top of your concept. Merc knows this really well, they were in that same position for years; seasons where they could stop developing the current car by June, and move 90% of the resources to next year. Because of that (PU ánd aero)advantage Merc was able to for instance develop stuff like DAS, which was innovation-wise brilliant in itself ofcourse .. simple but yet so effective.
That said, all future progress will now be hindered a lot by the 10% windtunnel/cfd punishment. In a world without bias one could even think it's quite harsh ...
But as that world is non-existant, I will probably butchered.
Remember, Devil's Advocate ..
I really disliked that the overspend was presented in pounds and the penalty it dollars. It makes the penality look larger and the overspend smaller.
I also disliked that the comment added by the FIA about "Notional Tax Credit". If they would have filed, they make it sound like it was a given that they'd get it, while the Notional website has alot if and maybes on it. I find it hard to beleive that RBR has probably 50 guys that have written several technical papers or thesis longer than 100 pages but they can't find an accountant to read and understand a 52 page accounting manual or file someting as basic as Notional Tax Credit. If they didn't file, it probably cause they didn't get it or weren't eligable for whatever reason.
“the correct treatment within its Full Year Reporting Documentation of their Notional Tax Credit within its 2021 submission of a value of £1,431,438” and therefore they would have exceeded the cap by $432,652 or 0.37%.
$432,652 is £377,218
So really
£1,431,438
+ £377,218
=========
£1,808,656 or $2,074,444 THAT IS WHAT THEY ARE OVER.
#################################################
Pretty close to £1,864.000, they were 52K from a major breach.
£1,808,656 is probably enough for a major upgrade.
If they ran out of gas on the out lap of qualifing after getting pole, the FIA wouldn't have said "Oh, if they had put enough fuel in the car, they would have finsihed on pole anyways."
As expected, people aren't reading the 1.8MIllion pounds that RBR are over, all they read is the 400K. It's so BS and it was written like that for that effect. RBR cheated and they are getting away with.
But I'm happy. I'm not a RBR fan, nor am I a Ferrari or Merc fan. I'm a F1 fan. So I'll fall back to what Jost Capito said " Atleast their not out spending us my hundreds of millions of dollars".