If Alfa has concentrated its efforts on the rear of the C43, Haas has pushed on the front. The suspension is completely redesigned and will also be on the SF-23. Reduced nose section, repositioned cooling and reduced airscope.
gordonthegun wrote: ↑11 Feb 2023, 22:00Here the photos of the new Haas VF-23 on track and of the old Ferrari F1-75.
Ferrari and Haas share the same suspensions and on the new Haas the front one is different from last year.
The same suspension will be on the new Ferrari SF-23.
The first thing I notice is that the dedicated steering arm is missing, but there might be more.
Vs
Ferrari (not Haas) developed a new front suspension which they sold to Haas together with: rear suspension, gearbox and engine.organic wrote: ↑13 Feb 2023, 11:22https://www.formu1a.uno/tecnica-haas-vf ... disegnata/
Confirmation that the front suspension completely changes with the Sf-23
If Alfa has concentrated its efforts on the rear of the C43, Haas has pushed on the front. The suspension is completely redesigned and will also be on the SF-23. Reduced nose section, repositioned cooling and reduced airscope.
By claiming you have a contact inside Ferrari who tells you to distrust Ferrari insiders, are you not now acting as a Ferrari insider yourself so I should not trust this information as well?zioture wrote: ↑13 Feb 2023, 15:04I have a contact with a Ferrari engineer, when he reads what that site writes he says he knows nothing. Ferrari is a team like any other, there is industrial secrecy. Obviously he can't tell me anything about what's going on. But often when he reads those articles he laughs, like saying they're false ... It's easier to make assumptions by looking at the photos than trusting fake insiders. The Ferrari environment is very private and if an engineer trespasses, he is immediately reported
I posted the same thing here the very same day (see some posts above).
I suppose that even if he read something true he'd purposely call it BS.zioture wrote: ↑13 Feb 2023, 15:04I have a contact with a Ferrari engineer, when he reads what that site writes he says he knows nothing. Ferrari is a team like any other, there is industrial secrecy. Obviously he can't tell me anything about what's going on. But often when he reads those articles he laughs, like saying they're false ... It's easier to make assumptions by looking at the photos than trusting fake insiders. The Ferrari environment is very private and if an engineer trespasses, he is immediately reported
The relationship between Ferrari and Haas, for which some mechanical components are shared, is not a hypothesis, it is a contractual certainty since Haas entered F1.zioture wrote: ↑13 Feb 2023, 16:07What I can say is that as far as trade secrets are concerned, so everything technical, Ferrari is really closed. Instead sometimes it's Ferrari that gives some journalists information, but it's not technical. As it happened with Binotto, from what I was told it was Ferrari that gave the rumor to Gazzetta.it of his exit from Ferrari before the statement that came afterwards. So secondary news or even technical fake news some times comes out of Ferrari, and the usual influencers write. I know for a fact that a Ferrari journalist whose name I cannot say is a spokesperson. He does not find out anything it is Ferrari who tells him what to say.